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09-11-2010, 07:06 AM | #21 |
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True, but that is also the state of the matter with regard to a great deal of ancient literature. I am not very comfortable with the idea of doubting everything that preceded the earliest known copy of a work. Manuscripts wear out and decay, especially papyrus, and even vellum is not indestructible.
How about something like a birth certificate? I have several certified copies of my own obtained by my parents and later myself. The earliest ones are probably datable to when I entered school at about 6 years of age, and this one includes even the time of birth. Later ones I obtained for college or maybe my first jobs are shorter and omit things like time of birth. None of them are dated wrt the date the certified copy was made. I learned that the department of vital statistics covering Euclid, Ohio, started to send copies of only the first page of a two page form in the mid 1970s, to discourage folks from using them for astrological horoscopes. The second page contained some medical detail about the birth, including exact time, etc. So, depending on when the certified copy was produced, the level of detail is different. Now, suppose that I lost the oldest copy, and in the meantime the Department of Vital Statistics were to have burned to the ground during some catastrophe in 1990. Later, the jack booted FBI raids my home because they suspect I am a terrorist after it is reported to them that I was friends with an Iranian student, Muhammed Reza Seyfi, at Huntington College in Indiana between 1977 & 1978. They would seize my copies of my birth certificate along with my other incriminating papers (you know, the crazy has-to-be-wrong stuff I post here). They go to the Dept of Vital Statistics and learn that all records before 1990 were destroyed, but that the form of the surviving copies indicate that they were produced in the late 1970s or early 80s. "How convenient!" they exclaim, and then proceed to question my birth records. How do they know that anything produced about me prior to 1990 is authentic, and not a clever fabrication to hide the fact that I am an undercover agent for those damn liberals who was colluding with Iranian expatriates hiding from the Shah's secret police (Reza was in fact afraid of them, even in quiet Huntington), no doubt because of a plot to bring Ayatollah Khomeini back to Iran and overthrow the Shah (which did indeed happen 3 years later)? Stephan Huller might then be correct to interject that it is interesting that this association happened in the hometown of Dan Quayle, who was in his freshman year in Congress, and asks the fair question "Were Mr Hindley and Mr Seyfi complicit in setting the stage for the 1992 Potato/Potatoe fiasco during his time as US Vice President under the elder Bush?" Meanwhile, on the basis of this uncertainty about the fact of my birth, the FBI has the justice department strip me of my US citizenship and deports me to Iran. On the way to the airport, under heavy chains, I meet up with ex president Barak Hussein Obama, similarly deposed, stripped of his citizenship, and on his way to be deported to Kenya. I am sure, though, that my friend Reza will meet me cheerfully at the airport, to offer me asylum in the name of President for life Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. When that time comes, Stephan will undoubtedly research the matter and find that Reza left Huntington College in 1978 to enroll at an Engineering school in Fort Wayne, and that this was the same major as that of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad while at Iran University of Science and Technology (IUST), thus quelling any uncertainty about the accuracy of the history created for me. The "truth" will, I am sure, be so obvious that no academic could be believed if he were to oh-so-erroneously say I was really born in Euclid, Ohio, in 1956, based on my own recollections in web posts on electronic bulletin boards between 1995 and 2010. DCH |
09-11-2010, 08:55 AM | #22 |
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I find it extremely amusing that people here are trying to use documents of which there are no originals in an attempt to date the writings of Irenaeus. This is like trying to date the Pauline writings using the very same Pauline writings as the corroborative source of itself.
The contents of the writings of "Against Heresies" clearly show that the author is NOT credible and was CONTRADICTED by many Church writers. "Against Heresies" shows signs that it was NOT really known among the Church writers at the time period of the 2nd century or that the writer himself was NOT familiar with actual events of that period. The author of "Against Heresies" implied that the Church was UNIFIED in their BELIEFS about Jesus yet in a most unprecedented and absurd manner demonstrated that his OWN claim was FALSE. The author of "Against Heresies" wrote and PREACHED that Jesus was about 50 years old when he suffered under CLAUDIUS. There is NO EVIDENCE from antiquity whatsoever that such a teaching was ORTHODOX or ACCEPTED by any Jesus believers in the 2nd century. Justin Martyr showed that Christians were NOT united in their beliefs in the 2nd century. Celsus in "Against Celsus" implied that people Christians were NOT united in their beliefs in the 2nd century. Tertullian implied that people called Christians were NOT united in the beliefs about Jesus. Origen wrote that people called Christians were NOT united in their beliefs. And it is EVIDENT just from examining writings from other sources, like Theophilus of Antioch and Athenagoras, that people called Christians were NOT unified in the 2nd century. The author of "Against Heresies" seems NOT to know the chronological order of Emperors of Rome and/or governors which was CRITICAL for historical purposes. No Church writer appeared to be AWARE of or addressed the Massive errors in "Against Heresies" and it is even more extra-ordinarily inexplicable that these Massive errors are found in another writing attributed to Irenaeus. The author of "Against Heresies" demonstrated that he was completely incompetent and had very little knowledge of the very writings of which he wrote about. The very fact that NO Church writers addressed the apparent incompetency and massive errors in "Against Heresies" and "Demonstration of Apostolic Preaching" tend to indicate that his writings were NOT circulated among the Heretics and writers of the 2nd century. |
09-11-2010, 09:04 AM | #23 | ||||||||
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Epiphanius lived in the 4th century, he was born post Constantine. Anybody after Eusebius, is suspect in my book. Hippolytus makes Paul Bunyan look like the vice president of R&D for Stihl chain saws: Quote:
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I don't accept, as axiomatic, the notion that so and so MUST have had xyz available to him/her. Two centuries after the fact, they easily could have possessed nothing more than Latin translations. Another two centuries, and they would have possessed only Arabic translations to read!!!! Nonsense. We cannot assume that anyone had any particular Greek original document. The whole "Irenaeus" business, as far as I can tell, is utterly mythical, a fabrication of Eusebius, until someone produces a reference with some teeth in it, and not yet another iteration of Larry, Moe and Curly. Quote:
While, I genuinely appreciate your effort, and I respect your scholarly accomplishments, I simply cannot accept your conclusions, or perhaps they are primarily your opinions, I am not sure: How do you know the dates for creation of these fragmentary manuscripts? Regarding the papyrus from Egypt, since it is well established that documents from that 1000 year old trash heap were often REUSED, how do we conclude that document xyz from that location was written in 195 CE, or 237 CE, or etc, etc, and NOT eighth century...?? We cannot rely upon the location within the trash heap, if that degree of precision had been applied, during the excavation, for it is clear that folks went rummaging about that trash heap, looking for useful objects, for CENTURIES, nor can we rely upon a date written on the same individual papyrus document, again, because of the re-use problem.... That leaves handwriting analysis...Then, we must ask, who was the source of analysis, and upon which criteria were these (very early) dates elaborated? Were these Christian handwriting experts? avi |
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09-11-2010, 09:40 AM | #24 |
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"The first two books of Irenæus Against Heresies have been translated by Dr. Roberts. The groundwork of the translation of the third book, and that portion of the fourth book which is continued in this volume, has been furnished by the Rev. W. H. Rambaut. An attempt has been made, in rendering this important author into English, to adhere as closely as possible to the original. It would have been far easier to give a loose and flowing translation of the obscure and involved sentences of Irenæus; but the object has been studiously kept in view, to place the English reader, as much as possible, in the position of one who has immediate access to the Greek or Latin text."
"It is certain that Irenæus was bishop of Lyons, in France, during the latter quarter of the second century." "he succeeded Pothinus as bishop of Lyons, probably about a.d. 177. His great work Against Heresies was, we learn, written during the episcopate of Eleutherus, that is, between a.d. 182 and a.d. 188, for Victor succeeded to the bishopric of Rome in a.d. 189. This new bishop of Rome took very harsh measures for enforcing uniformity throughout the Church as to the observance of the paschal solemnities. On account of the severity thus evinced, Irenæus addressed to him a letter (only a fragment of which remains), warning him that if he persisted in the course on which he had entered, the effect would be to rend the Catholic Church in pieces. This letter had the desired result; and the question was more temperately debated, until finally settled by the Council of Nice." http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf01.ix.i.html "the Greek text from the recently discovered Philosophoumena of Hippolytus; and the further addition of thirty-two fragments of a Syriac version of the Greek text of Irenæus, culled from the Nitrian collection of Syriac mss. in the British Museum...." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hippolytus_of_Rome |
09-11-2010, 10:18 AM | #25 | |
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THE DATE OF ADV. VAL.There you go. This critic thinks Tertullian translated Irenaeus independently of the Latin translation preserved for us, although the earlier resource I linked to thinks there are too many verbatum similarities to make independent translations likely. DCH |
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09-11-2010, 10:41 AM | #26 | ||||||
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Dr. Roberts...
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Dave's reference here's the quote from that book: Quote:
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This guy has no idea when anything was written. He is free to express his opinion. The fact that so and so references event 123, but not event 789, in no way convinces me, that it was written before event 789 took place. Quote:
Or, alternatively, maybe "Tertullian" wrote the whole thing.... Quote:
Hmm. Then, someone has the original documents to show that Tertullian wrote incorrectly? Gosh, holy cow. So, someone, somewhere knows enough to proclaim to the heavens that Tertullian confabulated, about specific point ABC, but at the same time, insist that Tertullian did NOT confabulate about point xyz????? Quote:
I am going out, now, to talk with used car salesmen, to gain a bit more clarity about today's weather forecast predictions. avi |
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09-11-2010, 01:41 PM | #27 | |||||||
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Greek had a significant influence on Gaul. Tribes which tried to operate independently of Rome issued coins with Greek characters. For a good while, the support for the Roman military was staffed by Greek speakers, and the locals got their first exposure to these folks, not the invading soldiers. In time this changed, especially as Rome found these good Celts and Teutons to be damn fine soldiers, and made efforts to offer Roman citizenship to the local leadership and actively recruited for their Legions and Auxiliaries, which led to Roman citizenship. They may have been Barbarians, but they weren't stupid. They saw a good thing coming. Quote:
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DCH |
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09-11-2010, 03:42 PM | #28 | |
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Again, the claims that there is an abundance of evidence for Irenaeus in the 2nd century has turned out to be erroneous. The date of writing of the LATIN version of "Agaiasnt Heresies" is NOT KNOWN.
We have an abundance of speculation from apologetic sources. Quote:
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09-12-2010, 04:43 PM | #29 | |
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Heresies go hand in fist with orthodoxies, and while there is a demonstrable lack of evidence such that it cannot be safely established that either orthodoxies or heresies existed before Nicaea, we have an abundance of evidence establishing the existence of orthodoxies and heresies after Nicaea. The war related councils of Antioch and Nicaea heralded in a revolution "from the top" over almost all aspects of the historical Graeco-Roman civilisation. Examining all the available evidence alone and without preconception, the argument which best explains the patterns of this evidence is that Irenaeus is simply an imperially sponsored forgery, designed (perhaps in retrospect - ie: later 4th or 5th century) to take the heat off and to historically disemble the utterly disharmonious reception of othodoxy of Constantine's Christian cult. That the writings of Irenaeus (as found for example cited within the "Historia Ecclesiastica") represent a retrojection of the 4th century politics into centuries past is commensurate in modus operandi with the forgeries and false documentation found in the 4th century imperially sponsored "Historia Augusta" - a known forgery. |
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09-12-2010, 10:03 PM | #30 | ||
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