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11-06-2007, 03:05 AM | #11 | |
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Agreed, there is a great deal of conjecture about.
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However, I am more interested in 3rd C archeology because it shows the transition as HJ iconography slowly begins to kick in from about 250CE. |
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11-06-2007, 03:14 PM | #12 | |
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involves iconography from the "Hebrew Bible", for example see "Jonas Marbles" -- for this period. IMO these are Jewish, but presumed "christian". Here are my notes: The following is quoted from the The Cleveland Museum in reference to a series Best wishes, Pete Brown |
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11-08-2007, 02:54 PM | #13 | ||
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examining the (unexamined?) postulate for HJ. gospels, and christianity before 312CE
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if needs be, of any and all evidence related to the historicity (or otherwise) of the HJ, the Gospels and Christianity itself before the fourth century. Quote:
threads here over the last year or so, in which various respondents have found the authors making citations to various categories of archaeological evidence admitted to the field of ancient history which support the theory that there was an HJ, gospels and "Christianity" before the fourth century. I have researched these books, and from them have gleaned a list of over 60 separate citations that form set of such evidence. The Prosenes inscription is just one of this set. The point is that this entire set of citations are of the same dubious nature as the Prosenes inscription, and that when one actually examines the postulate of HJ, gospels or indeed "Christianity" before the 4th century one finds no support for it. Peter Kirby sometime back quipped we are dealing with "the unexamined postulate of an HJ". Well, all I am doing is examining the postulate in accordance with the academic methods required in ancient history and archaeology. These methods require evidence. I have accumulated 60 odd bits. There are all Prosene-like. This is problematic for mainstream. This is my point. Best wishes, Pete Brown |
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11-11-2007, 06:38 PM | #14 | ||
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Irony has its place But would you kindly expand on your use of the term agreed you have employed above? Do you agree that the Prosenes inscription is not necessarily christian, or something else? Additionally, while we're after the loose ends, do you understand my previous reference to the use of "Hebrew text narratives" (eg: Jonah) in the imagery of achaeological relics, statues, art, mosaics, etc, etc, etc? [ie: the postulate that there may be a need to distinguish "Jewish" and "Early Christian" evidence]. From The World of Late Antiquity by Peter Brown (perhaps a little old but the pictures are abundant of the art, etc) at p.106 we find Plate 76: Quote:
with respect to monumental and other archaeological evidence for the totally unambiguous presence of Christianity is an explosion in the fourth century. Scientific analysis in many other fields of research has learnt to detect the signature of chaos as distinct from the signature of continuity. The turbulence of the Arian controversy requires objective human analysis. Hopefully this not a contradiction of terms. Best wishes YA, Pete Brown |
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11-11-2007, 08:23 PM | #15 | ||||
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There are probably a number of problems with this, but two major ones I can think of are; 1. Ownership of the site. The reason that the Callistus funerary art was executed and survived was because the property was in private hands, but controlled by the 'church' authorities - probably Bishop Zephyrinus. Only Christians were buried there. 2. There are Jewish catacombs in Rome contemporary with Callistus. Quite possibly the frescoes were executed by the same workshops. Their iconography is indeed similar as far as the decorative elements are concerned, but differs markedly in representation of OT themes. Similarly at Dura Europos where the 'House Church' was near a synagogue (and a mithraeum, Temple of Aphlad, etc.). They all may have used the same schools of local artists. Yet the narrative iconography is quite distinctive. The Jonah Cycle, Noah & Ark, Daniel & Lions, Youths in Fiery Pit, etc., are all highly stylised and are clearly not meant to represent the original OT stories so much as a consistent message of deliverance. Quote:
It seems to me that anyone putting forward an orthodox HJ explanation of the 1st & 2nd C Christian literature is going to have to jump thru some rather difficult hoops in order to explain the 3rd C archaeology. In short, there may be an elephant in the room. Why do you keep insisting that it is a TRex? |
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11-11-2007, 10:47 PM | #16 | ||||
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also is my understanding of my position. I have gleaned the citations from a number of books to date. To be consistent I will find Ante Pacem and log its citations. Quote:
One stone and one paper fragment at a time YA. You know the drill by now, as do the lurkers. Best wishes to all those who see themselves as students of ancient history, Pete Brown |
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11-12-2007, 12:01 AM | #17 | |||
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11-12-2007, 03:37 PM | #18 | |||
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My training also includes science. Here is a quick probabilistic calculation. You know I have accumulated a set of perhaps 60 citations. And you are thinking that one way to assess the probability of my position is to weight the collective probability of a set of perhaps 100 citations. (Hey, YA, lets say Ante Pacem provides another 40 I have not yet seen - generous?) The probability I am wrong increases quickly with every citation. (I decline at this stage to derive the general probabilistic formula) However, you are missing one very important point (IMO) Quote:
citations a very small but positive figure of probability for their "historicity as related to christianity". This is your default position, which may or may not be actually the objective assessment. OTOH my claim is that the probability that the Prosenes inscription is christian is not in fact a very small positive figure, but in fact is zero. When you add 100 zeros together, the probability adds to zero. That the Prosenes inscription is zero percent christian is not an unreasobale claim IMO. That P.Oxy 3035 is zero percent christian is also not an unreasonable claim IMO. Do you follow this? Is it unscientific? We have 98 more citations to assess. And at the end of the road my claim is that all of these citations are reasonably viewed as "Prosenes-Like", having 000.000% probability of being "christian" (not "chrestian"!). An interesting journey JA for the everyperson who see themselves as students of ancient history. Best wishes, Pete Brown |
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11-13-2007, 12:47 AM | #19 |
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11-13-2007, 02:16 PM | #20 |
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FWIW I have sourced Ante Pacem.
However your response does not make it clear to me that you understand my argument against your argument from probabilisitic theory, thus a quick example. Example One: Sum of many very small probabilities Whenever you walk into a room in which there are other people, because everyone has a birthday, there will be a small chance that another will share your birthday. In fact if there is only one person in the room that probability will be 1 in 365 (ignoring the leap year birthdays). How many people have to be in this room before the chance has risen to 50%? The answer is between 23 and 24 I think. And where more people are in that room, its a greater chance. The chance that noone shares a birthday becomes rapidly small over 30 odd, and converges on "unlikely" shortly thereafter as the numbers increase. I understand this. But you must understand this example deals with a distribution of small positive probabilities (1 in 365). Example Two: Sum of many very zero probabilities Is zero. End of the story. You need to argue that the Prosenes inscription has a small probability of being "christian", and that this probability is not zero. Perhaps you would like to set it at 1 chance in 365? This setting of the probability is not based on evidence. The setting is based on the conjecture that the inscription might in fact be christian. Do you agree with this? Best wishes, Pete Brown |
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