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07-03-2012, 11:50 AM | #21 | ||||||
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"The opposite of [There exists x for which P(x) is true] is [For all x, P(x) is not true] (0.2.3)...These rules may seem reasonable and simple. Clearly the opposite of the (false) statement, "All rational numbers equal 1," is the statement, "There exists a rational number that does not equal one." However, by the same rules, the statement, "All eleven-legged alligators are orange with blue spots" is true, since if it were false, then there would exist a eleven-legged alligator that is not orange with blue spots. The statement "all eleven-legged alligators are black with white stripes" is equally true." On the side of the page, where the authors make a great many amusing, clever, and/or helpful points, they write "Statements that to the ordinary mortal are false or meaningless are thus accepted as true by mathematicians; if you object, the mathematician will retort, 'find me a counterexample.'" Hence the importance of distinguishing ontological truths and simple logical validity or even soundness. |
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07-03-2012, 11:52 AM | #22 |
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07-03-2012, 02:38 PM | #23 | |
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07-03-2012, 02:51 PM | #24 |
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07-03-2012, 05:27 PM | #25 | ||
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You know those mythicists authors who misquote early Christians writers and they make false claims about how gnostics believed in a merely mythical Jesus, and they claim that such a merely mythical Jesus is plainly seen in the writings of Paul. If so, that would also falsify the historical Jesus. Not that "falsification" is the best way to think about this stuff. It should be about choosing the theory that explains the evidence best. |
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07-03-2012, 06:07 PM | #26 | ||||
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Their historical Jesus was born and lived in obscurity, died without many noticing, then his followers were inspired somehow to turn him into a Jewish-Hellenistic hero with mythical features, and some of them lost any interest in the actual Jesus in favor of their creation. There's no way to falsify that. Quote:
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07-03-2012, 06:09 PM | #27 | |
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But that would be difficult to show, especially since it looks like some of them did believe he existed. And this is likely to be true even if they made stuff up about him. In those days the category of evidence-based history wasn't very distinct, or wasn't very distinct to most people - in those days, if you were inspired to think that something was true (e.g. something you "saw" in a dream or a vision), that was ok, and others might well accept it at face value. I guess you could call it fraud hyperbolically, but let's bear in mind that's not strictly accurate without further evidence to prove fraud. That's why "fiction" isn't quite the right category either. Fiction was fiction, but this kind of inspired pseudo-history and pseudo-biography was another thing. |
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07-03-2012, 06:50 PM | #28 | |||
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We can compare Suetonius "Lives of the Twelve Caesars" to any Jesus story and see that the Jesus stories are Myth Fables. Examine Life of Tiberius by Suetonius--The birth of Tiberius Quote:
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07-03-2012, 06:51 PM | #29 | ||
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But of course evidence like that doesn't have to exist in order for the position of a mythical Jesus to be generally accepted by reasonable people as probable. A lesser potential falsification would be that the early Christian writings shows mythical progression from God to man, rather than from man to God. Suppose Paul and the gospels of Mark and Q portrayed Jesus as God, with little or no humanity to be seen, and the derivative gospels of Matthew and Luke portrayed Jesus as purely man. If not falsify the historical Jesus, it would lend credibility to the theory that Jesus was merely myth, and it would have a place at the scholarly table. Critical scholars would generally accept it, and so would all of us. |
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07-03-2012, 06:57 PM | #30 | |||
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Additinionally, from the evidence we have, it seems that people did indeed distinguish eyewitness testimony from non-eyewitness testimony, and likewise distinguished "visions" from "actual events." This includes Christians (which is why the author of Luke goes out of his way to assert that his writings are from eye-witness investigations). The claim of Paul to have seen Jesus through revelation, a claim repeated over the centuries and into our own time, is not the same as claiming that he did actually walk on Earth. And that is what Paul and the gospel authors (among others) were saying. This kind of claim, that a person really did live and walk around with followers, is a quite different kind of claim. Hundreds of years before the first century, people were doubting the texts which served not only as the foundation for histories from Herodotus onwards, but also as a sort of "bible" for the Greeks (the Homeric epics). There is a marked trend from Herodotus onwards for historians to attempt to recover myths about individuals said to live hundreds and hundreds of years earlier by "rationalizing" these myths (Romulus and Remus weren't actually raised by wolves, but rather this particular myth developed because of X or Y). They also included notes of doubt about accounts and held more believable accounts by those who had seen the events in question. What we don't see, apart from the gospels, are accounts which are close enough to ancient biographies that numerous people have argued this is the genre to which they belong in which a person is said not to have worked wonders in some bygone age in some half-mythical region, but a couple of generations ago in nearby regions (places which were under control of the Romans, not far in some land barely known or heard of). Certainly, we have examples of legends growing around people whose historicity is difficult to establish, or at least questionable (e.g., Pythagoras or Apollonius of Tyana, who both probably lived, but our sources are quite late and full of mythic elements), but with all of these the following hold true: 1) Most historians think the individuals in question did exist and were historical people 2) Our sources are seperated by a century or more from the individual in question. For example, with Pythagoras we have a handful of scant references (none of which we can trace to a clear source) followed by full biographies written some 6-7 centuries after Pythagoras was said to have lived. By contrast, what we have with Jesus are, it appears, a number of accounts of his ministry beginning around 40 years after the time it occured. The first of these is as long as just about any biography we have from the ancient world, although it is much more poorly written than most and far more mythical/legendary than most as well. But neither this nor the subsequent accounts claim to be based on visions. And the length of time between them and the person they are about is comparatively short. Far, far, shorter than between clearly mythical persons and our earliest accounts of their actions, and far shorter than most references to likely historical people about whom myths and legends grew around. Quote:
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