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03-26-2007, 01:02 PM | #11 |
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When did "the historical Jesus" become established by the evidence?
In the biological sciences, we can show when certain hypotheses become supported by the evidence, such that they become justifiable knowledge. At what point did the existence of Jesus become justifiably true? When did the evidence prove that he existed? |
03-26-2007, 03:41 PM | #12 | ||||
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Sorry, everyone: I hadn't checked. To make amends I've found the link:
http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.php?t=200747 Quote:
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03-26-2007, 03:56 PM | #13 | ||
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So, no, I'm not sure I believe anyone has the right to be senseless and foolish - only the freedom to be so. Interestingly, Figuer, your later example half agrees with this. Evolution might not be up for grabs, but many intelligent and informed people think the consensus theory for the mechanism needs to be looked at again. So the example you picked was a rational one, not something wacko. Can you ever honestly imagine yourself writing something like "I believe in yogic flying, despite the many "experts" that say it's nonsense. I might be completely wrong, but it is my right to err." I don't believe you can; in other words, you yourself limit your "right to err" to things that are not nonsense. |
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03-26-2007, 04:06 PM | #14 |
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I think the analogy goes the other way. HJ is like creationism, especially the creationism of Darwin's time, when it was the standard accepted theory. It appears rational, but it is based on 1) assuming that the Bible has some sort of validity and 2) assuming that the appearance of design implies a creator. The HJ scholars know that Christianity exists, and many of them assume that this implies that there was a founder, someone like the Jesus described in the gospels.
MJ is more analogous to evolution. MJ scholars accept that religions can evolve, rather than be created. Both are quite different from creationism or evolution: there is no hard data and no real way of testing either hypothesis. |
03-26-2007, 04:20 PM | #15 | |
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03-26-2007, 05:05 PM | #16 |
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03-26-2007, 05:07 PM | #17 | |
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My real problem with the phrase you used is however that you base his lack of right in the number of people who claim such a thing. If you had claimed the strenght of the evidence as a reason I would have found it more acceptable. I just find any suggestion that conceptions of truth or science are dependent on democratic concensus extremely dangerous. |
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03-26-2007, 08:32 PM | #18 | ||
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The evidence is "compelling" because the "experts" want it to be. They read and interpret it in ways that make it compelling for them. For example, take the "argument from embarrassment" which says the story of the disciples' abandoning Jesus must have actually happened because there's no other way such an "embarrassing" incident would have been included in the gospels otherwise. Bible scholars use this argument all the time, but it is hardly the only or the best explanation. For example, it's quite likely "Mark" is structured almost entirely from the Jewish scriptures. "They all forsook him, and fled" (Mark 15:30) is included in the story to fulfill Scripture, such as: Psalm 31:11 Because of all my enemies, I am the utter contempt of my neighbors; I am a dread to my friends— those who see me on the street flee from me. Psalm 38:11 My friends and companions avoid me because of my wounds; my neighbors stay far away. Quote:
Look ... although the MJ thesis is quite compelling, there's no way to demonstrate it to be true beyond all doubt. As long as there is any uncertainty or ambiguity, most Bible scholars are likely going to play it safe and go along with the majority opinion. But the simple fact is, that majority opinion is not based on lots of hard evidence. It would not surprise me if most Bible scholars simply assume Jesus must have existed, assume that all MJ theories have already been decisively refuted, and give little more thought to the matter. |
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03-26-2007, 08:33 PM | #19 | ||
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there also exists the chance that we are not dealing with either an HJ or a MJ, but rather a fabricated FJ. Hitherto researchers of biblical history have accepted that the gospels and accompanying NT were delivered to Constantine to be bound, along with the OT, and the supporting documentation provided --- at the very very same time --- passed down as is claimed by Eusebius. What is being struggled towards is essentially a theory of history for the period of antiquity from -4 BCE (Birth of Apollonius of Tyana) to the Council of Nicaea. Today, the theory of history assembled by Eusebius, in the time period 312-324 CE, in which the "tribe of christians" is claimed to have had an historical existence, is the only one anyone has ever had since Constantine's "supremacy party". The contention that mainstream BC&H are studying a fiction and a pseudo-history cannot be overlooked. The emperor Julian cites "the fabrication" as "a fiction of men composed by wickedness". Such a theory of history is falsifiable and obviously must necessarily include the history of the invention of the "new and strange Roman religious order" with effect from the fourth century. It must also explain any inconsistent historical citation with respect to the tribe of christians in the prenicene epoch, and has done so to-date. Remember that the "Literary Tradition" is only one of the traditions at the disposal of historical enquiry. There are a series of perhaps a dozen or more traditions which are resources to historical enquiry independent from the "Literature Tradition". EG: Numismatic tradition, C14, archeology, etc, etc. The only other "tradition" ancillary (although by no means independent of) the Literature Tradition, is paleography. Handwriting analysis requires handwritten literature. In summary, aside from the "attestation of Handwriting experts" with respect to papyrii fragments, and ancient mss, there is absolutely no other historical "tradition" that bears witness to the existence of "the prenicene tribe of christians". Art, coins, architecture, bones, ossaries, inscriptions, sarcohagi, legal contracts, archeological relics, carbon dating citations on NT papryii and bindings, jewellery, trinkets, clothing, murals, weapons, graffiti, sculpture, burial relics, curios, libelli, tax returns, etc, etc. No parallel supporting evidence for the existence of the prenicene "tribe of christians" until after the great boundary event known as BULLNECK's Basilicas. |
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03-26-2007, 09:04 PM | #20 | |
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