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Old 02-28-2005, 02:45 PM   #301
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
bfniii, perhaps we should apply your own criteria to a miracle claim from another religion.

According to Muslim tradition, this refers to an actual miracle of Islam: Mohammed caused the Moon to split into two pieces.

OK, here we go:

1. Could the storyteller arrange for this to happen? No, a storyteller can't split the Moon.

2. Could it be a mass hallucination? No, thousands (maybe millions) of people must have seen it.

3. Were there eyewitnesses? Yes, Mohammed and those with him (plus many others over half the planet...)

4. Do we have eyewitness accounts? Yes, several (apparently there are hadiths too).

4. Are there any contemporary refutations? None are known.

Therefore it must have happened.

Does this mean that you'll be reporting to your local mosque tomorrow?
if a miracle did happen, is there a reason why i should devote my life to mohammed?
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Old 02-28-2005, 03:28 PM   #302
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
WTF is "historical agnosticism?"
the position that no one can know what happened during any one particular period of antiquity and therefore no one can say whether an event really hapenned or not. that person would base their decisions on lack of historical facts from a particular place or time.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
No, I am talking about empirical methodology. You want to assert against all evidence and logic that a dead guy came back to life 2000 years ago. Since it is physically impossible for dead guys to come back to life it is incumbant upon you to provide some pretty good evidence for such an absurd assertion. Thus far you have presented no evidence at all that this dead guy even existed, much less that he came back to life. Therefore, as it stands, you made an assertion and failed to support it. I have made no counter assertion, I've only pointed out that you've failed to prove yours.
what is continually escaping you that i am pointing out is that you are making historical claims and this response proves it. alternate versions of history represented here are that people don't come back to life after death or that the person didn't even exist in the first place. although you can't see it, you are advocating alternate versions of history. one is that if there was a Jesus, He wasn't crucified or that He was crucified and didn't rise. another would be that there wasn't a Jesus.

why do you ask for proof or evidence of a miracle? what form would that proof come in?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
Yoiu seem to have the notion that we are both looking at a real historical phenomenon (ie. people who said they saw a dead guy come back to life 2000 years ago) and that we are discussing possible explanations for that event. You are mistaken in that presumption.
that's not what my statement said. what i said is that the fact that you question one particular version of history presupposes that you favor another, otherwise the questions would never even come up.

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Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
We are looking at a story in a book (actually, four contradictory stories)
what are these contradictions?

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Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
written long after the alleged facts
how long is long?

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Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
by unknown authors
why do they have titles today?

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Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
who did not witness this alleged event and did not know anyone else who witnessed the event
you know this for a fact?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
there are also a number of demonstrable fictions, factual errors, historical errors, geographical errors, legal errors, and historical anachronisms.
what would these errors be?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
It is your position that all four of these stories are somehow literally historically true (even the stuff that contradicts the other stuff) and my position is "prove it."
as i asked in the beginning of this thread, what reason do we have to believe otherwise?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
Demanding an alternative explanation for a mythological event is silly.
i have asked why you think it is mythological. i have asked if the bible is false, what is true?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
Do you believe that Athena guided Odysseus on his way back to Ithaca? If not, then how the heck did he make it back home?
is it accurate to compare homer's work to the bible?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
Yes, I assume that the physically impossible is physically impossible until proven otherwise. This is not just rational but necessary to empirical method.
this is an incorrect inference. you infer that the bible recounts the impossible which is not the case. the bible claims that an omnipotent god performed miracles which is certainly not impossible. the question then becomes why you do or don't believe in a supernatural god, not the credibility of the bible.

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Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
It is not necessary to formulate an historical alternative to a fictional story.
the fact that you presume it to be fictional is the reason why your claim should be questioned.

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Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
What unfalsifiable position have I taken?
that of asking for proof (that even you haven't shown can exist) and then claiming your claims don't require proof. what's even worse is that you can't even admit that your claims are claims.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
I've offered several times to start a new thread debunking the historical credibilty and traditional authorship of the gospels. Are you interested?
certainly
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Old 02-28-2005, 04:05 PM   #303
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
You are still presuming too much. You still have to prove that anyone ever claimed to have seen a "risen" Jesus. I have never seen any good proof that a single person ever made that claim. The claim of a physical resurrection is not found in any Christian literature until 50 years after the alleged crucifixion in the Gospel of Matthew who had no first hand knowledge of anything.
if that's the case, then how did christians get the idea that the gospel authors and paul saw Jesus resurrected?

i'm not sure 50 years is accurate. even so, why is that a problem for you?

i take it you have proof that matthew didn't have first hand knowledge of the account.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
This is a completely false statement
are you saying the bible is true?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
and it's not even about "skepticism," it's about sound methodology.
is it sound to:
1. require proof of miracles
2. claim the bible is false but then say you're not making a claim
3. misinterpret the bible and then claim it contradicts itself
4. claim that because you perceive errors and contradictions exist, they can never be clarified by apologists
5. assume that what other first century authors wrote is reasonably true but what the authors in the bible wrote is false

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
Nothing is accepted as true without proof.
how do you know what josephus wrote is true? if you don't, why use his work to determine if the bible is true?

besides, what is considered proof? how true is true? i have seen several people use "reasonably" as a qualifier. how is that not subjective?

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Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
This is an utter misstatement of the facts.
how so?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
All kinds of things, none of which exist for your resurrection fable.
no specifics? is that because you have none?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
Corroboration - by other writers
1. How do we know the author is reliable?
2. How do we know it is trustworthy?
3. How do we know it wasn't doctored?
4. If it corroborates the claim, it wouldn't be independent. how would that not constitute an appeal to numbers?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
by archaeological evidence, things like that. None of which exists for your resurrection story.
what archaeological evidence could exist of the resurrection?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
We also tend to assume that impossible claims are impossible. For instance, nobody believes Herodotus' claims about giant ants mining gold in India.
what impossible claims does the bible make (not counting miracles since god is certainly capable of performing them)?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
they have no eyewitness evidence
what other than the gospels would you expect from eyewitnesses?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
or independent corroboration
corroboration by definition is not independent. even if it did exist, skeptics could claim it was trumped up.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
and because they so clearly follow common mythological motifs.
this is supposed to be sound methodology? this is a historical indictment?
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Old 02-28-2005, 05:18 PM   #304
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Ok, I'll start a new thread later tonight examining the case for eyewitness testomony and historical credibility in the NT.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
the position that no one can know what happened during any one particular period of antiquity and therefore no one can say whether an event really hapenned or not. that person would base their decisions on lack of historical facts from a particular place or time.
This isn't really true. We certainly can prove whether some things did or didn't happen. But if a part of history is unknown (and some parts of the gospels are provable fictions not just unproven history) then assertions about it must be proven...especially when those assertions include the fantastic and the impossible.
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what is continually escaping you that i am pointing out is that you are making historical claims and this response proves it. alternate versions of history represented here are that people don't come back to life after death or that the person didn't even exist in the first place. although you can't see it, you are advocating alternate versions of history. one is that if there was a Jesus, He wasn't crucified or that He was crucified and didn't rise. another would be that there wasn't a Jesus.
I haven't offered an alternate version of anything. I'm only pointing out that your version doesn't hold water. I haven't asserted that Jesus didn't exist, I've said only that you haven't proven he existed. I've also pointed out that there are no first hand or contemporaneous accounts for the resurrection. You can't prove that single human being ever claimed to have seen this particular dead guy come back to life.
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why do you ask for proof or evidence of a miracle? what form would that proof come in?
What kind of ridiculous question is this? Do you just automatically believe any and all miraculous claims without proof? If the answer is yes, then I must tell you that Jesus appeared to me in my corn flakes this morning and told me he wanted you to send me all your money. Do you believe me or do you want proof?

By the way, some independant corroboration for things like the zombie assault on Jerusalem would help the credibility of those claims. Kind of funny that nobody ever noticed that at the time.

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that's not what my statement said. what i said is that the fact that you question one particular version of history presupposes that you favor another, otherwise the questions would never even come up.
It means no such thing. It means only that I don't believe your version. I have a choice between A and "unknown." A is demonstably false so we are left with "unknown."
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what are these contradictions?
I will enumerate some in the new thread.
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how long is long?
Between 40-70 years after the alleged crucifixion, at a minimum.
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why do they have titles today?
2nd century tradition.
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you know this for a fact?
Yes.
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what would these errors be?
See the new thread later tonight.
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as i asked in the beginning of this thread, what reason do we have to believe otherwise?
Myriad contradictions, demonstrable fictions, errors, anachronisms, and claims of fantastic and impossible events.
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i have asked why you think it is mythological. i have asked if the bible is false, what is true?
What is true about what? Be more specific. If Homer is mythological, what is true?
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is it accurate to compare homer's work to the bible?
Absolutely.
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this is an incorrect inference. you infer that the bible recounts the impossible which is not the case. the bible claims that an omnipotent god performed miracles which is certainly not impossible. the question then becomes why you do or don't believe in a supernatural god, not the credibility of the bible.
This is a laughable tautology. You can't get yourself out of the impossible box by inventing a creature who can do the impossible.
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the fact that you presume it to be fictional is the reason why your claim should be questioned.
That's not a presumption, it's an informed conclusion. There's a huge difference.
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Old 02-28-2005, 06:27 PM   #305
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
if that's the case, then how did christians get the idea that the gospel authors and paul saw Jesus resurrected?
The Gospel writers didn't say anything about Paul but the Pauline corpus may have been the basis for the more elaborate Appearance fictions. More specifically, Mark wrote first one and the rest copied Mark.
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i'm not sure 50 years is accurate. even so, why is that a problem for you?
It's not a problem for me it's a problem you....specifically for your assertions that there were any contemporary, first hand accounts of the resurrection.
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i take it you have proof that matthew didn't have first hand knowledge of the account.
First of all this is a backwards demand for evidence. It is you who wants to attach a specific name to an anonymous book, so it is you who must prove it (can you prove the book was not written by Barney of Fife?).

However, as it happens, there is some pretty strong evidence that Matthew was not an eyewitness and none whatsoever that he was. He doesn;'t even make that claim for himself. More on this in the new thread later.
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are you saying the bible is true?
Huh?
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is it sound to:
1. require proof of miracles
Yes.
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2. claim the bible is false but then say you're not making a claim
I'm not making a claim for an alternate story to the Bible, and none is required to show that the proffered one is false.
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3. misinterpret the bible and then claim it contradicts itself
How have I "misinterpreted" the Bible. There are definitite, irreconcilable contradictions. That's not an opinion, it's a fact.
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4. claim that because you perceive errors and contradictions exist, they can never be clarified by apologists
I'm hoping you can bring some of these apologies on in the new thread. I doubt you've got any new ones but it's always fun to take a little batting practice.
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5. assume that what other first century authors wrote is reasonably true but what the authors in the bible wrote is false
I've made no such assumption.
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how do you know what josephus wrote is true? if you don't, why use his work to determine if the bible is true?
Josephus is corroborated by other physical and documentary evidence.
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1. How do we know the author is reliable?
You don't, necessarily, but overall reliability isn't an issue when it comes to independent corroboration.
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2. How do we know it is trustworthy?
How is this different from question 1?
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3. How do we know it wasn't doctored?
The onus is on you to show that it was doctored.
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4. If it corroborates the claim, it wouldn't be independent. how would that not constitute an appeal to numbers?
You don't seem to understand what independent corroboration means. If two authors both mention something independently of each other - if they were not aware of each other - then you've got yourself some independent corroboration.

Haven't I already explained this?
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what archaeological evidence could exist of the resurrection?
In this case, you wouldn't expect much archaeologically, more like documentary.
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what impossible claims does the bible make (not counting miracles since god is certainly capable of performing them)?
Miracles are, by definition, physically impossible events. If they are natural events, they can't be miracles. And conjecturing a powerful, magic fairy to perform your impossible feats does not make them less impossible.
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what other than the gospels would you expect from eyewitnesses?
You don't even have gospels that were written by eywitnesses. I'd be happy to examine any eyewitness testimony of Jesus you can find. I'm not picky. There is no such testimony in the Bible, though.
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corroboration by definition is not independent. even if it did exist, skeptics could claim it was trumped up.
Don't use terminology if you don't know what it means. I have explained the meaning of independent corroboration twice already. You should understand it by now.
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this is supposed to be sound methodology? this is a historical indictment?
Sound methdology, yes. I have no idea what you mean by "indictment."
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Old 02-28-2005, 09:11 PM   #306
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Family Man
you are wrong, however, in insisting that the skeptic needs to prove that alternative account.
i haven't insisted anything. i'm just asking why anyone should listen to a skeptic when they snipe at the bible without having the guts to provide their own version of events and some facts to back it up. I’m really asking a skeptic to prove anything. Anything at all.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Family Man
In order to demonstrate that, there needs to be evidence, and in the case of the resurrection that does not exist.
what kind of evidence of the resurrection could exist?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Family Man
It is perfectly legitimate for historians to say "we don't know what happened, though we can be fairly certain it didn't happen the way it is claimed."
Even if they legitimately claim that, is it correct? I can see someone being agnostic and saying there isn’t enough facts to know for sure or someone saying x isn’t as plausible as y for z reasons, but not both as you state here.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Family Man
In fact, I can refer you to Christian historians who say very much the same thing we do here: the resurrection is not a historical event.
And I can cite people who don’t say that, so we’re name dropping which gets us nowhere. Let’s figure out what is true and why.

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Originally Posted by Family Man
Ameleq is right on this issue. It is absurb to demand an alternative accounting
I have done no such thing. I merely pose the question why anyone should take any stock in such an unfalsifiable approach.

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Originally Posted by Family Man
when there isn't enough evidence to know exactly what happened.
This is what I mean by agnosticism. If you believe this, then NO account is verifiably true to you, biblical or not.

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Originally Posted by Family Man
Historians don't demand that.
Maybe they should

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Originally Posted by Family Man
All that needs to be shown in a case like this is that other plausible explanations exist,
But that’s not what has been done here, especially by Diogenes or rlogan.

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Originally Posted by Family Man
and in the case of the resurrection, the willing of people to believe inanely stupid things is more than plausible, even if we don't know the exact details.
I guess the “inanely stupid things� is what is in question.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Family Man
History is about humanity's past, not about gods. If you read modern historical analysis, you'll find that descriptions of supernaturals events are always discounted. Heck, as Diogenes points out, even the merely absurb (giant ants mining gold) is not believed. Right there, the resurrection has to be considered non-historical. (Note: I'm not saying this disproves that it happened. I'm saying that the Christian can't use historical analysis to prove that it did.)
As I have stated, the miraculous claims of the bible are beyond the purview of science because they are not repeatable in a controlled environment where they can be qualified/quantified. Therefore, they should be excluded from historical consideration. The people who make the accounts are a different story. They certainly can be scrutinized. In this case, do you have reason to believe the authors in the bible are lying or mistaken? Furthermore, the miracles are more subject to metaphysical analysis than historical.

Why is it that you say Christians can’t use historical analysis to prove a biblical claim, but skeptics can use historical analysis to refute it? Skeptics point to lack of extrabiblical corroboration but Christians can’t point to lack of equal but opposite refutation.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Family Man
And by independent accounts I mean people working from different perspectives. Both Caesar and Cicero, for example, wrote proligately about the events of their times, and were political opponents. Thus, when they both say something happened, we can be fairly confident that that happened.
I disagree.
1. how can we be sure they even wrote what is attributed to them?
2. how can we be sure their works weren’t altered?
3. how can we be sure they weren’t mistaken?
4. in the case of identifying one particular event, if they both agree on that specific event, they aren’t opponents and therefore aren’t “independent�.

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Originally Posted by Family Man
The trouble with Christian sources is that they are all working under the same tradition and community.
Your assumption that this is an indictment is unnecessary. They can still be historically accurate, reliable and trustworthy.

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Originally Posted by Family Man
Luke and Matthew copied extensively from Mark
So say some

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Originally Posted by Family Man
and John is widely considered to be a theological gospel with little historical content
by certain people

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Originally Posted by Family Man
If there were Roman records that Jesus was crucified, that would bolster the Christian story (though not the resurrection account).
Not necessarily for above listed reasons.

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Originally Posted by Family Man
Julius Caesar generally accepted credit for his victories but tended to fob off defeats on his underlings. The sources we have for ancient history are well known and the biases of the authors taken into account when their work is analyzed. Where they appear to be writing dispassionately and objectively, we credit their accounts more highly than when they are pushing an agenda.
This type of critique is quite subjective. Who decides whether an author is being objective or not?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Family Man
The problem with the gospels is a) we don't know who the authors even were.
That’s funny. My bible says matthew, mark, luke and john

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Originally Posted by Family Man
The authorship wasn't assigned until well into the second century
Assigned by whom? Where did they get their info from?

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Originally Posted by Family Man
and were assigned using the ancient practice of using famous people from the past.
What other first century works ascribed to this practice?

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Originally Posted by Family Man
Matthew, Mark, Luke and John as described almost certainly weren't the authors of the gospels.
According to whom?

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Originally Posted by Family Man
And b) they had a huge axe to grind. They weren't writing history; they were writing hagiography with the view of promoting their religious beliefs.
What if I told you not everyone believes that?

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Originally Posted by Family Man
The problem with the Christian accounts is that Jesus had very little effect during his lifetime.
How is that a problem? who decides how much impact He should have had?

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Originally Posted by Family Man
(In fact, the gospel stories record a remarkable failure, making is post-mortem success all the more suspect).
Really? What failure would that be?

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Originally Posted by Family Man
None of his contemporaries sees fit to mention him
Should they have? We’ve been over this one a lot throughout this thread. It’s been shown that it would have been out of character to do so.

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Originally Posted by Family Man
and later mentions of him (as sparse as they are) could probably be better explained by the existence of the Christian religion than by the existence of Jesus himself.
How so?

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Originally Posted by Family Man
There isn't a single bit of archeological evidence that supports any of the events of Jesus's life.
Does the bible give you reason to believe there should be that type of evidence? Is there any other reason why there should be that type of evidence? So far, archaeology has been a good friend to the bible despite what finkelstein conjectures.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Family Man
There can't be proof. That's why Christians are supposed to have faith, remember?
I have observed many assumptions in your post. Maybe you should question what you have read and been told a little more.
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Old 02-28-2005, 09:16 PM   #307
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rlogan
respect requires that you not misrepresent a position like you do immediately after making this patronizing remark.
perhaps you could point out where the misrepresentation is

Quote:
Originally Posted by rlogan
You are not quoting anyone here because there is no such person present - and Amaleq13 in particular has disabused you of this falsity.
he has? maybe you should read back through this thread and show me where i mistakenly derived these ideas from.

Quote:
Originally Posted by rlogan
It really is pretty amusing to watch this now. Initially I was annoyed. Courage? So I guess you see yourself as a swash-buckling skeptic-killer in a dashing outfit and matching sword sheath.
no response to the challenge? pity.

is there a reason you come to a debate and don't debate, just insult?
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Old 02-28-2005, 10:18 PM   #308
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bfniii,

Just a word to let you know that my Gospel critique thread is in the workshop and will be finished sometime tomorrow.
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Old 02-28-2005, 11:43 PM   #309
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Quote:
i haven't insisted anything. i'm just asking why anyone should listen to a skeptic when they snipe at the bible without having the guts to provide their own version of events and some facts to back it up. I’m really asking a skeptic to prove anything. Anything at all.
Why should anyone listen to a skeptic even though we can't "prove" an alternative version of events? Because it isn't necessary for us to prove anything at all. All we have to do is to demonstrate that your version of events are impossible or highly unlikely. If you claim that you had lunch with aliens and had 500 anonymous eyewitnesses to back you up, I don't think too many people would demand that we provide an "alternative scenario". Your claim is clearly insufficient.

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what kind of evidence of the resurrection could exist?
Actually, that's why history doesn't include supernatural events as historical ones: there can't be evidence by normal standards.

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Even if they legitimately claim that, is it correct? I can see someone being agnostic and saying there isn’t enough facts to know for sure or someone saying x isn’t as plausible as y for z reasons, but not both as you state here.
That's why I said "fairly certain". I'm not claiming that history can claim anything with absolute certainly; I'm merely claiming that supernatural events such as the resurrection cannot be claimed to have happened as a historical event. Believe it if you must, but please don't pervert the historical method to do so.

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And I can cite people who don’t say that, so we’re name dropping which gets us nowhere. Let’s figure out what is true and why.
I just made an offer. I doubt that your names are little more than apologists, but I have no problem with your approach.

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I have done no such thing. I merely pose the question why anyone should take any stock in such an unfalsifiable approach.
You have done such a thing, by "merely posing the question." And the methodology is not unfalsifiable. All you have to do is to find some evidence that backs up the biblical account. The fact that such evidence doesn't exist is your problem, not ours.

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when there isn't enough evidence to know exactly what happened.
This is what I mean by agnosticism. If you believe this, then NO account is verifiably true to you, biblical or not.
You are clearly misunderstanding my position. Please look at the world I bolded. There are accounts that are verifiably true for many ancient accounts; your problem is that the gospel accounts are not one of them.

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Historians don't demand that.
Maybe they should
Then it would be your burden to show that they should, don't you think? In the mention, adopting standards just so you can think that the gospels are true doesn't strike me as the soundest of methodologies.

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All that needs to be shown in a case like this is that other plausible explanations exist,
But that’s not what has been done here, especially by Diogenes or rlogan.
You mistake my meaning, I fear. By plausible explanations, I don't mean exact accounts that describe exactly what happened. I mean that we can imagine ways that are more likely, and that fit within the realm of human experience, than the problematic accounts being considered.

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I guess the “inanely stupid things� is what is in question.
No, it isn't. That people come to believe inanely stupid things is rather obvious. That a small group of people could come to falsely believe that a charismatic preacher is a resurrected god is no more implausible than a small group of people believing that by committing suicide they'll be instantly transported to a spaceship hiding behind a comet. Just the fact that people routinely stupid things is enough to suggest that there are other possibilities for resurrection belief other than the given gospel accounts. The same is not true for many other events reported in ancient sources.

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As I have stated, the miraculous claims of the bible are beyond the purview of science because they are not repeatable in a controlled environment where they can be qualified/quantified. Therefore, they should be excluded from historical consideration. The people who make the accounts are a different story. They certainly can be scrutinized. In this case, do you have reason to believe the authors in the bible are lying or mistaken? Furthermore, the miracles are more subject to metaphysical analysis than historical.
There is no difference between saying that "miraculous claims of the belief are beyond the purview of science" (though that ought to be historical analysis) and the people who make such claims. You can't separate the two. Any claim made in any book is made by a person.

And, yes, I do have reason to believe that the gospel writers lied, though they wouldn't have seen it that way. They reported events that no one could have possibly witnessed. Consider the birth narratives: anyone who witnessed that would have been dead a long time by the time the gospels were written. And there is clear evidence of embellishments: stars hanging out over mangers (that no one else in the world seemed to have noticed), the wise men themselves, Herod's slaughter of innocents (again, not noticed by anyone else), strange and unnecessary movements to other cities for tax collection purposes, not to mention virgin births, all of which suggest embellishment. And this is just one example. Oh, yes, there are many sound reasons to distrust the gospel narratives.

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Why is it that you say Christians can’t use historical analysis to prove a biblical claim, but skeptics can use historical analysis to refute it? Skeptics point to lack of extrabiblical corroboration but Christians can’t point to lack of equal but opposite refutation.
You can for ordinary biblical events, but you can't for supernatural ones, because that's not history. But even for ordinary events, it is only the positive claim that can be evaluated. If I claim to have eaten Post Toasties this morning, and this happened to be important, it would be my burden to demonstrate that I did. It would be unreasonable to demand that you "refute" such a claim since you have no access to evidence one way to another, and it would be unreasonable for us to expect you to find any. Your demand for "equal and opposite refutation" is silly and not a demand of historical analysis.

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I disagree.
1. how can we be sure they even wrote what is attributed to them?
2. how can we be sure their works weren’t altered?
3. how can we be sure they weren’t mistaken?
4. in the case of identifying one particular event, if they both agree on that specific event, they aren’t opponents and therefore aren’t “independent�.
Ah, a hyperskeptic I see. Have you considered the consequences of this demand on the biblical position? Essentially, you could kiss any hope of demonstrating biblical accuracy right there if you really made such demands.

But let's clear one point up. Historians don't doubt everything that written. They combine the standards I described with what is written to come up with a judgement on the accuracy of the work. In other words, they wouldn't doubt that Caesar wrote his Histories unless they have a good reason to doubt that he didn't -- i.e. some of the standards I mentioned were regularly violated. Some benefit of the doubt is usually given, just not to the demand that Christians want. I suspect an overwhelming majority of historians would agree that Jesus was crucified, even though the evidence is poor. However, the resurrection would not be considered to be historical. Claims have to be judged on an individual basis.

But, in fact, historians can and do answer your questions. I'm not an expert on this, but I think the answer would be these:

1. Caesar and Cicero were very famous men who were commented and quoted by many other people. That their works reflect what we know of them for other sources is enough to establish their authorship.
2. Textual analysis reveals this. That's how we know that Josephus was altered.
3. They were all mistaken? Now you're getting silly.
4. Would not even be a consideration. A democrat and a republican agreeing that George Bush was elected president in 2004 hardly makes them allies.

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The trouble with Christian sources is that they are all working under the same tradition and community.
Your assumption that this is an indictment is unnecessary. They can still be historically accurate, reliable and trustworthy.
If this was the only problem with the gospels, you'd have a point. It is not the only problem, and the lack of independence is a consideration.

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Miscellaneous claims about the nature of the gospels
There is considerable and serious scholarship that demonstrates that Matthew and Luke is a rewrite of Mark and that John is historically useless. These are not crackpot, atheistic theories, however much you'd like to imply that they are.

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This type of critique is quite subjective. Who decides whether an author is being objective or not?
Of course they're subjective. This is history, not science. That is why there are standards and scholarly debates. But, generally speaking, when a source is clearly promoting a point of view rather than reporting events is a red-flag to the historian that maybe the claim ought to be taken with a grain of salt. Do you seriously suggesting that such a standard is unreasonable and can't be applied reasonably?

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Various complaints about gospel authorship.
More hyperskepticism. I've read several texts on the subject, as well as a college level course, and there is a clear, scholarly consensus that the titles of the books were added in the late second century. Although the books were clearly quoted in earlier works, none of them were ever identified by names. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John are just names, not the real authors.

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And b) they had a huge axe to grind. They weren't writing history; they were writing hagiography with the view of promoting their religious beliefs.
What if I told you not everyone believes that?
Then I'd tell you that those people need to brush up on their critical thinking skills and read more carefully.

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Originally Posted by Family Man
The problem with the Christian accounts is that Jesus had very little effect during his lifetime.
How is that a problem? who decides how much impact He should have had?
It's a problem because it makes the evaluation of the claims about him much more difficult to accomplish. We have reams of materials about famous Roman figures, but very little about Jesus.

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(In fact, the gospel stories record a remarkable failure, making is post-mortem success all the more suspect).
Really? What failure would that be?
For example, his preaching in Galilee produced much skepticism and little support. Even his family rejected him. And, of course, he was crucified. It was only the post-mortem spin that was a success.

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and later mentions of him (as sparse as they are) could probably be better explained by the existence of the Christian religion than by the existence of Jesus himself.
How so?
If there were no Christian religion, Jesus would have remained anonymous. And, no, the Christian religion is not evidence that Jesus was what the gospel writers claimed he was.

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Does the bible give you reason to believe there should be that type of evidence? Is there any other reason why there should be that type of evidence? So far, archaeology has been a good friend to the bible despite what finkelstein conjectures.
No, it doesn't matter whether the bible gives me reason to believe something or not. You asked for standards. This is one of them. The lack of archeological evidence is not a point in favor of the gospel accounts.

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I have observed many assumptions in your post. Maybe you should question what you have read and been told a little more.
Well, that's rather ironic coming from someone who clearly takes his gospels at face value. You've observed nothing but sound reasoning and accurate reflection of scholarship in my posts, your hyperskepticism notwithstanding. The fact remains that there are standards that historians use (which you conveniently clipped) and that the gospel stories don't meet them. And that's your problem, not ours.
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Old 03-03-2005, 09:03 AM   #310
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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
To the participants in the discussion.
All of the participants?

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Unresolvable contradictions and failed prophecies also qualify.
Given the fact that only a limited number of people agree that there are contradictions and failed prophecies, I would say that the reasonableness of the explanations is in question.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
The Bible doesn't mention the YEAR of the resurrection.
Is that necessary? If so, why?

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
And you are STILL assuming it actually happened! If the resurrection was FICTIONAL
Your starting point is that the gospels are fiction. If so, how do we know anything from that time period is true?

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
If he was definitely in Tyre in 32 AD, he could still have been crucified in Jerusalem in 33 AD, or 34 AD, or 35 AD...
You’re moving the goalposts. What I mean is that whatever year Christians claimed He was crucified, “he was crucified 3 years ago� for example, it could be shown that at that time He wasn’t even in Judea.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Again, the most obvious examples are the creationist ones. Many of them still say that evolution contradicts the 2nd law of thermodynamics, or that there are "no transitional fossils"...
You are stating here that apologists fail to mention refutations which is not true. Even your own response acknowledges that they respond to the very criticism you cite, evolution. I ask again, which ones do apologists ignore?

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Throughout the whole of medieval Europe, Christians were the ONLY people around to copy documents
Now come on. This seems a stretch. I doubt very seriously that you could show this to be absolutely true.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
and we KNOW that they were selective about which ones they preserved!
I have illuminated this tautology before. Christians didn’t completely preserve arguments of opponents. We know this because they don’t exist. They don’t exist because Christians didn’t preserve them. Perhaps you could show me if I’m missing some details in this unfalsifiable position.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
And this goes way back. You've heard of the Council of Nicea and of Nag Hammadi, I hope?
These councils didn’t decide canon, canon was already de facto existing. They merely codified what was already known to be true.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Try opening your Bible at the Gospel of Mary Magdalene - you can't, because it's not in there.
Is there a reason why that book should be canonical?

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
If this is how they treat their own gospels, why do you imagine they'd faithfully preserve non-Christian refutations?
Considering so few people were actually writing historical accounts in the first and second centuries (as compared to current media overload), it would seem they did a pretty good job.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Most eyewitnesses would have died of old age. Only a few would have been young enough to possibly still be alive, and it's quite likely that those few would have been killed or scattered in the wars. It is POSSIBLE that some might be alive and contactable, but also POSSIBLE (indeed, quite likely) that no survivors could be located by our hypothetical investigating skeptic.
You are assuming that the story was propagated no further than the eyewitnesses themselves. If the eyewitnesses did indeed interact with other people, as the bible suggests, then it shouldn’t have been too hard to find them. It has long been understood that the Christian message was disseminated fairly rapidly. “the way� may have started small, but it didn’t remain so for very long.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Already answered, many times, by various people here. Maybe you should re-read the thread from the beginning?
These have been my responses:
1. since miracles are not scientific, they are excluded from indicting the bible as erroneous.
2. apart from the miracles, how is the bible less credible than any first century work when standard historical analyses are applied?
3. if the gospels are untrue, how do we know any first century work is true?

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
...So dragons exist then? Did the soldiers in Iraq find one? Were there photographs? BTW, Babylon still exists, and has remained inhabited since the prophecy was made.
Perhaps you could show a picture of a current map that has the word “Babylon� on it. I can’t seem to find one.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
This never happened, and Caananite is now a dead language.
Is there a reason why you take this prophecy, the Canaanite language, to be literal as opposed to figurative? Most prophecies are not literal.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Tyre was supposed to be completely destroyed: so completely that "though thou be sought for, yet shalt thou never be found again". Erased so completely that nobody knows where it WAS.
Again we see you taking a literalistic approach to the phrase “never be found again� which would more properly be rendered in today’s vernacular, “not ever the same as it was�.

I can see where you derive so much confusion over biblical prophecies. You seem to be looking for whatever semantic derivation shows the prophecy didn’t happen.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Furthermore, Ezekiel was completed AFTER the event, and therefore fails as a prediction:
The entire book was completed afterwards, or just the prophecy against tyre?

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
You have yet to demonstrate any "misinterpretation". And, yes, I have plenty more (for another thread...)
So far, that’s all that has been demonstrated.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Apparently, the basis of YOUR assertion is that the events actually happened. OK, prove it.
That’s the point of the entire thread.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Where does the author say that he WAS a fisherman from Galilee?
Would that have been necessary for that fact to be known?

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
"haven't been given"
In this thread, which is certainly the case

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
You tell me, you're the one who made the claim of "misinterpretation".
You gave a general statement, that of Farrell till. I’m asking for a specific.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Another reversal of the burden of proof. YOU asserted that the lack of eyewitness accounts "was untrue". Therefore you have the burden of demonstrating that the gospels were eyewitness accounts.
How did anyone ever get the idea that they are eyewitness accounts? Why has that been a long-held belief? Evidently, many people think that they are. I’m asking you why you think they aren’t.

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Originally Posted by Jack the Bodiless
Why use it as the basis for anything? Why believe it?
This response doesn’t answer the question asked. Christianity developed from the alleged events of Jesus’ ministry. The bible is supposed to be a chronicle of that development. If so, why wouldn’t the bible be the basis of Christianity?
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