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04-26-2010, 02:30 PM | #51 | ||
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And I can copy this last post of yours 100% accurate, but you will have to pay. I am not infallible. I just need to get paid. You are just wasting time. |
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04-26-2010, 04:38 PM | #52 |
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Where did you find this information (concerning "Early Christian - before the 4th CE - Scribal practices)?
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04-26-2010, 05:00 PM | #53 | ||
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But there is no technique which gives a 100% guarantee of 100% accuracy in copying 100% of the time. If you think there is, I challenge you to find a professional proofreading or editing service (and there are plenty of these to be found online) which will give such a guarantee. I also challenge you, again, to provide an explanation of the existence of variations in scribal manuscripts of documents from before the age of print. I mentioned The Canterbury Tales because it was the first example that sprang to mind, but the phenomenon is a general one. |
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04-26-2010, 05:15 PM | #54 | |
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It is also important to consider the epoch. You earlier mentioned the manuscripts of The Canterbury Tales which are representative of 14th century practice. When discussing scribal activity with respect to the New Testament manuscripts specifically we also need to be aware that we could be covering a number of centuries. For example, the massive Differences between codices Sinaiticus and Vaticanus are attributable to scribal activity during the 4th century. This specific scribal task may have been in fact related to the production of the 50 copies of the "Constantine Bibles". We have no idea what the quality assurance practices were of the scribes who performed this task under the instruction of Constantine and the direct supervision of Eusebius, but it was obviously a monumental task. |
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04-26-2010, 07:40 PM | #55 | ||
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04-27-2010, 12:02 AM | #56 | ||||
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If I was a scribe I would guarantee you 100% accuracy or your money back. Quote:
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I will guarantee you a copy of your presentation or MASTER COPY with 100% accuracy WORD FOR WORD in English. Quote:
Please prove or demonstrate that a scribe made mistakes in "The Canterbury Tales". And then show what EXACTLY the scribe was asked to copy. |
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04-27-2010, 12:19 AM | #57 | |||||
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04-27-2010, 05:03 AM | #58 | |||
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You are just wasting time. Just put your money where your mouth is. You have not giving me a challenge since you yourself cannot demonstrate that you have any idea of the actual copying method of every version of "The Canterbury Tales" and the errors that may have been already in the manuscript before any scribe made copies. Please name one scribe who copied "The Canterbury Tales" and made a mistake? Quote:
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You MUST prove that a scribe was given one version of "The Canterbury Tales" and produced another version of his own by adding or removing words, and/or chapters without the expressed permission of the author or owner of the manuscript to be copied. It is quite illogical to see different versions of a manuscript and then think that it was the product of scribal error when the different versions were not at all written by scribes. You MUST provide sources external of the Church of Jesus believers of antiquity that claimed scribes were altering manuscripts without the permission of the author or owner of the manuscript. And, if the early printing methods are examined, you may find that they were PRONE to making many errors. |
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04-27-2010, 06:10 AM | #59 | ||||||||||
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The challenges are there. If you don't want to meet them, that's another matter. Quote:
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I don't know what each scribe was given to copy and neither does anybody else. What difference does it make? Quote:
No matter how you try to wriggle out of the implications, the fact remains that you have not given an explanation of the indisputable fact that the manuscripts are non-identical. Quote:
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Or you could look here: http://faculty.goucher.edu/eng330/ho...manuscript.htm or here: http://www.ualberta.ca/~sreimer/ms-c...e/scbl-err.htmI don't doubt it. I don't see how it has any relevance to the point I was making. |
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04-27-2010, 12:03 PM | #60 | ||||
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Your point is worthless. Please name a single scribe who copied any document and added, or removed words without the express permission of the owner, or author of the document. Quote:
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You have utterly failed to show that any scribe of antiquity made any errors or that all or any differences in any manuscript was the FAULT of scribes. You have utterly failed to show that any scribes in antiquity altered, removed, added, interpolated and redacted any writing WITHOUT the express permission of the author or owner of the material to be copied. |
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