FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 05-07-2009, 04:08 PM   #111
Junior Member
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Valencia Province, Spain
Posts: 41
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by matthijs View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
DR: Show me that calibrated C14 dates for Thera are proven by anything other than C14 and widely accepted by the archaeological fraternity. Then produce the still unpublished data for the dendrochronologies of the region actually under discussion (and not the Pacific coast of the USA). Explain how local climate conditions do not effect growth patterns and how trees from all around the world can be expected to grow the same tree-ring widths (from the snow-covered slopes of the White Mountains to the bogs of Ireland). Show me, using that data (if you can get it after 20 years without independent scrutiny), that the proposed overlap-matches in the separate tree-ring sequences in the Turkish, German and Belfast dendrochronologies are independent of C14 dating (used to fix the time-period for the overlap search) and explain to me why you think Yamaguchi does not produce good examples of complacency in that matching process of the rings. Do that and science can claim a victory.
Thank you for making this clear, David. I'll get back to you after I've had some sleep, unless someone beats me to it. Some of the items you've listed, however, are clearly unreasonable and amount to the same kind of demands placed on evolutionary theory by creationists; namely, things that are unprovable and entirely beside the point. I've bolded those portions of your post, and I trust that in the name of sensible discourse you're able to see fit to withdraw them. The portions that I haven't bolded, I believe I can demonstrate quite well.

Elske.
DR: But the words you have highlighted are the whole point.

(a) You don't just have to convince me but all the archaeologists who refuse to accept C14 dating because it messes big time with their research. You do that by proving the calibration curve is correct for the Middle East to everyone's satisfaction - and at present the calibrated C14 dating system is not provable.

(b) The whole point is that science is normally tested by making the data available for others to test and replicate, yet the dendro boys in Belfast won't/haven't published the data after 20 years. What does that tell you.

(c) I would have thought it was obvious that this business of local climate conditions is a major flaw in the dendro uniformity thesis. How can bog oaks in a damp Irish climate have the same growth pattern as Bristlecone Pines high up on the mountains of the western USA?
David Rohl is offline  
Old 05-07-2009, 04:21 PM   #112
Junior Member
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Valencia Province, Spain
Posts: 41
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by matthijs
I can rehash quite happily if that's really what needs to be done, but I can't help but be nagged by the pointless feeling of it. I'd rather not recast the contents of this thread in my own terms, but as I say, I'll do that, and then some, if you're really unconvinced by those arguments. Is that what you need from me? I'll boil the kettle, make my coffee thick and black and rough, and deal to this now if that's what you need. I'll confess, I find the idea of an all-nighter endearing.

Elske.
DR: Now perhaps you might have a better understanding of the position I find myself in here (I haven't done a day's work since I foolishly joined this discussion board). And perhaps a little sympathy for the bombardment I have had to cope with? I am certainly not going to do your work for you. You must understand that it is not just for my benefit, but, if you are going to question my scholarship, you have to make your case to the other readers here. Otherwise its just putting this old dog down without giving him a chance to respond to the details of the criticism.
David Rohl is offline  
Old 05-07-2009, 08:26 PM   #113
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Bli Bli
Posts: 3,135
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by judge View Post


Is Paris in Texas or France?
Is Athens in Georgia or Greece?

What about Springfield? :devil1:
Note "Joshua's". Let me ask you again, is Joshua's Goshen in Egypt? (Hint: the choice is yes or no.)

(Please don't make this into repetitive stress.)


spin
Well I don't think there is much point unless you have something new to say. I am no expert (far from it), but presently I think your alternative is lacking.
I admire your imagination in proposing it (although perhaps you saw it somewhere?).
I know that tactically at least, you like to insist you are right and perhaps here you are, but I also know that your style is to forcefully state your case, even when you yourself are not really convinced that it is trully persuasive.(your lingusitic arguments re: Nazareth for example).
Anyway I will perhaps continue to consider your alternative, although as I don't believe in a literal exodus it is of no great import, to me.
All the best.
judge is offline  
Old 05-08-2009, 01:04 AM   #114
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Bli Bli
Posts: 3,135
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
.
Spin says Akkadian possesses the same generic words (cognates) as Hebrew, thus the latter is more akin to it's sister Semitic languages than Egyptian. [At another time he was arguing that you can't use East Semitic to make a linguistic point with regard to the relationship between Egyptian and Hebrew.] All that implies is that the Semitic languages as a whole - given their close relationships - were capable of represnting Sh where the Egyptians used S. I have produced sufficient evidence in the form of examples of this phenomenon to cast doubt on Kitchen's assertion that this never happened with Hebrew. And there is nothing wrong with the methodology of doubt - that is the basis of criticism.
If you are trying to cast doubt on an assertion that this never happened with Hebrew then it seems you must have done this.

I will probably leave this thread now, but all the best with your work when you return to it, and thanks for dropping by. I will make sure I have a look at one of your book/s when next near a large bookstore (maybe later this month if lucky).
judge is offline  
Old 05-08-2009, 01:07 AM   #115
Junior Member
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Valencia Province, Spain
Posts: 41
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by JoeWallack View Post
JW:
The Shroud is a favorite hobby of mine because it is an excellent example of modern Christianity manufacturing evidence for a supposed historical event. Regarding Villarreal's supposed discrediting of the carbon dating results of The Shroud, here is the chronology:

[snip]

Perhaps more mysterious than The Shroud itself is how a 14th century person could have patched The Shroud in an undetectable way to multiple 20th century textile experts with modern photography equipment. The ironic conclusion is that the sample used for the carbon dating was carefully controlled while the sample used by Villareal claiming to dispute the carbon dating results was subject to no controls whatsoever.

Joseph
DR: The story you give, Joseph, is very interesting indeed. So, are you suggesting that these scientists have acted fraudulently (one conveniently dying in order not to have to account for his dishonesty)? Shocking! And there was me thinking that Science was objective and not subjective. So there is hope for me yet! I can now argue that science is not infallible and that scientists have agendas, and that they can falsify data, and that they can discard results that don't agree with their expectations, and that they can ignore obvious flaws in their methodology. Wow! Thank you.

To err is human. To err (possibly intentionally) and proclaim the objectivity of science in your work is diabolical (unless you happen to be an atheist, then I suppose we had better use the word naughty).
David Rohl is offline  
Old 05-08-2009, 02:23 AM   #116
Junior Member
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Valencia Province, Spain
Posts: 41
Default

This is going to be my final word on the Shishak issue as the whole drawn-out thing is getting silly. To summarise my position:

(a) There are historical and chronological reasons to question the identity of Shoshenk I as the biblical Shishak who, according to the biblical narrative, attacked Judah, took its fortified cities and plundered the temple of Jerusalem and the royal palace there in the 5th year or Rehoboam (usually dated to 926 BC).

(b) The Shoshenk campaign itinerary at Karnak lists scores of locations which the Egyptian army reached. These do not include Jerusalem or (with the exception of one on the main highway into the northern hill country) any of the fortified towns protecting Judah claimed to have been attacked by Shishak. In fact Shoshenk’s campaign concentrated on the territory of the Northern Kingdom of Israel and then the Negev. In other words Shoshenk actually avoided the Southern Kingdom of Judah. This is the exact opposite of the biblical narrative concerning Shishak.

(c) The internal Egyptian evidence (coupled with inscriptions from Byblos) dates Shoshenk I to the very end of the 9th century BC which is a whole century later than the biblical date for Shishak.

(d) Yet Kitchen uses the biblical date to establish the date for the Egyptian king based on his identification as Shishak. The whole chronology of the Third Intermediate Period is held up by this methodological error.

(e) The only mentions of Israel in Egyptian inscriptions come from the 19th Dynasty (specifically a statue base from the early reign of Ramesses II and the Merenptah Stela). These references place Israel in Palestine and show that Egypt recognised Israel as a political entity. It is listed alongside Hatti, Libya and Syria as a major player in the region (and not a bunch of tribes wandering around Sinai or eking out a living in the hill country of Palestine).

(f) The poem on the Merenptah Stela mentioning Israel is reflected in the campaigns inscribed on the exterior wall of the hypostyle hall at Karnak where we see Ramesses II (or according to Yurco, Merenptah) fighting against an Israelite army using chariots. The first time that Israel possessed a chariot force (according to the OT) was in the time of Solomon. There is absolutely no indication that Moses or Joshua employed chariots. None of the stories in Judges says anything other than that the Israelite tribes employed infantry tactics. King David actually ordered the destruction of enemy chariots seized in battle and the hamstringing of the horses because he had no use for them. So the conclusion I draw from all this is that Ramesses II and his son Merenptah were contemporaries of Solomon and Rehoboam. There are internal chronological indications (genealogies, etc) from Egyptian archaeology which confirm this general time frame.

(g) Ramesses had a hypocoristicon - Sysw - which was common currency in Syro-Palestine (places in that region being named ‘X of Sysw’). The W vowel marker at the end of the shortened name probably represents an A. In the Year 21 Hittite Treaty, the Hittite version (written in the lingua franca of Akkadian) gives the full names of Usermaatre-setepenre Ramesses-meriamun as Washmuaria-shatapnaria Riamashesha-miamana. This shows how the Hittites heard Ramesses name (remember that the writing of the name we employ is modern Egypto-speak based on Greek). So the hypocoristicon of Riamashesha is represented here by Shesha.

(h) Where Egyptians employed the letter S in names, the Semitic languages (including Akkadian and Hebrew) sometimes (and I believe regularly) used a shin. Thus the Egyptian name of the land south of Egypt in modern Sudan was Kus. The Hebrew version was Kush. The name of Ramesses’ father was Sutu (Egypto-speak Seti) whereas the Hebrew version was Shutu. The Egyptian word for ‘man’ was ‘is’, the Hebrew ‘ish’. Kitchen claims that this transfer of S to Sh never occurs. I disagree.

(i) It has been claimed that the name Ramesses is written in biblical Hebrew with samek and not shin/sin. The problem with this argument is that samek in the Late Bronze Age and early Iron Age represented Ts and Td and not S [see (J. E. Hoch: ‘Semitic Words in Egyptian Texts of the New Kingdom and Third Intermediate Period’ (Princeton, 1994), pp. 407-8, 429) and R. S. Hendel in BASOR 301]. It is only later, in the late Iron Age, and probably in the time of Josiah, that the name Ramesses was edited into the biblical narrative when samek could be used to represent S. But in the time of Ramesses II (and in the NC, Solomon and Rehoboam) samek could not be used for Egyptian S because it would have given Tsytsw which is nothing like Sysw. This is why we have so much evidence in the Semitic languages to show that Sh (shin) was used.

(j) Moreover, the early Hebrew script (without the pointing of the Massoretic texts of more than a thousand years later) did not distinguish between sin and shin. There was a single sign (looking like W) to represent them both. So I don’t even have to argue that Egyptian S became Sh in early Hebrew writing (although I believe that it did).

(k) And, in addition, the early (10th century) Hebrew signs for waw and qoph were identical (see the Lachish VI ostracon and the Izbet Sartah abecedary). So the name Sysw would have been written in Hebrew in exactly the same way as the scribe would have written Shyshak - with sin/shin-yod-sin/shin-waw/qoph. I cannot illustrate this for you here (I don’t believe you have the facilities to do that) but, rest assured, you would find it impossible to tell the difference. I would therefore argue that the 10th century Hebrew scribes recorded the name as shin/shin-yod-shin/sin-waw and it was only in the time of Josiah or later - when waw no longer looked like qoph - that the scribes of that time mistook the name as shin-yod-shin-qoph.

(l) So I have internal archaeological evidence from Egypt to date Shoshenk later than Rehoboam, plus evidence that Ramesses II was contemporary with Solomon (with his chariots), plus linguistic evidence to show how Ramesses’ popular name - Sysw - might have ended up as Shishak centuries after the events under discussion.

That is it from me on this subject, unless reasonable clarifications are requested.
David Rohl is offline  
Old 05-08-2009, 04:41 AM   #117
Junior Member
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Denmark
Posts: 31
Default

Hi David,

As I said, I would've preferred to leave this up to someone more competent than myself, but I think I've been able to address your concerns adequately, and state my criticisms intelligibly. You're unlikely to agree with most of it, but discourse--even futile discourse--is usually better than silence.

Okay, here we go...

Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
DR: Show me that calibrated C14 dates for Thera are proven by anything other than C14 and widely accepted by the archaeological fraternity.
Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
(a) You don't just have to convince me but all the archaeologists who refuse to accept C14 dating because it messes big time with their research. You do that by proving the calibration curve is correct for the Middle East to everyone's satisfaction - and at present the calibrated C14 dating system is not provable.
I don't have to convince archeologists at all. Their opinion of a subject that isn't archeology isn't relevant. I also don't intend to prove anything to "everyone's satisfaction." I'm not fussed about what "everyone" thinks, and neither should you be. You're trying to set the bar too high, and I'm just going to ignore it because it's subterfuge. Let's concentrate on what matters--and that would be you, David. You've shown yourself willing to buck a consensus or two, so you don't really get to fall back on an appeal to the numbers at this point. Archeologists be damned.

Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
Explain how local climate conditions do not effect growth patterns and how trees from all around the world can be expected to grow the same tree-ring widths (from the snow-covered slopes of the White Mountains to the bogs of Ireland).
Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
I would have thought it was obvious that this business of local climate conditions is a major flaw in the dendro uniformity thesis. How can bog oaks in a damp Irish climate have the same growth pattern as Bristlecone Pines high up on the mountains of the western USA?
We have frost damage to bristlecone pine rings[1] that coincides nicely with exceptionally narrow rings in Irish bogs[2], and we have acidity layers in Greenland icecores[3] that coincide with the previous two data without breaching the estimated error limit for the dating. It's not clear to me where uniformity of "growth pattern" is at issue here. The bristlecones are frost damaged, which closely-couples with high dust-veil indices; and we have Irish bogs with exceptionally narrow rings, a phenomenon that has been connected to volcanic activity via its coinciding with other relevant dates. Add to this the icecores, and what you have is a conciliance between several independent models, which together provide, at the very least, strong circumstantial evidence in support of the calibrated C14 dating methods, which form another point of conciliance. There are also weak synchronisms with Egypt and China FWIW, and a few other tidbits that didn't strike me as strong enough to include.

Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
Then produce the still unpublished data for the dendrochronologies of the region actually under discussion (and not the Pacific coast of the USA).
Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
(b) The whole point is that science is normally tested by making the data available for others to test and replicate, yet the dendro boys in Belfast won't/haven't published the data after 20 years. What does that tell you.
Conspiracy, maybe? Academic cover-up, perhaps? A scandal waiting to be unveiled by a feisty sleuth? The first point here is that scientists are generally honest, so that's the default position. The second point is that you cannot ask me to conjure these data, for obvious reasons, and you cannot win an argument by hinting at malfeasance. Thirdly, and for whatever reason, dendrochronological data are often considered propriety, and can be fiercely guarded. Finally, IIUC the University of Arizona's Laboratory of Tree-ring Research houses a sample specimen from Belfast, where they also have high-resolution photographs available.

This doesn't sound much like a cover-up to me, I just don't get the impression that a box has been locked and the key thrown away. But then again, I don't buy into crop circles either, and my tin-foil hat is on permanent hiatus. Perhaps my credulity needs recalibration; have you heard good things about dendro curves?

Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
Show me, using that European dendro data (if you can get it after 20 years without independent scrutiny), that the proposed overlap-matches in the separate tree-ring sequences in the Turkish, German and Belfast dendrochronologies are independent of C14 dating (used to fix the time-period for the overlap search)
Well, hopefully you're just waxing rhetorical with that first part--my access to data is more limited even than yours. And from what I can tell, the second part is based on your dislike of wiggle-matching, which you arrived at mostly as a result of Yamaguchi I presume. This is from your Appendix C:
Quote:
In 1986, D. Yamaguchi recognised that trees tend to auto-correlate -- that is they possess the ability to cross-match with each other in several places within the tree-ring sequence. He took a douglas fir log known to date between AD 1482 and 1668 and demonstrated that it could cross-match with other tree-ring sequences to give t-values of around 5 at AD 1504 (for the low end of the ring age), 7 at AD 1647 and 4.5 at AD 1763. Indeed he found 113 significant candidate wiggle-matches throughout the whole of the AD tree-ring sequence. [...] Thus one would be justified in asking if the crucial cross-links which connect up the floating sequences of the Belfast and German chronologies are based on incorrect wiggle-matches which have resulted from the phenomenon of autocorrelation.
This is a simple case of failing to acknowledge the context. Yamaguchi provided[4] a corrective for the autocorrelation problem later in the article:
Quote:
One way to circumvent this problem is to fit autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) models (Chatfield 1975; Box and Jenkins 1976; O'Donovan 1983) to remove autocorrelation from them, or "prewhiten" them, before cross correlation.
He described a short-coming of the current technique, which you cited, then he provided a solution, which you failed to cite. This is cherry picking, am I wrong? What part of Yamaguchi's corrective are you unsatisfied with? Why didn't you deem it relevant?

Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
DR: Now perhaps you might have a better understanding of the position I find myself in here (I haven't done a day's work since I foolishly joined this discussion board). And perhaps a little sympathy for the bombardment I have had to cope with?
I certainly do sympathise. The internet is rough and tumble and very unforgiving, and you've suffered no end of scrutiny by multiple people, a tireless attack on your theses, and you've every right to feel overwhelmed. I'm not mitigating that. But in so many ways, you just started on the wrong foot here. Without wasting a moment, you challenged what most FRDB denizens consider sacred; the right to speak freely, anonymously, deal only with data and analysis, and ignore credentials. Letting arguments float or fail purely on their merits, and having nicknames--these two are especially sacred. You breached those with your very first post. If you're feeling hostility, it's mainly because you entered a foreign community and failed to respect their customs. If you're feeling overwhelmed, that's because people here aren't afraid of expressing their opinions. That's the way this particular merry-go-round goes round, but the free-flow of information can be intoxicating--I wouldn't dismiss it out-of-hand.

(And to answer your earlier question, I'm one of those people who think spin should take the prickle-chain off his knuckles. Don't know if that makes you feel better.)

Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
I am certainly not going to do your work for you.
All I can say is it's really your work. You wrote a book, one that has provided no end of comfort to creationists and other folks who sustain their lunatic beliefs on the trickle of anti-science dogma that flows ever more steadily than it should. They didn't even have to quote-mine you, since you said exactly what they wanted to hear in perfectly articulate terms. This is unfair to everybody, and you shouldn't be attempting to induce guilt in me for not spit-polishing the shrapnel of your scholarship.

Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
You must understand that it is not just for my benefit, but, if you are going to question my scholarship, you have to make your case to the other readers here.
The other readers here are quite capable following a hyperlink to another thread. I was convinced that such wouldn't be too tiresome for them, and that they felt no obligation to take my word for anything. I've done this only for your sake, since you asked so kindly, and perhaps because it's a good refresher for myself.

I wish you many happy returns, David.

Elske.

References
1. LaMarche, V. C. Jr & Hirschboeck, K. K. Nature 307, 121-126 (1984).
2. M. G. L. Baillie & M. A. R. Munro Nature 332, 344 - 346 (24 March 1988).
3. C. U. Hammer, H. B. Clausen, W. L. Friedrich & H. Tauber Nature 328, 517 - 519 (06 August 1987).
4. Yamaguchi, D.K. Tree-Ring Bulletin 46, 47-54 (1986).
matthijs is offline  
Old 05-08-2009, 05:29 AM   #118
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by judge View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Note "Joshua's". Let me ask you again, is Joshua's Goshen in Egypt? (Hint: the choice is yes or no.)

(Please don't make this into repetitive stress.)
Well I don't think there is much point unless you have something new to say. I am no expert (far from it), but presently I think your alternative is lacking.
I admire your imagination in proposing it (although perhaps you saw it somewhere?).
I know that tactically at least, you like to insist you are right and perhaps here you are, but I also know that your style is to forcefully state your case, even when you yourself are not really convinced that it is trully persuasive.(your lingusitic arguments re: Nazareth for example).
Anyway I will perhaps continue to consider your alternative, although as I don't believe in a literal exodus it is of no great import, to me.
All the best.
You see how difficult it is to get you to be rational. The interest is in the origin of the word "Goshen". You need to consider all the data, not be led astray by a portion.


spin
spin is offline  
Old 05-08-2009, 06:19 AM   #119
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Midwest
Posts: 4,787
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by David Rohl View Post
This is going to be my final word on the Shishak issue as the whole drawn-out thing is getting silly.

....

That is it from me on this subject, unless reasonable clarifications are requested.
I for one am grateful you stopped by to discuss your position.

You mention that the earliest Hebrew signs for the yod and the qoph are identical, and you cite the Izbet Sartah abecedary as evidence. Here are some images and reproductions:







Is there some way you could describe what you are saying from these images? (It looks to me like the alphabet starts at the bottom lefthand corner, right?)

Many thanks in advance.

Ben.
Ben C Smith is offline  
Old 05-08-2009, 06:34 AM   #120
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: ""
Posts: 3,863
Default

I found the following in the WIkipedia entry of David Rohl
Quote:
Redating the floruit of Ramesses II three centuries later would not only reposition the date of the Battle of Qadesh and complicate the chronology of Hittite history, it would require a less severe revision of the chronology of Assyrian history prior to 664 BC.
How does David date the Battle of Qadesh in A Test of Time?
Ted Hoffman is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:48 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.