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12-30-2005, 09:59 PM | #21 | |
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12-30-2005, 10:08 PM | #22 | ||||
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12-30-2005, 10:13 PM | #23 | |||
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12-30-2005, 10:29 PM | #24 | |||||
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2. Pseudonyms are a way of keeping your identity secret. Many of us here adopt pseudonyms for fear that our personal lives may be endangered if our identities are known. Some people just like using a certain handle which they generally have kept across board. When I first signed up to the internet community, I was known as "cweb255" just because it was what I used everywhere. Even now where I need a username for something I'm prone to use that name. Think of how you use jgibson000 instead of Jeffrey Gibson. It becomes habit, does it not? I also, though, tend to agree that it is sort of annoying when engaging in discussions. I guess that's why we have those lists which require full name and academic institution, no? Quote:
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Seriously though, I've debated Michael before, but many of his discussions are generally out of my interest. To be truthful, the entire quest for the historical Jesus is generally out of my main interest. I consider it a side project, something interesting to pursue apart from my serious academic interests. Matthean theology interests me far more. Chris |
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12-30-2005, 10:36 PM | #25 | |
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12-30-2005, 10:56 PM | #26 | |
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Here's the Chilton link: Authenticating the Words of Jesus & Authenticating the Activities of Jesus |
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12-31-2005, 05:35 AM | #27 | |
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12-31-2005, 06:03 AM | #28 | ||
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/AS...ternetinfidels Quote:
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12-31-2005, 09:20 AM | #29 | |
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As I understand it, evidence for some proposition P is just a fact or set of facts F that could be logically explained by supposing P to be true. We call the evidence strong or weak (or good or poor) according to our perception of the likelihood that P could be false notwithstanding F. If we think it very unlikely, then the evidence is strong. Otherwise it is not. Four books reporting the trial and crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth, were written, at the latest, sometime during the second century CE. That is a fact not in dispute. A possible explanation for that fact is that they record oral traditions about the actual trial and crucifixion of a Galilean preacher named Jesus. Therefore, the books are evidence that Jesus was tried and crucified. The question then becomes whether that evidence is sufficient to justify a belief that the trial and execution really occurred. It probably would be, if it were the only evidence we needed to concern ourselves with, but it is not. There are many other facts pertaining to Christianity's origins, and any proposed explanation must account somehow for all of the pertinent facts, not just some of them. Some of us think that when all the facts are considered, the best explanation includes a supposition that there was no trial or crucifixion because there was no Jesus. We think that some of the other evidence provides a stronger argument against Jesus' existence than the gospels provide for his existence. It eventually gets down to parsimony. Take everything we know for sure or with reasonable confidence about Christians during the first and second centuries. (That is not as much as most Christians think, but it is not the empty set, either.) Many possible explanations can be conjured up, and the facts will be evidence for all of them. And, every one of them will include a batch of assumptions, and so we try to put Occam's razor to work. A simplistic take on parsimony calls for preferring the explanation with the fewest assumptions. I defy anyone to actually enumerate all the assumptions of mythicists and historicists and declare who makes fewer. But I think there should be a place in our evaluations for the plausibility of our assumptions. Five assumptions that are easy to believe might be more justified than one that that seems highly improbable. However, I digress. The real debate over Christian origins is not whether there is evidence for one or another particular claim. There is evidence for all of them. The real debate is over which claim or set of claims the evidence shows to be most probably true. |
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12-31-2005, 09:23 AM | #30 | ||||||||
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