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06-15-2012, 12:18 PM | #51 | ||
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06-15-2012, 12:36 PM | #52 |
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As a matter of fact there is no contradiction here. They can be built on the O/T and also be based on the person of Yeshu ben Pandera.
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06-15-2012, 04:52 PM | #53 | |
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All of Josephus' examples of similar syntax to that of Antiquities 20 (and they are only in some cases, as you admit) and dismissing the latter's word order as simply another example of that syntax, do nothing to address those problems. I outlined them earlier, but you have ignored them. The same goes for the letter-writing business. A person calling a respected figure "Lord" instead of by his name, is nowhere on the same level as Paul using "the Lord" to refer to a cosmic Son who is the creator and sustainer of the universe, or a "Lord of glory," or a "Lord" whose mystical body spans heaven and earth. Especially when that sort of thing is the exclusive application to be found in the epistles, with never an example of "the Lord" being used as clearly descriptive of a human man on earth--except by begging the question, which historicists are quite adept at doing. (I deal at length with this topic in my latest installment on Vridar, to be published in a day or two.) Your arguments are irrelevant because they are too insufficiently suitable comparisons to cast light on the unique Pauline and Josephan cases. Earl Doherty |
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06-15-2012, 05:34 PM | #54 |
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06-15-2012, 06:06 PM | #55 |
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I thought Spin's objection to my post was the use of introduction, in that as James had already been introduced, this was not an introduction. He may think this as well, but whatever his problems with calling my quotation an "introduction", as worded now my original post does not say what I meant it to, and Spin was correct at least in pointing this out. Unfortunately, I know what I had meant, and didn't bother to go back and re-read it because I was so certain he was objecting to the use of "introduction" here. At least my mistakes are getting better (more serious). The last debate we had he went on about my typos.
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06-15-2012, 06:37 PM | #56 | |
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While we are here, I may as well say how I think the interpolation got there. Origen, working from Hegesippus who gave Origen the idea that the fall of Jerusalem was related to the death of James, wrote his James material (Eusebius quotes the stuff in EH 2.23), confusing Hegesippus with Josephus (not uncommon in antiquity). A scribe finding αδελφος Ιησου λεγομενου χριστου missing Josephus "re"-inserted it in AJ 20.200, giving us the marked order not found in Origen. Now don't do it again. |
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06-15-2012, 07:18 PM | #57 | ||||||
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There is also Josephus' appreciation not just for variety (i.e., changing names or the way he refers to someone or something), but for "syntactic sophistication" (Mason's words), which (as any reader of Thucydides knows, often enough means syntactic complexity, novelty, and deviance. In fact, this he doesn't even limit this to syntax, but lexical choice as well. In book 1 of JW alone, there are at least for rare neuter substantives Josephus uses only once, and a number of other words (again, restricting this to just book 1) rarely found in Greek literature. Some words and phrases Josephus used are first attested to in his works, but then appear later, which means he may very well have introduced them. Quote:
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06-15-2012, 07:45 PM | #58 | ||
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And the reason you stopped responding was because I kept asking for an analysis of your claim about markedness. And as I expected, I'll never get one. Quote:
Spin: "It's obviously and interpolation, it's marked." Me: "Marked? In what way? How exactly are you using the term here, based on what linguistic work, and how does it apply?" Spin: "What's Markedness? DUH! Here's a google scholar search where the term is used in numerous different ways, many of which can't possibly apply. There, satisfied?" Me: "Not really. Josephus' syntax, especially when it comes to indentifications/introductions, varies widely, which is true of Greek in general." Spin: "There you go with your bait and switch text wall. It's clearly marked. How can it not be marked. Can't you see it's Marked?" Me: "I've shown the amount of variation, and that's my point: he varies, he uses novel phrases, etc. So why does this one seem odd such that interpolation seems likely?" Spin:"Stop baiting and switching your text walls. Clearly your examples are different from AJ 20.200, which is marked." Me: "HOW IS IT MAKRED DAMN IT!? Why can't you just demonstrate what linguistic work you are applying here and explain why you think it applies!!?" Spin: .... The rest is silence |
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06-15-2012, 11:17 PM | #59 | |
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The game is to show that any reference to jesus is an interpolation. Rule #1 is that all references are forgeries, when the evidence does not support this, refer back to rule #1. It's all a game There is nothing wrong with such games, just in believing in them :-) |
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06-15-2012, 11:57 PM | #60 | |
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You utterly fail to understand that we simply have at least TWO opposing sides or arguments. 1. Jesus was likely WHOLLY fabricated and Never did actually exist. 2. Jesus was likely NOT wholly fabricated and did actually exist as human. In any event it has been EXPOSED that there is NO evidence at all from any credible sources of antiquity to support the argument that Jesus was not likely to be fabricated. In antiquity the Myth Gods of Romans were WHOLLY Fabricated--Jesus was a God in the Bible of the Romans. |
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