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07-12-2010, 09:15 AM | #21 | ||
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Of course, Mark's Pilate is wholly fictional, as it's at odds with how he's presented in Josephus and Philo. |
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07-12-2010, 10:19 AM | #22 | ||
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But Hurtado is too much of a gentleman to bury me beneath evidence or refute my arguments. |
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07-12-2010, 10:26 AM | #23 | |
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Which, of course, only a professional NT scholar would think was true. We amateurs go and check. |
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07-12-2010, 02:58 PM | #24 | |
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BTW, on the related blurb of puerperal fever: it is plain rubbish to say that there was a substantially lower puerperal fever mortality with midwives than trained obstetricians before Semmelweiss. The infant/mother mortality has always been higher in midwife perinatal care than with doctors, which is something even today responsible midwives recognize. It is not that midwife deliveries are unsafe per se, but that in situations where either the mother or the infant are at some larger medical risk, the trained obstetrician in a medical setting has a much wider range of options at his or her disposal. There is simply no evidence that doctors in the old days had lower standards of hygiene than midwives that would make them more septic. This is the kind of dumb feminist psychobabble which helps or dignifies no-one. One of its early pioneers, Mary Wollstonecraft died herself of puerperal fever after her midwife mishandled a complicated delivery of her daughter Mary (Shelley) ! The story of Semmelweiss is a little more complicated than the wiki tendetious agenda, or a silly BBC documentary with identical catechism, indicate. For one, the news of the training physicians not washing their hands after handling cadavers caused a great embarrassment to the hospital where Semmelweiss worked because it was at variance with accepted norms of medical practice - even in his time (the 12% mortality at one of the two wards studied was impossibly high !). Florence Nightingale did not invent hospital sanitation; she simply insisted on it ! Two: Semmelwiess 'discovery' and crusade for antisepsis made him a celebrity and the news of his success in Vienna (after he addressed the Viennese Imperial Academy in 1851) travelled far and wide. He left for Budapest and stayed there even though he had a number of offers of prestigious posts. His methods were emulated. Among other things, the idiots at BBC maintained that his maternity hospital in Budapest had 33% mortality when Ignaz entered. In reality it was 6% and he brought it down to under 1%. Three: it is of course true that Semmelweiss suffered from mental illness and his 1861 book unfortunately witnesses his struggle with paranoia. But to paint his personal misfortune as the inevitable result of some generalized rejection by the medical establishment is utter nonsense. Both Lister and Pasteur learned about Semmelweiss' ideas and success the same year that he died. In case anyone's interested in the general 19th century developments in obstetrics and midwifery, I recommend Roy Porter's The Greatest Benefit to Mankind. (or via: amazon.co.uk) Best, Jiri |
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07-13-2010, 12:43 AM | #25 | ||
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Compared to the final penalty of earlier centuries is it not encouraging to contemplate that people may now laugh at these things? Is this not a step forward in itself? As far as Hurtado is concerned he seems to have made an impression amidst the theories of the origin of the nomina sacra in the Greek new testament, and is often cited for this observation .... “There is no undisputably Jewish manuscript |
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07-13-2010, 09:37 PM | #26 | |
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In this case though, I wouldn't take Hurtado's nonresponse as evidence that you are right. As others have stated, he probably just doess't want to waste his time on you. That doesn't mean he *could* present evidence that would sway you, but neither does it mean that you stumped him. |
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07-13-2010, 10:02 PM | #27 | |
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He claimed that Luke/Acts corroborated the existence of a brother of Jesus called James. |
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07-13-2010, 10:16 PM | #28 | |
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I overlooked this, and upon further reflection I think your original objection is justified. |
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07-13-2010, 10:34 PM | #29 | ||
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We do have corroboration of some characters. E.g., in Paul’s letter to the Galatians we have first-hand references to Kephas (Peter), James (Jesus’ brother), John (Zebedee), Barnabas, and Titus (all of whom are also mentioned in Luke-Acts.His point about James was part of a larger point about the corroboration of many people between the letters of Paul and Luke-Acts. If he was a regular member of the debates here, then he may have been familiar with the objection that we don't know who "James" is in the Acts. It may be an established belief in the scholarship, but I don't think a mythicist or a normalskeptic is likely to accept the premises that lead to such a belief. If Hurtado were more familiar with such a way of thinking, then he may have said, "...all of whom are also mentioned in Luke-Acts, Mark and Matthew," since James the brother of Jesus is most certainly mentioned in Mark and Matthew, though I know that the mythicists and the normalskeptics hold that Paul's mention of James, the brother of the Lord, still isn't the same James, which is where it really starts to look ridiculous for impartial observers. Come to think of it, if Hurtado really were familiar with such debates, I figure that he would have dismissed Steven Carr much more hastily. Hurtado seemed to be especially generous with Steven Carr. |
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07-14-2010, 03:20 AM | #30 | ||
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The enterprising ones provide repetitive ‘truthful’ assertions like a song: My darling Constantine, you know I love you. My darling Clementine, you know I do. What can anyone say to anybody that keeps repeating that what you are saying is a lie? |
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