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04-15-2008, 12:30 PM | #21 | |
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Similarly, if you find a supposedly ancient text that claims that the Macedonians were not Greek (or were definitely Greek), or were maybe proto-Bulgarian, you might consider the possibility that a modern day nationalist on one side of the Macedonian question has altered that text. |
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04-15-2008, 01:36 PM | #22 | ||
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Here is the passage used from their translation: Quote:
(Bold is added by me). Created is the right word here, never to be formed and find existence in being, and therefore remaining an illusion that may be fun for fantasies but will never be real. Sure, good to know thet difference between good and bad [such as when making a living] and may even be fun to crucify after it has served its purpose. |
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04-15-2008, 01:49 PM | #23 |
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04-15-2008, 01:53 PM | #24 |
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The Iliad is a mythological retelling from the viewpoint of Classical Greeks, of exploits of Mycenean Greeks. The events are believed to be real history, but told from a perspective of many centuries later.
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04-15-2008, 07:53 PM | #25 | |||||||||||||||||||||
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A) Cannot assign a quantitative measure to the degree of preservation (e.g. 99.5% or what have you) because we don't have the originals to compare to, and B) Must acknowledge that while there are many minor/irrelevant discrepancies in the extant mss, there are some that are significant enough to prevent us from saying categorically "The NT is reliable." Quote:
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The Bible is pretty much unique, at least in the Western world, in the sense that it directly and measurably influences both personal and social policies and interactions. That influence makes it an imperative that we be very careful in how we deal with it. Quote:
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I've asked you before if you'd read any of Ehrman's work yourself. I believe that you indirectly indicated you had not. If that's the case, I think this particular discussion - that of the message people take from Ehrman's writings - would be well served if you did read some of his material. Then we could discuss specifics instead of generalities. Quote:
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Now, we can go back and forth about different standards and whatnot, but at the end of the day it comes back to this: A) We've got a bunch of different mss of various parts of the NT. B) There are a bunch of differences between corresponding passages within those mss. C) They can't all be right. D) Modern Bibles contain passages, indeed entire books, of debatable origin and/or questionable translation, due in large part to A) through C). These are facts. They're not open to debate. Quote:
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There are, certainly, plenty of other reasons to suppose inaccuracy in the Bible, but we happen to be embroiled in a discussion in the Biblical Criticism and History forum of a discussion board populated heavily by atheists, agnostics, and assorted other flavors of skeptics. I suspect very few, if any, here have "tear up the heritage of mankind" on their personal agendas, and were the Bible not so influential and prominent in the modern Western world, I suspect there would be a lot less discussion on what it says and how it was formed. (Incidentally, re: your comment about possessing the original autographs - I agree that it wouldn't affect the question of the veracity of Christianity.) regards, NinJay (As an aside: Roger, would you be willing to adopt the convention of either splitting responses to long posts among several posts? The VB software makes long intercalated respones somewhat cumbersome, and I suspect some readers might find shorter post/response sequences easier to follow.) |
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04-16-2008, 06:17 AM | #26 |
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Um, I'm very short of time, and I'm not sure that I have anything further to add on this. Very long posts are impossible to follow, as you rightly say.
Your responses seem to be reiterations to me (because I think that I have already addressed the issues that they contain). |
04-16-2008, 06:20 AM | #27 |
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Last time I checked, the only facts in the Iliad that are considered undisputed are (1) Troy existed at the time in question (13th century BCE, plus or minus a bit), (2) it fought some wars and lost them, and (3) some Greek forces were probably involved in at least one of those wars.
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04-17-2008, 10:55 AM | #28 | |
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My understanding of what I have read from him, is that deliberate changes to support particular doctrinal views were much more significant. There are some major differences between the transmission of the NT and the Classics. For the first couple of hundred years or so, the NT was copied by amateurs, who made many more mistakes when compared to dedicated scribes. More importantly, the NT documents were holy texts, whose words were used as a basis for doctrine. This obviously creates huge motivation for making changes, let alone complete forgery. The same does not apply to the works of Cicero. Another problem with comparing the NT to the classics is that the NT is still the basis of doctrine for many Christians today. This obviously raises the bar a bit. Your claim that "the NT is the best preserved of ancient literary texts", while probably true in shear numbers of ancient copies, is grossly misleading when it comes down to analysing what the original Christians might have actually believed. This is obsucrantism. |
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04-17-2008, 11:01 AM | #29 | |
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There seem to have been attempts by later Platonists to rewrite Plato so as to make him agree with their understanding of Platonism. See Dillon 1989 "Tampering with the Timaeus" American Journal of Philology 110:50-72 Andrew Criddle |
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04-17-2008, 11:22 AM | #30 | ||
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As far as I know, we do not know very much about the now non-existent ancient ancestors of our medieval copies of the classics, for the obvious reason that they are, well, non-existent. Certainly texts like Livy were revised and copied in private households in late antiquity, as copied subscriptio's indicate. I have a feeling that these statements are the conclusions of some kind of argument, rather than pieces of data as they appear? Quote:
But as I have remarked at least twice already, unless we restrict ourselves to changes for which we actually have evidence, we go directly to subjectivity where texts are considered corrupt for reasons other than evidence. All the best, Roger Pearse |
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