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09-27-2005, 12:32 AM | #11 | |
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GDon,
Look at how you duck points 1. and point 2. as if you are blindfolded and then you zip straight to point 3. and 4. and respond as if the first two points do not even exist. And this is exactly how you respond to Doherty: you only respond to arguments that you think you have a response to and ignore everything else. And mostly, your responses are just advanced arbitrarily sometimes purely for nuisance value. You do not concede to counterarguments that rebutt your arguments. This is a shoddy and unprofessional style of argumentation. Note that Doherty does concede when you make good points. I am not asking you to concede where you feel the counter-argument is not sufficient to falsify your argument: I am only asking that you be honest and forthright. Deal with the arguments. Blow by blow. It is only by dealing honestly with the ideas exchanged that we can move forward. And that "it is not relevant" dismissal wont cut it either. You have to explain why and how it is not relevant. I countered your "spot the mythicist" game. You went silent on my counter. Then you unpacked other issues without dealing with my response first. Quote:
How does your Tertullian quote show I am wrong? I am asking this because it is clear to me that you did not understand what my argument was, or its thrust. Or you may have lost track of your initial arguments. That is why I am reluctant to rip through your objections in their cradle. |
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09-27-2005, 03:22 AM | #12 | ||||
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On your point 1, you said: "1. Unlike the early Christian apologists, there is evidence that the creationists are intentionally pushing ID. Take the Wedge for instance... As I showed in the other thread, your example of Justin is not apt." I disagree. I think that Justin, saying that he gives faith-based answers to Christians, and "secular" answers to pagans, is evidence for this approach. You said that I was saying that "if one mango is in a basket, then all fruit in the basket is a mango". In fact, Doherty is saying that "there is no mangoes in the basket". I've shown that there is at least one. On your point 2, you said: "2. The pro-ID scientists and non-scientists are working in concert - Dembski, Behe etc. But the early Christians were split and fighting each other. Marcionites, Orthodox Christians, Ebionites etc." That's irrelevant AFAICS. Can you tell me how that would matter? Quote:
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"The conjecture “the logos would have been a useful concept� is challenged by ecclesiastical writers like Tertullian who attempted to distance Christianity from pagan religions by saying that it is the devil that set up the similarities between Christianity and pagan religions." I understood this to mean that you believe that, as the concept of the Logos was similar to that used by pagan religions, it wouldn't have been a useful concept to use for writers like Tertullian who wanted to distance Christianity from those pagan religions. My reply shows Tertullian using the concept of the Logos: "We have already asserted that God made the world, and all which it contains, by His Word, and Reason, and Power. It is abundantly plain that your philosophers, too, regard the Logos--that is, the Word and Reason--as the Creator of the universe." |
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09-27-2005, 04:20 AM | #13 | |||
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Gdon
I am completely confused by this: Quote:
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Xianity does not need an HJ to be internally consistent! |
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09-27-2005, 05:03 AM | #14 | ||
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09-27-2005, 05:42 AM | #15 |
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Sorry, you will have to expand!
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09-27-2005, 06:12 AM | #16 | |
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And in Greek, wouldn't the phrase make much more sense with the use of definite articles? |
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09-27-2005, 06:30 AM | #17 | |
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09-27-2005, 06:36 AM | #18 | |
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http://members.optusnet.com.au/gakus...ndC_Review.htm http://members.optusnet.com.au/gakus...view_Part2.htm |
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09-27-2005, 09:00 AM | #19 | |
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GDon's point is that, if all we had was the former (eg M.Felix) you would conclude incorrectly (as you have apparently done) that this author did not believe in a Jesus who existed in history. He is arguing that the statements Doherty focuses upon in the writings of 2nd century Christians are not reliable indicators of a lack of belief in a Jesus who existed in history. |
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09-27-2005, 11:19 PM | #20 | |||||||||||||
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GDon is running all over the place. First he argued that the early Christians used concepts like Logos because they were useful for Christianity. Then he argued that we find the early Christians using pagan philosophical concepts because the early Christians were re-imaging Christianity. Then he argued that we find these pagan concepts because philosophizing Christianity "was part of an on-going process in the Second Century, when numbers of philosophically trained pagans were converting to Christianity."
GDon also argues that these early apologists only focused on expounding on philosophical concepts like logos rather than mention historical details about Jesus because these pagan philosophical concepts (which GDon sees as functionally divergent from historical details about Jesus) were the most effective for winning converts. Note the following:
GDon's style of argumentation, from the above (and below), appears to be arbitrary, fluid, and poorly thought out. It is reactive and based on the immediate difficulty at hand, fuelled by random thoughts that occur to him. That is why he is contradicting himself (above and below), and that is why he is pulling different rabbits out of a hat without adducing any evidence to support his conjectures. That is why he is asking us to join him in a guessing game instead of providing a framework that supports and shows how he arrived at his conclusions. We have seen that his usage of Justin is a hasty generalization. We have seen that his attempt at drawing a parallel with the ID movement is a false analogy. And I am sure we will see more attempts and more ideas come from him. When asked to provide evidence that demonstrates that the Christians apologists had made a conscious choice to slant their presentations to exclude a historical Jesus, GDon, like one that does not understand what "conscious choice to slant" means, responds: Quote:
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1. You argued that Christians adopted the logos concept because it would have been a useful concept for Christianity [Yes, you have done a volte face and denied you did this. And I have challenged this entire argument, but lets not be distracted by those] 2. (1) is premised on the idea that Christians co-opted or adopted concepts in pagan religions to make Christianity similar to pagan religions in order to make Christianity more applealing to pagans. 3. But Tertullian, instead of embracing the similarities between Christianity and pagan religions, condemns them as the works of the devil. 4. Therefore not all early Christians were interested in presenting Christianity as similar to pagan religions: some sought to argue that Christianity is not similar to paganism. This is what I was arguing. Now, about MF and Tertullian, MF's work is only one. And in it, he rejects the idea that a man could die to confer salvation to fellow men. Tertullian argues that a divine being is not mortal and thus existed even before incarnation. Here are the differences: 1. Ad Nationes provides a metaphysical framework that the "incarnation" alluded to in Apology can fit in by spanning the lifetime of the divinity pre and post the incarnation. Octavius has no countervailing text to salvage the the rejected godman. In other words, Apology is like a Text saying "You are a pig" and Ad Nationes is like a text saying "Sorry I was drunk when I said that". OTOH, with MF, all we have is Octavius and Octavius says "You are a pig". We have no reason to believe that such an expression was influenced by alcohol (to maintain my analogy). 2. The tone in Octavius is also devoid of any reverence to the crucified man. If MF was a Christian, he would have cut down on the tone of ridicule, which any Christian would have found offensive. 3. Tertullian appeared to have been addressing a misunderstanding or explaining a metaphysical framework while MF was rejecting a specific concept without any qualms. These differences, IMO, set apart MF and Tertullian. Quote:
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Are you telling us that you have read all the literature of the period? |
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