FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Yesterday at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 07-14-2008, 05:25 PM   #1
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Marion
Posts: 114
Default Historical Methodology

Some of you may realize I am new here and it may be unclear that I am struggling with understanding the approach to history that is prevelant here. While I believe that literary criticism is a valid field and certainly worth the investiment I have a difficult time resting upon it entirely. How reliable do you feel literary criticism is in determining "fact" from "fiction".

How should our beliefs affect our approach to history?

Is it possible to approach history as an "objective" 3rd party?

How much speculation should the historian allow into his theory?
stonewall1012 is offline  
Old 07-14-2008, 06:22 PM   #2
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default





An Epigram on Apollonius of Tyana

This article has been extracted from:
An Epigram on Apollonius of Tyana
C. P. Jones
The Journal of Hellenic Studies,
Vol. 100, Centennary Issue. (1980),
pp. 190-194.

Quote:
An inscription of major importance, now in the New Museum of Adana, contains an epigram on Apollonius of Tyana. Almost simultaneously, a preliminary text has been provided by E. L. Bowie, and a full publication with discussion and photograph by G. Dagron and J. Marcillet-Jaubert. I offer here a text, translation, and commentary, and look for a historical and cultural setting.

The inscription is cut on a single large block, now damaged on the left, which originally served as an architrave or lintel. The photograph (PLATE Ib) makes detailed comment on the palaeography superfluous: but it is worth noting the sign of punctuation ( after XXXXX and of elision (~) after rho'; the leaf filling the vacant space at the end of line 4; and generally the very affected script, notably the rho shaped like a shepherd's crook, the complicated xi and the lyre-shaped omega. This strange lettering makes it more than usually hazardous to date the inscription from this feature alone. A date in the third or fourth century seems roughly right, and would accord with the content of the epigram.

The origin of the stone is also uncertain, though it is presumably a place in eastern, 'level', Cilicia. An attractive suggestion, independently made by Bowie and the other two editors, is the coastal city of Aegaeae. This is closely connected with Apollonius: the young sage received his Pythagorean training in the city, and began his religious career by residing in the famous sanctuary of Asclepius. His stay in Aegaeae was subsequently narrated by one of the citizens, a certain Maximus . However, the claims of a city closer to Adana should not be ignored - Tarsus. Apollonius began his studies in Tarsus, but in disgust at its immorality moved to its rival Aegaeae; later, however, after he had interceded for the city with the emperor Titus, it considered him a 'founder and mainstay'; and he also performed a miraculous cure there.

I propose the following text and translation:

'This man, named after Apollo,
and shining forth Tyana,
extinguished the faults of men.
The tomb in Tyana (received) his body,
but in truth heaven received him
so that he might drive out the pains of men
(or:drive pains from among men) .'


--- Ancient inscription, translated C. P. Jones

Thus restored and interpreted, the epigram speaks of Apollonius as a being more than human, if not explicitly as a hero or god. The building on which it was inscribed seems to have contained his statue; it could well have resembled the 'small temple' of Polemo in Smyrna. Notoriously, the emperors forbade the worship of Roman governors which had been usual under the republic: but divine honours rendered by a city to its notable citizens or benefactors, such as Dio Chrysostom's mother or the sophist Polemo, are sporadically found under the empire.
The history of Apollonius' posthumous reputation is long and complex, and it is natural to ask if the epigram can be given a definite place in it. The first steps towards his cult may already have been taken in his lifetime: according to Philostratus, the Spartans were ready to worship him as a god but Apollonius declined 'so as not to incur envy' (VA iv 3 I ) .In Ephesus he ended a plague, and there is some evidence that he was subsequently worshipped there in the guise of Heracles Alexikakos [34]. [FN:34 Lact. div. inst. v 3.14-15]

Other cities in which he was remembered as a holy man, such as Aegaeae and Tarsus, might also have founded cults of him, more probably after his death than before. As is natural, the chief centre of his cult was his birthplace, Tyana. The emperor Caracalla founded a sumptuous shrine of him there: it seems likely, however, especially in view of the cults of him elsewhere, that worship had been paid to him at Tyana well before Caracalla. [35]. There may even have been an earlier sanctuary built at imperial expense. [36]

It cannot therefore be assumed that the epigram is subsequent to Philostratus merely because it implies Apollonius' divinity. However, there is another element of his posthumous reputation which might provide a clue: his use by the opponents of Christianity. [37] It is worth recalling the more notable allusions to Apollonius in the pagan literature of the third and fourth centuries, and asking if they help to date the present epigram. Porphyry, in his work Against the Christians, cited Apollonius together with Moses and Apuleius as great thaumaturges. [38] An oracle preserved in the 'Tubingen Theosophy' is a reply to one who asked if a pure life could bring a man 'near to God'; Apollo replied that such a privilege was granted to very few, Hermes Trismegistos, Moses. [38]

This oracle may come from a pagan source of the third century, rather than being a Christian fraud of the fourth: if not from Porphyry himself, it expresses ideas related to his. [40] At the beginning of the fourth century, Sosianus Hierocles, in his Lover of Truth, argued simultaneously that Apollonius was a greater thaumaturge than Jesus, and yet that his admirers regarded him 'not as a god, but as a man dear to the gods'. [41]

A weakness of Hierocles' case, as he seems to have recognized, was that Apollonius had in fact been regarded by some as a god; [42] [FN:32 Lact. Div Ins.v 3.14] and Hierocles was also hard put to show that Philostratus was less credulous than the evangelists. [43][FN:43 It is to this point that Eusbius' reply is mainly directed].

A number of sources show the intense interest in Apollonius of pagans living in the late fourth century. The strongly anti-Christian Eunapius declared that Philostratus should have called his work not The Life of Apollonius but A Visit of God to Mankind. [44][FN:44 VS 2.1.4 (Loeb p. 346); the reference 1s presumably to VA i 9.] Eunapius also compares his teacher, the Neoplatonist Chrysanthius, with Pythagoras, Archytas of Tarentum, Apollonius, 'and those who revered (npoo~vvjoav~cs) Apollonius', 'all of whom merely seemed to have a body and to be men'. [45][VS 23.1.8].

In the contemporary west, Apollonius became the device of militant iaganism. Nicomachus Flavianus, one of Eugenius' most prominent supporters, either adapted or translated Philostratus' The appear ance of Apollonius on 'contorniates' probably expresses the same atmosphere.[47]

The activity of Nicomachus is inseparable from another work also probably of the late fourth century, the Historia Augusta. The author refers to Apollonius in two passages, both of which are relevant to the question of his cult.

The first is notorious. Severus Alexander had in his lararium not only the deified emperors but optimos electoset animas sanctiores, including Apollonius and, so a contem- porary author averred, Christ, Abraham, Orpheus, and others of the like. [48] The distinction between Apollonius and the other 'souls' may suggest that the author found him in his source and was inspired to add the three others: there is nothing inherently unlikely in Alexander's worshipping a person to whom his divine father had erected a sanctuary. [49] The other names, however, clearly reflect the pagan polemics of the late fourth century. [50]

The second reference to Apollonius is equally revealing. The emperor Aurelian, marching east against palmyra, was blocked by the resistance of Tyana and determined to destroy it. However, he had a vision of Apollonius, 'that sage of the most celebrated fame and authority, an ancient philosopher, truly a friend of the gods, [51] himself worthy to be worshipped as a divinity (numen)'. Aurelian recognized the 'venerable philosopher' from the portraits which he had seen in many temples [52] and, dissuaded from his purpose, promised him 'a portrait, statues, and a temple'. The historian proceeds to extol Apollonius as one who 'gave life to the dead, and said and did much that was more than human'; the curious are referred to the books written about him in Greek; in fact the author himself, 'if the favour of the great man permits', will write his own brief account (HA Aurel. xxiv 2 9 ) . It is clear from the mention soon after of a translator called Nicomachus (ibid. xxvii 6) that he is thinking of the translation of Nicomachus Flavianus; probably the whole incident is drawn from another work of Nicomachus, the Annales. [53] However, the author has not only read Nicomachus, but imbibed some of his spirit. Apollonius is 'more than human', a saviour, and his 'favour' still operates beneficently in human affairs.

The way in which the Historia Augusta talks of Apollonius and his continuing influence on mankind recalls the new epigram, and it is tempting to place it in the context of the struggle waged by paganism and Christianity in the fourth century. [54] Yet it has been seen that such language does not go far, if at all, beyond the domestic divinisation exemplified by many funeral epigrams of the high empire, so that a third century date is not to be rejected. But if the date must therefore remain in doubt, there is no doubt of the importance of this new text for the history of Apollonius and his legend.

C. P. JONES
University of Toronto
1980

Best wishes,


Pete
mountainman is offline  
Old 07-14-2008, 06:40 PM   #3
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by stonewall1012 View Post
Some of you may realize I am new here and it may be unclear that I am struggling with understanding the approach to history that is prevelant here. While I believe that literary criticism is a valid field and certainly worth the investiment I have a difficult time resting upon it entirely. How reliable do you feel literary criticism is in determining "fact" from "fiction".
Literary criticism does not pretend to separate fact from fiction. It merely helps you understand the document you are reading.

Quote:
How should our beliefs affect our approach to history?
If your life or eternal salvation depends on a certain set of historical facts, you should probably avoid the field of history.

Quote:
Is it possible to approach history as an "objective" 3rd party?
Why not? But you have to not care too much about the results.

Quote:
How much speculation should the historian allow into his theory?
In the field of ancient history, it's all speculation.
Toto is offline  
Old 07-14-2008, 07:18 PM   #4
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by stonewall1012 View Post
How much speculation should the historian allow into his theory?
In the field of ancient history, it's all speculation.
The speculation needs to explain the evidence or lack thereof and is thus constrained by all the evidence which may be admitted to the field of ancient history.
mountainman is offline  
Old 07-14-2008, 07:18 PM   #5
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Marion
Posts: 114
Default

"If your life or eternal salvation depends on a certain set of historical facts, you should probably avoid the field of history."

That's a pretty limited view of what it means to believe... For example Philosophical Materialist believe that matter is all there is or ever will be. Can that assertion be proven? Is it known only through evidence? Can the assertion be tested? The the assertion be implimented in any way?

If you wish to believe that "to believe" is to hold to "eternal salvation" you might want to re think that... I don't think that "to believe" by a buddist monk is the same as "to believe" as a follower of Islam.


"It merely helps you understand the document you are reading."

I would agree with that assessment except that "understanding" is a very loaded term. Philosophically speaking, to ignore that implication is to turn a blind eye to its power.

"Why not? But you have to not care too much about the results."

So your telling me you don't care if Genesis 1:1 is an accurate historical rendering of how the universe began? Your telling me you don't care one way or another if Muhammad atually had a conversation with Allah? You have no interest in whether "Jesus" rose from the dead or not? You are not allowing your Western 21st century male capatalist liberally educated life affect the way you "understand" and read history? I think there are those who would disagree with you

Isn't that the point of deconstructionism?

"In the field of ancient history, it's all speculation."
Thats a bug bunch of bull... wether you think the donation of Constantine is a forgery or not we have the document. You can either believe the current understanding (since the 1500 cent) that it is or you can blow it off. But the entire field is NOT just speculation. Yes there are assumptions; yes presupposions, yes some speculation. But the entire thing is not ALL speculation. That's a nihilists perspective,
stonewall1012 is offline  
Old 07-14-2008, 07:54 PM   #6
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

stonewall - I wish you would learn to use the quote format.

Notice I didn't talk about belief in general - I qualified it to belief in historical facts that are necessary for some external reason.

And of course, the speculation has to be tested against the evidence, but there is precious little evidence from the first century.

What is your theory of history?
Toto is offline  
Old 07-14-2008, 08:57 PM   #7
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Marion
Posts: 114
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
stonewall - I wish you would learn to use the quote format.

Notice I didn't talk about belief in general - I qualified it to belief in historical facts that are necessary for some external reason.

And of course, the speculation has to be tested against the evidence, but there is precious little evidence from the first century.

What is your theory of history?
Theory of history, I guess I'm not sure how your using that term; do you mean is history cyclic or linear? Are you meaning my methodological approach to history? I have a pretty good idea what you might mean but I'm unsure as to how your employing that term. In my view theory and method are usually the same thing.
stonewall1012 is offline  
Old 07-14-2008, 11:56 PM   #8
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by stonewall1012 View Post
whether you think the donation of Constantine is a forgery or not we have the document. You can either believe the current understanding (since the 1500 cent) that it is or you can blow it off. But the entire field is NOT just speculation. Yes there are assumptions; yes presupposions, yes some speculation. But the entire thing is not ALL speculation. That's a nihilists perspective,
It is the evidence that needs to be confronted and explained since that is what we have (or do not have). Thus from my perspective the field of ancient history and its methodolgy must constantly and without inconsistency as best as it is able to explain all the evidence we have.

What is the evidence which is currently published concerning the period of the first three hundred years -- presumed to be the ground of "christian origins"? I have listed this evidence at a page entitled: Early Christian "Epigraphic Habit"

My opinion is that these citations either substantiate or do not substantiate the literary record purportedly assembled by Eusebius Pamphilus of Caesarea under the probably sponsorship of Constantine between the years of 312 to 324 CE in or around Rome.

Best wishes,


Pete
mountainman is offline  
Old 07-15-2008, 02:05 AM   #9
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: San Bernardino, Calif.
Posts: 5,435
Default

Your questions cannot be usefully answered in the written equivalent of sound bites, but I'll take a shot at them anyway.

Quote:
Originally Posted by stonewall1012 View Post
How should our beliefs affect our approach to history?
What we believe about the past should be consistent with what we think we know about the present.

Quote:
Originally Posted by stonewall1012 View Post
Is it possible to approach history as an "objective" 3rd party?
Considering the scare quotes, I'll say no. But I'll also say that we ought to study history as disinterestedly as we can within the constraints of our human nature.

Quote:
Originally Posted by stonewall1012 View Post
How much speculation should the historian allow into his theory?
It depends on what you call speculation. We have evidence about what happened in the past. That evidence tells us nothing itself. Historiography, at some level, is nothing more than formulating theories to explain the evidence. As some people see it, any theory is nothing but so much speculation.
Doug Shaver is offline  
Old 07-15-2008, 03:15 AM   #10
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: N/A
Posts: 4,370
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by stonewall1012 View Post
"If your life or eternal salvation depends on a certain set of historical facts, you should probably avoid the field of history."
Such a statement reveals a strange ignorance of the history of scholarship! It's probably merely the words of an uneducated man.

Quote:
"In the field of ancient history, it's all speculation."

Thats a bug bunch of bull... wether you think the donation of Constantine is a forgery or not we have the document. You can either believe the current understanding (since the 1500 cent) that it is or you can blow it off. But the entire field is NOT just speculation. Yes there are assumptions; yes presupposions, yes some speculation. But the entire thing is not ALL speculation. That's a nihilists perspective,
No indeed. This is not a disagreement between Christian and atheist, but between the educated, of both creeds, and a few uneducated people.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
Roger Pearse is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 12:19 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.