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Old 07-29-2012, 12:24 AM   #11
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The fact that people took Ehrman's recent book as indicative of anything (e.g., the case for historicity had been presented and found wanting) was a shock to me.
Yes, it was rather strange of people to take Ehrman's book as he evidently intended it.

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other web 2.0 products that I realized the disconnect between academia was different than I knew. My family and friends know what I do, and despite frequent attempts on my part to get them to stop, they feel compelled to direct me to every media reference (usually a newspaper) to some study about the brain. Almost without exception, these reports so distort the studies they are talking about to make them interesting that they are either just wrong, or are useless.
LoM on this site, nobody ever refers to media reports as sources of anything but the most basic information (look, new thingy dug up in Israel!). Maybe you should drop the blinkers and realize that people here actually and eagerly read academic studies, both in journal and book form.

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And I believe that it is this, more than anything else, which is behind much of the belief that historical Jesus scholarship is somehow a consensus built on air and mythicism is disregarded because of some socio-cultural, religious component inherent to historical Jesus studies.
...and yet you are so very wrong. I suggest that rather than leap mightily to conclusions, you take a few years to understand what you are criticizing. In other words, pay the same compliment to mythicists that they pay to HJ studies.

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Old 07-29-2012, 12:36 AM   #12
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LoM on this site, nobody ever refers to media reports as sources of anything but the most basic information (look, new thingy dug up in Israel!).
How often do you visit the science discussion section? Because it happens all the time.

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Maybe you should drop the blinkers and realize that people here actually and eagerly read academic studies, both in journal and book form.
I'm sure there are those who do. I'm equally sure there are those who not only don't, but who aren't aware that journal vs. book is almost a distinction not worth making. There are journals which are peer-reviewed and are dedicated to things like extra-sensory perception. And as someone who frequently buys a book which costs ~$200 dollars, I know that most people who don't have access to university libraries don't have access to most of the important books. And finally, with historical Jesus studies, most of the scholarship isn't written in English.


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...and yet you are so very wrong.
Perhaps. But then, you started your response with something which can be checked and found inaccurate right now.

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In other words, pay the same compliment to mythicists that they pay to HJ studies.
What compliments?
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Old 07-29-2012, 12:39 AM   #13
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LegionOnomaMoi: these are all generalities, but they are not new and you don't apply this to historical Jesus studies. You don't seem to have followed the proceedings of the Jesus Project, or the discussions on historicity from several years ago here, or Richard Carrier's professional opinion of much of historical Jesus research.

As I waded through your essay, I think this is your intended point:
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.... One thing I noticed a long time ago, before joining forums and so forth, was how little people in general knew about the nature of our sources for the past. There are a great many people who have read quite a bit of scholarship about the historical Jesus, but haven't read much about ancient history in general. They not only lack access to most of the secondary scholarship on the historical Jesus or related topics, but have even less familiarity with how scholarship on this topic compares with others which concern ancient history. And I believe that it is this, more than anything else, which is behind much of the belief that historical Jesus scholarship is somehow a consensus built on air and mythicism is disregarded because of some socio-cultural, religious component inherent to historical Jesus studies. The idea that Jesus as a myth is somehow more offensive or off limits than what is actually out there is bizarre. That the historical Jesus quest is doomed from the start is a position held quite adamantly within more conservative christian circles.
So you think that no one else here knows how academia works, or is acquainted with the sources of ancient history?

Would you like to produce the academic research that shows that the consensus belief that Jesus existed is based on something more substantial than hot air? Notice that Ehrman did not even try to write a book for specialists on the historicity of Jesus comparable to his book for the lay audience, and my years of looking for this research turned up nothing later than Shirley Case, who assumed that the gospels had a historical basis.

Conservative Christians reject a merely historical Jesus, and they reject the Jesus Seminar and those who try to study the historical Jesus outside the faith, but we've known that for a long time. They also reject mythicism. (I've often referred to a book by conservative public intellectual Charlotte Allen called The Human Christ.) So I really don't understand the point of your last sentence in the quote. I think it indicates that you do not understand the debate here.

You said "The idea that Jesus as a myth is somehow more offensive or off limits than what is actually out there is bizarre." Yes it is bizarre on a logical basis, and I have made that point, but I have also observed that Christian apologists on these boards react more strongly at the idea that Jesus was a myth than at any other wacky theory that you would think would undermine their religion.

So if you think that there is some real basis for the academic consensus on the existence of a historical Jesus, let us know where it has been hiding.
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Old 07-29-2012, 01:00 AM   #14
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LoM on this site, nobody ever refers to media reports as sources of anything but the most basic information (look, new thingy dug up in Israel!).
How often do you visit the science discussion section? Because it happens all the time.
Your pardon, I meant only BCH.

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I'm sure there are those who do. I'm equally sure there are those who not only don't, but who aren't aware that journal vs. book is almost a distinction not worth making. There are journals which are peer-reviewed and are dedicated to things like extra-sensory perception. And as someone who frequently buys a book which costs ~$200 dollars, I know that most people who don't have access to university libraries don't have access to most of the important books. And finally, with historical Jesus studies, most of the scholarship isn't written in English.
Yes, yes, yes, and shit wish I could read German.

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What compliments?
The one of studying what the other side actually says, and not what you think it says. The mythicists you discuss exist only in your own mind.

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Old 07-29-2012, 01:10 AM   #15
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LegionOnomaMoi: these are all generalities, but they are not new and you don't apply this to historical Jesus studies.
That's part of the problem: there isn't something which makes historical Jesus studies some special realm so different from other fields. Every field has unique problems and biases and ones which are shared with others.

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You don't seem to have followed the proceedings of the Jesus Project
I did, and recently was pointed to comments made about the inclusion of those who were unfamiliar with the field.

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, or the discussions on historicity from several years ago here
Nope. Haven't read those.

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or Richard Carrier's professional opinion of much of historical Jesus research.
I've been following Carrier for years, and waiting for his book since he announced it. It was such a piece of garbage I was horrified. He was someone I respected, even though I disagreed with points he made (after all, any disagreements could usually be my lack of experties). But Bayesian analysis, Bayes' theorem, or BT (his use isn't consistent) is far, far, more my area of expertise than his. I owned most of the books he referenced on the subject before reading his book, and read most of the rest after hoping that I was missing something because he couldn't really be that wrong: take the version of BT from some basic textbook and cite a bunch of sources which use it in an entirely different way and combine it all into one useless heap disguised by the trappings of formalism.

I am still holding out hope that his next book is different. But this one was a real blow.


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So you think that no one else here knows how academia works, or is acquainted with the sources of ancient history?
Those are two very different questions, and the answer to both is no, I don't think that no one else knows. I said so.

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Would you like to produce the academic research that shows that the consensus belief that Jesus existed is based on something more substantial than hot air?
What exactly do you mean by produce? Give you a list of references?

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Notice that Ehrman did not even try to write a book for specialists on the historicity of Jesus comparable to his book for the lay audience, and my years of looking for this research turned up nothing later than Shirley Case, who assumed that the gospels had a historical basis.
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You "usually" don't read secondary sources, yet you speak as if you have read all the books which deal with the question of Jesus' existence rather than assuming it. Have you read most or all of these? And I don't mean simply Schweitzer (2nd ed.), Remsburg, Bultmann, etc. Dunn, Habermas (Gary, not Jürgen), Grant, Eddy & Boyd, and many others do not start with an assumption of historicity. Price, for example, provided one of the blurbs for the book by the last two authors (their longer The Jesus Legend), stating that they took his case seriously. Nor is this a complete list by any stretch of the imagination.
Keep in mind that this question started over 200 years ago. Also, I've seen how divorced your treatment of christian texts is from their greco-roman context.

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Conservative Christians reject a merely historical Jesus, and they reject the Jesus Seminar and those who try to study the historical Jesus outside the faith, but we've known that for a long time.
They don't. Wright, Meier, Dunn, Bauckham, Witherington III, and so many others who could be counted amont conservative christian scholars are active in historical Jesus research.

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They also reject mythicism. (I've often referred to a book by conservative public intellectual Charlotte Allen called The Human Christ.) So I really don't understand the point of your last sentence in the quote. I think it indicates that you do not understand the debate here.
There have been multiple posts, threads, and discussions about hegemony or whatever which is supposed to explain why, after a couple of centuries, the mythicist position has repeatedly been raised and completely rejected but for reasons having nothing to do with the validity of the arguments. Often, such arguments have relied, at least in part, on the influence of christianity. If christianity were influencing scholarship in this way, it would look very, very different.

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You said "The idea that Jesus as a myth is somehow more offensive or off limits than what is actually out there is bizarre." Yes it is bizarre on a logical basis, and I have made that point, but I have also observed that Christian apologists on these boards react more strongly at the idea that Jesus was a myth than at any other wacky theory that you would think would undermine their religion.
My grandfather was an agnostic Jew. Although I wasn't there (or alive) apparently he reacted to a claim that we really can't know if Jesus existed with enormous disdain. He was a specialist in the area of Greco-roman literature and IE languages, and had zero patience for views he regarded as intellectually sterile or unsound, and the idea that we have no sources which enable us to say "Jesus existed" was apparently one of these.

Perhaps the reactions have less to do with the undermining their religion, and more to do with the fact that 1) they find it ridiculous and/or 2) here is one place where they have the backing of scholarship.

The reactions to everything from Harry Potter to The Da Vinci Code beat anything mythicist writings could imagine in terms of Christian protest. And I haven't seen any debate surpass that between christians who argue over the prologue to John and the trinity (nor have I been as attacked as when I entered that debate).

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So if you think that there is some real basis for the academic consensus on the existence of a historical Jesus, let us know where it has been hiding.
The same place where the evidence for the academic consensus on everyone else from ancient history has been hiding.
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Old 07-29-2012, 01:21 AM   #16
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The mythicists you discuss exist only in your own mind.

Vorkosigan
If you read my opening posts, you'll find that for the most part it deals with people in general. It in no way is limited to mythicists except in a few, specific places. There the issue is more that there are many people who have read a lot, but only on this topic.

I'm not interested in arguing how much your average mythicist knows. If everyone here has read far more than I, fantastic. I wasted a small amount of time. But as I started this thread in response to what was a "final straw" of sorts, and was indeed a misuse and misunderstanding of "scholarship", and have encountered this over and over again, I don't think mythicists are exempt from the norm. And as I know how hard it is for people outside of academia to obtain much of the literature in any given field, I find it hard to believe that historical Jesus studies are somehow a huge exception. Especially when (again) most is written in other languages (esp. German and French, but also Italian), and requires the knowledge of various ancient languages.
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Old 07-29-2012, 01:21 AM   #17
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Keep in mind that this question started over 200 years ago. Also, I've seen how divorced your treatment of christian texts is from their greco-roman context.
Hilarity ensues....
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Old 07-29-2012, 01:22 AM   #18
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And as I know how hard it is for people outside of academia ...
Yes, well many of us are in academia.
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Old 07-29-2012, 01:27 AM   #19
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My grandfather was an agnostic Jew. Although I wasn't there (or alive) apparently he reacted to a claim that we really can't know if Jesus existed with enormous disdain. He was a specialist in the area of Greco-roman literature and IE languages, and had zero patience for views he regarded as intellectually sterile or unsound, and the idea that we have no sources which enable us to say "Jesus existed" was apparently one of these.
For you it's important to keep bringing up the idea of intellectual sterility and unsoundness. Such invocations are useful substitutes for actual meaningful engagement, socially approved and requiring not a lot of work.
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Old 07-29-2012, 01:43 AM   #20
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Yes, well many of us are in academia.
I know this from my discussions in the science discussion section. You can continue to take this as a personal insult, despite the fact that there are those here whose take on christian origins borders on paranoid schizophrenia, or realize that it was neither specific to mythicism nor intended for all those here.

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For you it's important to keep bringing up the idea of intellectual sterility and unsoundness. Such invocations are useful substitutes for actual meaningful engagement, socially approved and requiring not a lot of work.
I refer to soundness frequently because logic is a focus of mine, But what I wrote which you quoted had nothing to do with anything other than my grandfather and his personality. He once said, completely seriously, of some particular topic that he "liked to keep an open mind about that kind of crap." The fact that I was told his reaction to the idea of a mythic Jesus was so dismissive had to do with his views, as I said, and the way he dealt with those who he thought were intellectually sterile.
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