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04-23-2010, 08:47 PM | #11 | |||
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Both categories of books were preserved concurrently all the time, I agree, and so must you. We know for a fact that every single known author of original works was producing original works. Surely you are not about to dispute this fact? Obviously, unless you can dispute this fact then it is mandatory that an assumption is required. Obviously at all ages, we had concurrent publication of "original works" and "centuries old reproduced works". Scribes performed both tasks. Publication houses were called scriptoria. Quote:
If you can find a citation --- regarding this ratio --- to the contrary I would be interested to see it. |
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04-23-2010, 08:52 PM | #12 | ||
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I think (if I read him correctly) Mountainman is correct in saying that we should suspect a first century date if every instance we have of a work is radiocarbon dated to the fourth century and so is anything that refers to it. In a field dealing with religious works such as Christian manuscripts relying on paleography alone is no better than accepting Grimm's Fairy Tales as history. |
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04-23-2010, 09:44 PM | #13 | |||
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Leaving aside for one moment the history of the "Orthodox Canonical Christians", the laws of common sense dictate that we should be very suspicious about the history provided by the "Orthodox Canonical Christians" concerning their "Religious Opposition" -- those vile, heretical misfits who were the unnamed authors of the "Gnostic Acts and Gospels". |
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04-24-2010, 05:40 AM | #14 | |
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The Gnostic Gospels
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This leaves the C14 and the 4th century politics. |
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04-25-2010, 06:05 PM | #15 | |||
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The Assumption Being Made by Christian Biblical Scholars is not the only one ....
Ancient manuscripts are discovered C14 dated to the 4th century. Do the manuscripts represent contemporary 4th century authorship or do the manuscripts represent copies of centuries old authorship, from the 3rd century, or the 2nd century, or the 1st century? This is the question.
Logically there are two possibilities in regard to any randomly discovered undated manuscript from antiquity (or any epoch prior to the printing press when scribes were employed to make copies). Here are the two assumptions we can make .... Assumption (1): The Authorship of the Manuscript is Contemporary with Publication. That is the Manuscript is a copy of an original work authored "in recent times" by the author and/or commissioned scribes.Toto, you must see that one or another of these assumptions will be selected and/or preferred. At the moment, with respect to the "Gnostic Gospels and Acts" the contemporary Biblical Scholarship and academics are following the second assumption. Your assertion that there is no assumption required is not logical. Quote:
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04-25-2010, 06:33 PM | #16 | |
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The mainstream does not assume that the documents are copies. They take the C14 date as the latest possible date of composition, and consider other evidence for an earlier date. So far, this thread appears to be you talking to yourself and baiting me into answering you. If there is nothing more to say, the thread can be closed. |
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04-25-2010, 08:23 PM | #17 | ||
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It's an interesting issue, IMO. I agree that the C14 dating establishes the latest possible date of composition. I also think, however, the "mainstream" has bought far too much into the christian timeline when dating authorship of biblically related manuscripts. Data showing the time of creation of the actual documents we do have is very interesting. I note that MM says he doesn't know of C14 studies of canonical documents. Does anyone else? |
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04-25-2010, 08:39 PM | #18 |
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If you don't want the thread closed, please say something substantive. Please avoid obviously fallacious arguments such as - most documents are original, therefore this one is.
There are probably many problems with dating the canonical and non-canonical texts, but posting non sequiturs is not helpful. |
04-25-2010, 08:44 PM | #19 | |
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04-25-2010, 09:01 PM | #20 | |||||
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Let's just have a look at this evidence .... The two C14 dated manuscripts in question are these: The Gospel of Thomas Quote:
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In addition to this primary Eusebian derived "evidence" a secondary source of evidence appealed to by the mainstream are a very small number of papyri fragments which they think are earlier than the 4th century. I have meticulously summarised all the available evidence for all the conjecturally [b]PRE-NICAEAN Gnostic Gospels and Acts" above in this post SUMMARY The christian scholars and academics are still following Eusebius in regard to the history of the Gnostic Gospels and Acts, despite the fact that Eusebius is admittedly an extremely hostile witness against the Gnostics. Does anyonyone perceive the danger in following Eusebius for the history of the authorship for the "Gnostic Gospels and Acts"? |
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