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Old 03-12-2011, 09:26 AM   #31
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Where are you getting this?

The Jesus Project ended because it ran out of money. Most of the scholars who ended up on the Project were well qualified academics, not at all extreme.

I don't know why you think that Hoffman was an activist, or a hack.
Like I said, maybe he isn't.
THEN STOP MAKING BASELESS ACCUSATIONS ABOUT PEOPLE

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Some time ago, I found out that Hoffmann supports a sort-of postmodernist position on the historical Jesus, where we just don't know one way or the other, much in the same way as Robert M. Price and you. I have a lot of contempt for that position, as it is a philosophical approach that neglects all judgments of probability, though such judgments are the only way historical conclusions can be made. It is not aligned with scientific empiricism. Instead, it is aligned with unlikely fringe theories, whose advocates want to put their positions on the same level as the mainline theories strongly backed by the evidence. Before I was deeply involved in the historical Jesus debates against atheists, I saw the postmodernist arguments regularly among creationists, who would never explicitly identify with the philosophy of postmodernist, but they are generally the same arguments. "We all have the same evidence, you have your interpretation, we have ours, and who is to say that your explanation is better than ours?"
This is so totally confused I don't know where to start. It mischaracterizes all of modern scholarship. It fails to realize that creationists use a parody of modern scholarship.

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Hoffmann is and has been an anti-religious activist. He was chair of the Committee for the Scientific Examination of Religion for seven years, and he was senior vice president of the Center for Inquiry.
CFI is not anti-religious. The mission of the Center for Inquiry is to foster a secular society based on science, reason, freedom of inquiry, and humanist values.

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On the other hand, Hoffmann has academic creds. He got his theological doctorate from Oxford, and he was a professor at several campuses.
He knows more than you do

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There is no dichotomy between academics who are "well qualified" and academics who are "extreme." They may overlap, and those were the kinds of participants in the Jesus Project. My judgment about what happened in the Jesus Project came from Hoffmann's blog entry titled, "Rethinking the Thinking behind The Jesus Project." In it, Hoffmann writes:
The first sign of possible trouble came when I was asked by one such “myther” whether we might not start a “Jesus Myth” section of the project devoted exclusively to those who were committed to the thesis that Jesus never existed. I am not sure what “committed to a thesis” entails, but it does not imply the sort of skepticism that the myth theory itself invites.
This question did not come from a participant.

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I think April DeConick's explanation for why she left the Jesus Project is much more direct and revealing.
<snip>
So, the take-away point is that the Jesus Project was infested with scholars who wished primarily to advance the hypothesis that Jesus was merely myth. That isn't to say that they are unqualified scholars. But, they would qualify as both "extreme" and "hacks," at least in my estimation.
You haven't identified any of these people, because they are a figment of your imagination.
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Old 03-12-2011, 09:45 AM   #32
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You would be highly mistaken to propose that the influence of Jesus-mythicism is evidence of its reasonableness.
I never made such a claim. But I would endorse it. It is not beyond the realm of possibility that an influential idea is so because of its reasonableness, even if there are examples of influential ideas which are not reasonable, like Creationism. And there is a difference between the two. Creationism is endorsed by a different segment of society than mythicism, namely people who don't think and who believe superstitious nonsense vs. people who do think and are open-minded and capable of evaluating evidence.

Unfortunately, Abe, you seem to have put yourself into the former camp because you condemn an influential idea based on lack of knowledge and an apparent unwillingness to try to correct that lack of knowledge or evaluate evidence in an open-minded fashion. You strike me as being here on a mission every bit as predetermined as that of any fanatical creationist.

Earl Doherty
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Old 03-12-2011, 10:00 AM   #33
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You can download a free Kindle reader from Amazon that will work on your PC. You don't need an actual Kindle.
Thank you, that is a relief.
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CFI is not anti-religious. The mission of the Center for Inquiry is to foster a secular society based on science, reason, freedom of inquiry, and humanist values.
There is no practical distinction, in my estimate, but, if you like, we can call Hoffmann a secular humanist activist, and the relevant conclusion does not change.

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This question did not come from a participant.
That would make Hoffmann an idiot for believing it is a sign of trouble for the Jesus Project, and I don't think Hoffmann is an idiot.

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You haven't identified any of these people, because they are a figment of your imagination.
They are all openly listed here:

http://www.centerforinquiry.net/jesusproject/fellows

I can pick out at least some of the scholars that I know for sure are hacks: Richard Carrier, Hermann Detering, Robert M. Price, and Frank Zindler. I don't know the rest of them, but apparently both Hoffmann and DeConick thought that such participants were enough to corrupt the entire project.
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Old 03-12-2011, 10:07 AM   #34
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So, why is Hermann Detering a hack?
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Old 03-12-2011, 10:07 AM   #35
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You would be highly mistaken to propose that the influence of Jesus-mythicism is evidence of its reasonableness.
I never made such a claim. But I would endorse it. It is not beyond the realm of possibility that an influential idea is so because of its reasonableness, even if there are examples of influential ideas which are not reasonable, like Creationism. And there is a difference between the two. Creationism is endorsed by a different segment of society than mythicism, namely people who don't think and who believe superstitious nonsense vs. people who do think and are open-minded and capable of evaluating evidence.

Unfortunately, Abe, you seem to have put yourself into the former camp because you condemn an influential idea based on lack of knowledge and an apparent unwillingness to try to correct that lack of knowledge or evaluate evidence in an open-minded fashion. You strike me as being here on a mission every bit as predetermined as that of any fanatical creationist.

Earl Doherty
You could be right. I used to think very highly of the reasoning abilities of anti-religious people, and I discovered that there are severe limits to that pattern when I involved myself in the debates about history. I still hold at least relative respect for them. They are generally more knowledgeable and better reasoned than the creationists. As far as activists go, they are in the upper echelons of intelligence and reasoning ability. All I need to do is talk to a street preacher to confirm such a view. But, of course, anti-religious people can be and are victims to the same patterns of wishful thinking and delusion, much like all other activists. And, I certainly can not identify myself outside of that group, being typically more extreme of an anti-religious activist.
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Old 03-12-2011, 10:10 AM   #36
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So, why is Hermann Detering a hack?
He believes that every existing Pauline letter is a complete forgery, a position that stands against both the evidence and the positions of every other historian/scholar.
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Old 03-12-2011, 10:12 AM   #37
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...
There is no practical distinction, in my estimate, but, if you like, we can call Hoffmann a secular humanist activist, and the relevant conclusion does not change.
Your conclusion is totally baseless. Hoffmann is not anti-religious. He is a scholar of religion.

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That would make Hoffmann an idiot for believing it is a sign of trouble for the Jesus Project, and I don't think Hoffmann is an idiot.
This is totally confused, but I'm glad your opinion of Hoffmann has risen.

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You haven't identified any of these people, because they are a figment of your imagination.
They are all openly listed here:

http://www.centerforinquiry.net/jesusproject/fellows

I can pick out at least some of the scholars that I know for sure are hacks: Richard Carrier, Hermann Detering, Robert M. Price, and Frank Zindler. I don't know the rest of them, but apparently both Hoffmann and DeConick thought that such participants were enough to corrupt the entire project.
"Apparently" you don't know anything.

Richard Carrier has a PhD in ancient history. He is not a hack. Robert M. Price has two PhD's in theology. He is not a hack. Neither Hoffman nor DeConick thought that the presence of any of these people would corrupt the project - their problems were more philosophical.
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Old 03-12-2011, 10:13 AM   #38
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So, why is Hermann Detering a hack?
He believes that every existing Pauline letter is a complete forgery, a position that stands against both the evidence and the positions of every other historian/scholar.
So you're familiar with his arguments against the authenticity of the letters?

Right, almost all NT scholars think that some of the letters are authentic. Does disagreeing with the majority make him a hack?
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Old 03-12-2011, 10:14 AM   #39
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So, why is Hermann Detering a hack?
He believes that every existing Pauline letter is a complete forgery, a position that stands against both the evidence and the positions of every other historian/scholar.
What evidence? How have other historians or scholars evaluated that evidence?
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Old 03-12-2011, 10:26 AM   #40
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He believes that every existing Pauline letter is a complete forgery, a position that stands against both the evidence and the positions of every other historian/scholar.
So you're familiar with his arguments against the authenticity of the letters?

Right, almost all NT scholars think that some of the letters are authentic. Does disagreeing with the majority make him a hack?
I haven't read the works of Deterring. I have investigated and debated the authenticity of the letters of Paul in this forum. Half of the Pauline epistles are thought by critical scholars to be genuine, the other half forgery. I have concluded that the evidence is strongly on the side of the half-and-half position, but I don't want to get into that debate again. I would judge Deterring as probably a hack, even if there is still a possibility that he is right. It is simply much more probable given what I know that his position is all about selling copies of his book, not about the best explanations for the evidence. By participating in the same debates, I know that there are people who believe that claim of complete forgery of all Pauline epistles, without actually knowing the evidence, because they are motivated by an anti-Christianity bent, not because they want the best and most reasonable explanations. They are the ones who would be willing to buy books by Deterring. That is generally what makes a scholar probably a "hack."
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