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04-17-2007, 08:15 PM | #1 | ||||
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discussion about Arius, Bullneck and Bull-burner
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the historical nature of christianity is totaly accepted, because he constructed hundreds of basilicas throughout the roman empire, art of a christian nature flourished, literature flourished, all indexes for the historicity (coins, inscriptions, relics, etc, etc, etc) --- all these things are manifest. Arius and the Arian controversy and the Arian heresy are the subject of historical discussions for hundreds --- soon thousands --- of years. Quote:
should stand up for them against malevolent suppression. That is what I believe Arius did, as a neopythagorean priest. Quote:
Alternatively I could have said, he evicted all the pagans. There is no contradiction in my mind. Quote:
It is, I think, expedient to set forth to all mankindHis reference to Constantine and Jesus, and the manner in which Julian perceived their relationship is expressed in Julian's The Caesares:
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04-18-2007, 06:16 PM | #2 | ||||
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I don't see what that means, and it doesn't seem to be an answer to my question.
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And what grounds do you have for supposing that Arius was a neo-Pythagorean priest? Quote:
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04-18-2007, 08:41 PM | #3 | |||||
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measure of the authenticity (perhaps integrity) of a purported historical person and/or event -- and yes, with respect to "the science of history". The "science of history" I take to include study of "evidentiary material" from the following "fields".... * certain personages (authors or otherwise) * the texts of (purported) authors. * fragments of texts, and of papyrii * inscriptions of various categories * coins * architecture and buildings * art * sculpture & statues * weapons and tools * technological innovations * archeological relics * carbon dating citations [NB: Not intended to be comprehensive] [Feel free to add via thread tangentiation] Consequently IMO we are left examining a structure which is multi-dimensional -- with a dimension for each one of the above strands of scientific and/or archeological evidence -- and one further dimension formalised as time, or the chronology, which should be logically common and consistent between strands. I hope you agree to this point. This is the theory. In application of this (theory) my research has shown that the only strand of evidence which presents some evidence for the historicity of JC (in the period 0-300; ie: the first 3 centuries) is the "christian literary tradition", being a small subset of the available texts of antiquity, for the appropriate chronology. All other strands of evidence yield "null results" for the first three centuries as far as I can determine. During the fourth century, the history of "christianity" actually has greater wealth, almost an explosive wealth of evidentiary material. In the 4th century we have texts, perhaps even late 4th century manuscripts, certainly fragments, certainly inscriptions of various categories, certainly coins and architecture and the buildings (Constantine's basilicas). We have christian art, sculpture , statues, perhaps weapons and tools used by phanero-christians, we have archeological relics, and we have 2 carbon dating citations that establish the new testament in the fourth century. This is in total contrast to the void of evidence prior to the rise of Constantine, in all these "fields" used by the scientific approach to historical analysis. This leaves open the possibility that the christian literature is associated with a false chronology, and was actually written in the fourth century. Re: Arius ... Quote:
torture him is he were to be overtly opposed to Constantine's initiatives. Put yourself in Arius' position, face to face with a supreme imperial mafia thug and war-lord, who'se army had just been victorious in the military supremacy of the Eastern Roman Empire (as Constantine already held the western empire, this was his supremacy). What would you do? It is possible that Arius wishes to preserve his life, and yet --- being wise and clever in disputation --- left a record of his overt sayings in a cryptic manner, because there were simply no other channels open to him at that time. In the end he was probably poisoned (by Athanasius perhaps) some 5 years later. Quote:
letter written by COnstantine, just after Nicaea, as follows: Constantine the KingPorphyry was perhaps the leading academic of the empire. Constantine edicts for the destruction of his writings. He calls Arius a "Porphyrian" and edicts for the destruction of the writings of Arius, and etc, etc .. We know that Porphyry was associated with "the tribe of neopythagoreans" (here to be inclusive of neo-platonics) for he succeeded Plotinus, and edited his "enneads", and a host of other writings of vast scope. Quote:
He shut down temples and philosophers after Nicea. He also went down to Egypt, to the biggest of the ancient obelisks which had remained standing in the temple complex at Karnak, for well over 1800 years, and ripped it out of its foundations. Constantine shut down the Hellenic temples and constructed christian basilicas. We have been tendered from the times of Constantine, a chronological account of the rise of christianity (and thus presumably "the tribe of christians") by which we assume that "christians existed prior to Constantine". But did they? This is the historical question that I am exploring at present. re: bull-burner (Julian) ... Quote:
Are you that credulous? See note below. Are you aware of the relationship between the writings of Julian in 3 books (Against the Galilaeans) and what is today preserved of these writings, via a refutation in the fifth century by one Bishop Cyril of Alexandria? NOTE BELOW: See above notes on some form of provisional specification for the notion of historicity. Historicity in my opinion is not something which is black or white, but cast in thousands of shades of grey. We have perhaps thousands of "atomic evidentiary material" arranged into various strands or fields of scientific analysis (listed above). Based on this evidence, we need to ascertain our best explanation for the history of the times from which this evidence is derived. At present I am examining the possibility that christianity was actually invented in the fourth century, and by means of supreme imperial power, a very clever and monstrously complex pseudo- history was created as literature, by many pseudo-authors, and by altering the texts of existent authors, and by the perversion of other texts, and by the destruction of competitive texts, by fire and by non-action. Apollonius of Tyana, and the tribe of neopythagoreans IMO probably existed in the 300 year prenicene epoch, but the tribe of christians were a fourth century literary invention. Feel free to address any of the above issues, or any of the issues addressed on this page. |
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04-18-2007, 09:22 PM | #4 |
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Well, in general, just as a background reference, the "apostasy" of the Church was already starting even during the time of the apostles. The Mysteries and paganism use camouflage as much as possible. That is, they are like hermit crabs, who look to dwell in the shells and houses of others. So by the time the pagan Pontifax Maximum Constantine decided to "become Christian" it is presumed the Catholic Church, as it were, was already sufficiently infiltrated by ancient "illuminati" paganists who then completely corrupted the church.
Therefore, only the very, very earch Christians, say up until the fall of Jerusalem in 70-73CE would be of true "Christian" historicity. By the time of Constantine, the Church was considered a blend of paganism and Christianity. Thus anything in the Christian agenda would have to be checked against a purely paganism agenda, since at that point they were publically, at least, one in the same. LG47 |
04-18-2007, 09:56 PM | #5 | |
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You dont quite perceive the case that I am arguing at present. The case can be stated as follows ... Before Constantine, the new testament writings (forget the old just for the moment) did not exist. Hundreds of thousands of innocent men had been crucified by the Roman imperial order, but none of those men were our "Jesus Christ". Jesus Christ was the key figure in a monstrous imperially inspired fiction, which was later referred to by bullburner as "the fabrication of the Galilaeans". It was a massive fourth century literary scam, associated with the massive destruction of contemporary and ancient academic material, which continued after Constantine. Essentially the case is that, it is not impossible that bullneck invented "christianity" during his rise to absolute power, and then sponsored the creation of the appropriate literature, and a pseudo-history for the preceeding 300 years in which it was purported that "the tribe of christians" evolved even down to this very day. |
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04-18-2007, 10:04 PM | #6 |
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Although you have posted at great length, your ‘response’ seems to me to be largely non-responsive. What you’ve mainly done is haver.
You still haven’t explained what you meant by: ‘Arius is implicit in the Council of Nicaea’. You haven’t explained why you regard ‘having been discussed for hundreds of years’ as evidence of historicity in the case of Arius, when you won't in other cases. You have described additional examples of Constantine shutting down ancient temples before the Council of Nicaea, but you haven’t confronted the fact that if, as you assume, Christianity did not exist before the Council of Nicaea, it is not possible that Constantine shut down these temples for not being Christian. The question, which you are avoiding, is: why do you suppose Constantine shut down these temples? You haven’t explained why, if Julian believed that Constantine had fabricated Christianity, he wouldn’t have said so plainly. You’ve only expressed (unexplained) incredulity at my asking the question. Possibly you were cryptically hinting at an answer when you asked me: ‘Are you aware of the relationship between the writings of Julian in 3 books (Against the Galilaeans) and what is today preserved of these writings, via a refutation in the fifth century by one Bishop Cyril of Alexandria?’ That doesn’t help me, because I’m not aware of the relationship. On a couple of points you have given some sort of answers. Just not very good ones. When I asked you what made you say that Arius was a neo-Pythagorean priest, you relied on the testimony of Constantine as your evidence. Why would you do that? Why would you believe a word Constantine said, particularly about one of his religious opponents? I would expect what Constantine had to say about Arius to be libel, and hence unreliable as a guide to Arius’s real position. I understand the idea that Arius might have been afraid of what Constantine would do if he opposed Constantine’s ideas. But that’s not a good explanation of what happened, because what happened is that Arius did oppose Constantine’s ideas. If Arius had pretended to agree with Constantine, a well-founded and prudent fear of Constantine would have been a good explanation. But Arius did not pretend to agree with Constantine. If Arius had openly declared that Constantine had had the whole story of Jesus fabricated, a courageous determination to stand up for his principles would have been a good explanation. But Arius did not openly declare that Constantine had had the whole story of Jesus fabricated. You have offered, alternately, two contradictory explanations, neither one of which is actually an explanation of what actually happened, and you have tried to avoid confronting the inadequacy of your position by dodging back and forth from one to the other as each is challenged. What you have to explain is that Arius neither went along with (or pretended to go along with) what Constantine wanted, nor declared plainly that Constantine’s story was a complete fabrication. Neither of your explanations will do the job. (The conventional account does not have this problem. It would depict Arius as a courageous and sincerely religious man, who openly opposed Constantine’s views out of conviction, but who never said that the whole story of Jesus had been fabricated because that’s not what he believed.) |
04-18-2007, 10:07 PM | #7 | |
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I bet I could state your case more clearly than you can yourself. |
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04-18-2007, 10:08 PM | #8 | |
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Oh, I see. Well, my only comment would be that that may or may not be what really happened, but according to strict Biblical reference: "Matthew 16:28 Truly I say to YOU that there are some of those standing here that will not taste death at all until first they see the Son of man coming in his kingdom.” If that's the case, then it is reasonable to conclude that some of the original Christian writings were kept hidden and private down through the generations and thus we may have a confirmation regarding authentic Christian writings. That is, like the Dead Sea Scrolls, if some extant Early Christian writings came into the public domain, it would shape speculation and the extent of it. LG47 |
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04-18-2007, 10:19 PM | #9 |
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04-18-2007, 11:32 PM | #10 |
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OK.
Your position, as I understand it, is this. Not only was there never such a person as Jesus, nobody before the time of the Emperor Constantine believed that there was, and there were no Christians of any kind then, either. Constantine decided to fabricate an entirely new religion, and he implemented this decision at the Council of Nicaea in 325. All documentary references purporting to describe the existence of Christianity in any form before that date, including both the texts which make up what Christians now regard as the New Testament and all purported pre-325 church history, were fabricated at that time on the orders of Constantine, primarily or exclusively by Eusebius. There is no evidence of any kind, material or documentary, to confirm the existence of Christianity in any form before 325, and the reason for this absence of evidence is that Christianity did not exist in any form before that date, but was fabricated then on Constantine’s orders. I don’t say I agree with this, by the way. I’m just saying that that is a plainer, more definite, and more succinct statement of your position than you appear to be capable of, yourself. My judgement, for whatever it may be worth, is that you have never given any grounds to justify the conclusion that your account is a more likely explanation than the alternatives. So I regard it as a provocative but unsubstantiated speculation. I’m not opposed to discussing it, but when you won’t attempt to justify the views that you are putting forward it cripples discussion at the outset. We know what you think: the question is, why do you think what you think? Even if it is a possibility (which I’m not now disputing), what makes you think it is more than a mere possibility? |
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