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06-17-2010, 01:00 PM | #21 | |
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The ABE is the "best explanation." Why would I not accept it? I was the one who told you about it. The ABE is a bit subjective, of course, and it is not for finding the TRUTH - just the "best explanation." |
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06-17-2010, 01:07 PM | #22 | |||
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I need to go get some caffeine. :-P |
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06-17-2010, 01:12 PM | #23 | ||
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06-17-2010, 01:47 PM | #24 | |
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In the case of an individuals' historicity, the primary evidence would be things like personal letters written by the person, first-person accounts of interactions with that person, contemporaneous busts/portraits of the person, etc. Along with this, we would have to establish that different accounts of this person are indeed independent. That Tiberius was a Roman emperor is corroborated by independent secondary sources; sources where there is no question whether they are truly independent. That Jesus caused a ruckus in the temple does not share the same quality of secondary evidence. NT scholarship doesn't have the luxury of havinig the type of primary evidence that other fields of history have. At best, the primary evidence in NT scholarship would be "Christianity (or Christianities) happened". The secondary evidence is what these Christianities wanted us to believe about their own history. However, NT historians skip a step and promote what in reality is secondary evidence to primary evidence. Even worse than this, they arbitrarily select one particular Christian community's sacred books for their "primary evidence" and disregard the rest. Almost no NT historian has addressed this sort of sleight of hand. That they're "cheating", for want of a better word. Old Testament scholarship actually got on the ball and started following the historiography of other fields of history instead of biblical historiography. Using archaeology as primary evidence and Jewish writings (i.e. what certain communities of Jews wanted to believe) as secondary evidence. This has gotten the description of "Biblical Minimalism", which if I recall correctly you've used in a derogatory manner. Biblical minimalism is trying to follow the basic methodology of how history is done in other fields of study. NT scholarship has yet to catch up. And instead of acknowledging the flaws in their methodology, NT historians compare the amorphus "mythicists" to creationists and holocaust deniers. |
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06-17-2010, 01:51 PM | #25 | |||||
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You can compare Luke to some of the standard histories of the time. None are anonymous. Ancient historians usually gave some idea of why they think something happened, not just stories handed down from the earliest days... Quote:
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So he didn't start out in the opposing camp and move to leadership - he started out in the leadership and was fictionally portrayed as in the opposing camp much later. I don't know why you think that myths don't involve changing status of characters. Have you looked at any of the Greek myths? |
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06-17-2010, 02:37 PM | #26 | |||||||
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It was spamandham. He objected: Quote:
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I have only a facile familiarity with the Greek myths, so maybe there are some good examples of a character changing from one camp to another. I know that it can happen in fiction. Like, you see it in Pride and Prejudice or in His Dark Materials. Let me know if you think you have a good comparison to the shifting position of James. |
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06-17-2010, 02:54 PM | #27 | ||||
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Only by ignoring everything we know about literature, myth, history...
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06-17-2010, 03:04 PM | #28 | ||
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That is the sort of things they need to win the New Testament debates. When I used the phrase, "primary evidence," I didn't mean it in any technical sense. I only meant to say that the New Testament has the best evidence available to find the best explanations for the origins of Christianity. Minimalists and mythicists must also rely on the New Testament to make their judgments. None of us have any choice, because the New Testament contains most or all of the earliest documents that pertain to the origins of Christianity. To rely on the New Testament is to rely on the best evidence available. You may not judge the New Testament to be good enough evidence to make conclusions of any sort, and I think Toto and Robert Price and R. Joseph Hoffman may agree with you, but, if we are talking about the way normal history is done, then it is done using the best evidence available, which means relying on the contents of the New Testament. It is almost never appropriate to throw up your hands and claim that all analysis and all conclusions are useless. That may be appropriate when we genuinely have no relevant knowledge of a particular topic. In this case, we do have relevant knowledge. We have detailed Christian myths and letters of Paul from the first and second centuries. It is not the evidence we would really like, maybe not what you would call "primary evidence." But, it is the best evidence, and it is our duty to make the best sense of it. That is the way history is done. |
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06-17-2010, 03:29 PM | #29 | ||||
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Bummer. I expect, at least, that the sources that claim a downgraded James (synoptic gospels) should follow patterns that are a little different from the sources that claim an upgraded James (Paul). Is there a scholar or set of publications who you would say best represents your own model for the origins of Christianity? |
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06-17-2010, 03:30 PM | #30 |
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Toto, if it isn't too much trouble, I would love to know if you accept some possible historical explanations based on text as more probable than other possible historical explanations based on text.
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