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Old 04-05-2006, 04:48 PM   #21
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Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
The purpose of this thread is to discuss Constantin Brunner. In particular, his essay against mythicism is under consideration.
OK, here are some excerpts from the critique I posted in another thread.

Quote:
And apropos of the hypothesis that religious syncretism was current at the time of Christ even among Jews, I attach no great importance to it;
Nevertheless, the evidence for that hypothesis seems irrefutable.

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And I put no weight whatsoever on the considerable bundle of hypotheses which attributes to these Jewish fishermen, tax-collectors, sinners and harlots the most detailed knowledge of the cults of Mithras, Adonis, Tammuz, Attis and Osiris, the nature myths and divinity myths of the entire world, including those of Buddhism; as well as Alexandrine philosophical speculation (which in part developed only subsequently).
Since no real scholar suggests that Christianity was created by a bunch of "Jewish fishermen, tax-collectors, sinners and harlots," this is a totally irrelevant observation.

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The story of Christ is as remarkable as it is true.
It would be remarkable if it were true, but Brunner has been attempting to argue that it must be true because it is remarkable.

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The Christians at that time were not in the habit of falsifying things so subtly; their falsifications were crude affairs
Yeah, that is true of the ones we know about for sure, like Josephus's Testimonium. That is why we know about them. But why assume that Christian forgers were always so clumsy? Do we have any reason at all to suppose that we have caught every forgery that any Christian ever committed?

Quote:
Moreover, Christians then would not have been greatly interested in merely providing evidence that Christ really existed
We don't need to assume that that was their motive. A more likely motive would have been to provide evidence that the non-Christian world was aware of Christ as soon as awareness would have been likely.

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These accounts do not have the 'feel' of forgeries
Forgeries never do have that feel if they're done well.

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Paul's Christ is almost nothing in comparison with the Christ of the Gospels.
That is not surprising if Paul had never heard of the Christ of the gospels.
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Old 04-05-2006, 08:29 PM   #22
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
Nevertheless, the evidence for that hypothesis seems irrefutable.
So cite some.

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Since no real scholar suggests that Christianity was created by a bunch of "Jewish fishermen, tax-collectors, sinners and harlots," this is a totally irrelevant observation.
Quote some of these 'real scholars' then.

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It would be remarkable if it were true, but Brunner has been attempting to argue that it must be true because it is remarkable.
No, he's saying that every effect has an equivalent cause.


Quote:
Yeah, that is true of the ones we know about for sure, like Josephus's Testimonium. That is why we know about them. But why assume that Christian forgers were always so clumsy? Do we have any reason at all to suppose that we have caught every forgery that any Christian ever committed?
It's like the old joke:
Scout: "Injuns are soooo sneaky. There goes one!"
Tenderfoot: "I didn't see anything."
Scout: "See what I mean?"

Quote:
We don't need to assume that that was their motive. A more likely motive would have been to provide evidence that the non-Christian world was aware of Christ as soon as awareness would have been likely.
This is totally incomprehensible. Did you dream it up or can you quote something in support?


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Forgeries never do have that feel if they're done well.
See joke above.

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That is not surprising if Paul had never heard of the Christ of the gospels.
I'm quite familiar with and quite unimpressed by all the mythicist flatulence about Paul's Christ preceding that of the Gospels.
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Old 04-06-2006, 10:03 AM   #23
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Quote:
Originally Posted by brunner
And apropos of the hypothesis that religious syncretism was current at the time of Christ
Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
the evidence for that hypothesis seems irrefutable.
Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
So cite some.
Well, you've got me there. I haven't personally seen the evidence myself. I just infer its existence from the fact that every competent historical source I have read says it was happening.

For starters, I have found several articles in the Encyclopaedia Britannica that contradict Brunner. My access is by subscription, so there is no point in my linking to them, but here is a typical quotation:

Quote:
Instances of religious syncretism—as, for example, Gnosticism . . . Judaism, Christianity, and Greek religious philosophical concepts—were particularly prevalent during the Hellenistic period (c. 300 BC–c. AD 300). The fusion of cultures that was effected by the conquest of Alexander the Great (4th century BC), his successors, and the Roman Empire tended to bring together a variety of religious and philosophical views that resulted in a strong tendency toward religious syncretism. Orthodox Christianity, although influenced by other religions, generally looked negatively upon these syncretistic movements.
"religious syncretism." Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service. <http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9063140> [Accessed April 6, 2006].
There are lots more where that came from, if you must see them.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
no real scholar suggests that Christianity was created by a bunch of "Jewish fishermen, tax-collectors, sinners and harlots,"
Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
Quote some of these 'real scholars' then.
If you can show me how to quote somebody not saying something, I'll do the best I can to follow your example.

Alternatively, you could prove me wrong by quoting some real scholars who do indeed suggest that Christianity was created by a bunch of "Jewish fishermen, tax-collectors, sinners and harlots."

Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
but Brunner has been attempting to argue that it must be true because it is remarkable.
Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
No, he's saying that every effect has an equivalent cause.
Then he needs to offer a useful definition of "equivalent cause." Or else he can try to refute this argument: Christianity is a myth; therefore, it was caused by a myth.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
Do we have any reason at all to suppose that we have caught every forgery that any Christian ever committed?
Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
It's like the old joke:
I'm not claiming to see any Indians. Brunner is claiming that because we've killed every one that we have seen so far, there can't be any more Indians because Indians obviously are too stupid to hide.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Brunner
Christians then would not have been greatly interested in merely providing evidence that Christ really existed
Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
We don't need to assume that that was their motive. A more likely motive would have been to provide evidence that the non-Christian world was aware of Christ as soon as awareness would have been likely.
Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
can you quote something in support?
Quote something? No, but I can offer a logical argument. I don't need an authority to justify everything I think.

Early Christians never had to address arguments about Jesus' historicity -- or, if they ever did, no record of that confrontation was preserved (and there is no good reason to suppose that it would have been). The issue that any apologist had to confront was over Jesus' character and teachings, not his existence. The gospels were thought to suffice to prove his existence, but skeptics would have asked, as they do now: If he was so impressive, why didn't anybody notice him? The apologists would have found it useful if they could produce documents showing that in fact he was noticed.

We know that some of them tried, because some of them were too stupid to hide. The fact that they even found it necessary to attempt such forgeries ought to tell us something about whatever genuine evidence might have existed in those days.

Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
I'm quite familiar with and quite unimpressed by all the mythicist flatulence about Paul's Christ preceding that of the Gospels.
Paul's precedence over the gospels is not reasonably disputable. Only a bare handful of radical inerrantists claim that any gospel was written during Paul's lifetime. The only dispute is over whether Paul's Christ and the gospel Christ are one and the same.
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Old 04-06-2006, 01:14 PM   #24
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Reply to Doug Shaver

Regarding Jewish syncretism, here is what Brunner says:
Even those Jews who are influenced by the philosophical speculations of the "heathen" are still Jews, who refuse to let "revelation" be tampered with. For Philo, the prophets are the interpreters of God (Monarch. II, 222), in particular Moses, of course, the god and king of the Jewish nation (Vita Mos. p.105); he regards every individual syllable of the biblical books as inspired by God (De mutat.nom. I, 587); indeed, even the Septuagint, the 72 translators of the Bible into Greek, are held to be inspired (Mos. p. 140). Josephus indicates that it is self-evident to every Jew that he must give his life for the sake of the divine commandments (c.Ap. I,8). Thus even the philosophizing Jews of that time are united with the rabbis in taking their stand on pharisaic Judaism at its most severe and most scrupulous (and I would not speak any differently of the scrupulosity and rigour of any other community's notions). We can be absolutely certain that pagan myths did not succeed in gaining any foothold, even as a partial element or ingredient, in the consciousness of contemporary Jews, whether of those in Judaea or elsewhere in the world.
In the face of this you'll have to provide more than just the Britannica's say so.


Quote:
You could prove me wrong by quoting some real scholars who do indeed suggest that Christianity was created by a bunch of "Jewish fishermen, tax-collectors, sinners and harlots."
The socially inferior status of the disciples is not under dispute by scholars. Here is a typical scholarly quotation:
Simple fishermen of Galilee, they were typical `AM HAARETZ' .... They were not necessarily great sinners who needed to be converted. (Later, such ones as Levi, the tax collector, Mary of Magdala and other public sinners would become disciples).

]A House Divided: The Parting of the Ways between Synagogue and Church (or via: amazon.co.uk) by Vincent Martin p. 39
Quote:
Then he needs to offer a useful definition of "equivalent cause."
This is a large part of Brunner's presentation. Here is an important passage:
For if we were acquainted with significantly unique and inspired deeds under the names, for instance, of Sargon, Romulus, Perseus, Theseus, Heracles, Siegfried and Tell, then I would have to believe, if I were not to betray my fundamental notion of resultant phenomena having a cause (for every cause must produce its specific result, and every result must have its specific cause). This would follow even if I had never so little to show of the causes involved, of the originators of such works; for, in cases like this, the minus in terms of the kind of experiential certainty which is supplied by sense-data and other external information is outweighed by the plus of inner conviction. Thus I would have to believe that these deeds had creative personalities behind them, and so I would call them Tell, Siegfried, Heracles, Theseus, Perseus, Romulus and Sargon, just as I call Shakespeare the author of the unmistakably distinctive literary marvels, pointing to a single originator, that go under his name, in spite of the fact that we have as little certain knowledge of the life of the man Shakespeare as of the life of the man Christ - nay, we have less.
Quote:
Do we have any reason at all to suppose that we have caught every forgery that any Christian ever committed?
All Brunner is saying that the passages in Suetonius and Tacitus regarding Christians are unlikely to be Christian forgeries because they are too subtle in comparison with other known early Christian forgeries, they fit in with the character of the writers and their texts, and they serve no obvious apologetic purpose.

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Skeptics would have asked, as they do now: If he was so impressive, why didn't anybody notice him?
I'll need something more than your say so on this.

Quote:
Paul's precedence over the gospels is not reasonably disputable.
It certainly is disputable. The Gospels as we have them are occasional writings drawn from oral transmission.
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Old 04-07-2006, 01:27 PM   #25
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How did Brunner view the resurrection of Jesus?

Jake
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Old 04-07-2006, 01:34 PM   #26
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jakejonesiv
How did Brunner view the resurrection of Jesus?
It was a self-willed spiritual resurrection, a fulfilled desire to be perpetually reborn in the hearts of men.
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Old 04-07-2006, 03:01 PM   #27
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Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
here is what Brunner says: . . . In the face of this you'll have to provide more than just the Britannica's say so.
Brunner is proof-texting Philo and Josephus to support his thesis. I'll go with Britannica.

Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
The socially inferior status of the disciples is not under dispute by scholars.
I didn't say it was. I said that real scholars do not claim that such people created Christianity.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
he needs to offer a useful definition of "equivalent cause."
Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
Here is an important passage:
Whatever its importance in other regards, it does not present a useful definition of "equivalent cause."

Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
All Brunner is saying that the passages in Suetonius and Tacitus regarding Christians are unlikely to be Christian forgeries because they are too subtle in comparison with other known early Christian forgeries, they fit in with the character of the writers and their texts
We can, and should, discuss the evidence for and against those particular passages being forgeries without making any assumptions about whether every Christian who ever forged anything was too stupid to do it well enough to avoid detection.

There is no good reason to suppose that the "Chrestus" to whom Suetonius referred was Jesus of Nazareth, so it makes no difference to me whether that was a forgery or not. As for Tacitus, assuming the authenticity of that passage, it proves nothing more than that during his lifetime some people, whom he deemed credible, believed a story that was making the rounds about Nero having persecuted Christians. Even supposing that the story was true, for Tacitus to pass it on implies nothing about the actual existence of Jesus of Nazareth.

Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
and they serve no obvious apologetic purpose.
Bull. Christian apologists have been getting off on persecution stories from Day One.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
Skeptics would have asked, as they do now: If he was so impressive, why didn't anybody notice him?
Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
I'll need something more than your say so on this.
I say so based on the assumption that human nature has not changed over the past 2,000 years. If you question that assumption, I can say no more.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
Paul's precedence over the gospels is not reasonably disputable.
Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
It certainly is disputable. The Gospels as we have them are occasional writings drawn from oral transmission.
Maybe, maybe not. But absent clear evidence of their authors' sources, they cannot be used as evidence for what people were thinking several decades before they were written. The only evidence we have is the documentary evidence, and Paul's documents were written long before the documents that we call the gospels.
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Old 04-07-2006, 03:16 PM   #28
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
I'll go with Britannica.
I won't.

Quote:
I said that real scholars do not claim that such people created Christianity.
Again, name them.

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It does not present a useful definition of "equivalent cause."
I disagree.

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There is no good reason to suppose that the "Chrestus" to whom Suetonius referred was Jesus of Nazareth
There certainly is.

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For Tacitus to pass it on implies nothing about the actual existence of Jesus of Nazareth.
It implies, but does not prove said existence.

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Bull. Christian apologists have been getting off on persecution stories from Day One.
The text makes the Christians look bad, hardly evidence of Christian tampering.

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If you question that assumption, I can say no more.
Then please do so.

Quote:
The only evidence we have is the documentary evidence.
We can situate the documents culturally within the context of the oral society from which they sprang.
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Old 04-08-2006, 07:23 AM   #29
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
I'll go with Britannica.
Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
I won't.
Suit yourself. The lurkers can decide which of us is being more rational.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
I said that real scholars do not claim that such people created Christianity.
Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
Again, name them.
You ask me to provide evidence that people are not saying something? Uh-uh. You say some are saying it. Let's see the quotations.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
There is no good reason to suppose that the "Chrestus" to whom Suetonius referred was Jesus of Nazareth
Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
There certainly is.
Let's see it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
The text makes the Christians look bad, hardly evidence of Christian tampering.
It's not evidence against tampering, either, unless we assume that all Christian forgers were as inept as whoever doctored Josephus. A Christian forger with a lick of horse sense would have known better than to make Tacitus appear to be praising Christians.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
The only evidence we have is the documentary evidence.
Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots
We can situate the documents culturally within the context of the oral society from which they sprang.
You cannot describe the beliefs of that oral society without assuming your conclusion about the authors' intentions.
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Old 04-09-2006, 08:58 AM   #30
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
Suit yourself. The lurkers can decide which of us is being more rational.
Suits me.


Quote:
You ask me to provide evidence that people are not saying something? Uh-uh. You say some are saying it. Let's see the quotations.
I did provide a quotation about the disciples being of low social standing and including public sinners.


Quote:
Let's see it.
The Suetonius passage has been argued about frequently on this board. You can search for relevant discussions. We don't need to go over it all once again here.


Quote:
It's not evidence against tampering, either, unless we assume that all Christian forgers were as inept as whoever doctored Josephus. A Christian forger with a lick of horse sense would have known better than to make Tacitus appear to be praising Christians.
I can't accept your radical hermeneutics of suspicion.


Quote:
You cannot describe the beliefs of that oral society without assuming your conclusion about the authors' intentions.
It is the historian's job to understand documents in the context of the cultures in which they originate.
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