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Old 07-09-2011, 05:33 PM   #11
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The following is worth taking into account if one is to consider the use of the criteria invented to support an historical Jesus:


1. Embarrassment:

The Embarrassment Criterion as Meier and others define it above suffers from several flaws. First, it focuses on things which would have embarrassed the early Church. The Gospels were not written by the early Church, however, but by specific individuals whose attitudes are often unclear. Whatever the early Church thought, it cannot apply to what the writer of Mark wrote.

Secondly, even assuming that a story is embarrassing tells us nothing about whether it is true. For example, an embarrassing story might be invented to cover up or mitigate an even more embarrassing story, or for reasons now lost.

A third problem with this criterion is that it assumes that history underlies the Gospel of Mark. Instead of finding out whether anything in Mark is history, it assumes there is history in Mark and then proceeds to sort out fiction from fact. Thus, it simply discovers its own premises about the writer of Mark and his relationship to his sources. If the stories are inventions of Mark, then this criteria cannot apply.

Fourth, the entire of an "early Church" is a construct that implicitly assumes the very history it is trying to establish. Finally, even assuming that it is correct to deploy this criterion in the face of everything above, judging whether a particular story is "embarrassing" contains a strong element of subjectivity.


2. Difference

The criterion of difference is closely related to the Embarrassment Criterion, focusing also on whether an event or saying differs from what later communities stated. Once again we run into the problem of subjectivity: how much distance between an event attributed to Jesus and a posture of the later Christian communities is required to satisfy this criterion?

Further, both this and the previous criterion of Embarrassment presuppose an early Christianity whose boundaries are identifiable, a supposition many would deny.

And again, that something is "different" does not at all mean that it contains history. Both communities and traditions evolve, and "difference" may simply relate to difference stages in the evolutionary process. Theissen and Merz (1998), rightly criticize this criterion as "dogmatics disguised" (p115), that favors the development of an anti-Jewish Jesus.

for more criteria fallacies:

http://www.michaelturton.com/Mark/GMark_method.html
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Old 07-09-2011, 05:56 PM   #12
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I think this is sometimes also called "admission against interest."

The problem of course is knowing what is against interest. Suppose the writer of the gospel of Mark conceived a theological interest in giving Paul's spiritual Jesus, who spoke in visions and dreams after his death, instead of during his obscure (unremembered?) life a biography. Claiming that a genuine historical personage engaged with Jesus would have been the theological interest. John the Baptist would have baptized Jesus (that being what John the Baptst does) and that was the key point. By the time of a later gospel like Luke, the historicity isn't the real interest, since that is now assumed by faith. At that time, the theological embarrassment of the implication of John's superiority becomes more important. the writer of the gospel ofLuke then makes up an entirely different connection between John the Baptist and Jesus, namely, they are blood relatives!

Judging intererst, or similarity to practice, calls for careful exercise of historical judgment. Theologians by and large are miserably poor at it. One infamous example (or at least it should be,) was the story of Jesus' brothers and sisters and mother trying to tell him he was crazy. This has actually been argued as internal evidence of Jesus' historicity. The theological interest of course is the armor the new cult member against taking his family's remonstrations seriously.
Yeah, I do think that the criterion has little relevance for anyone who thinks that the interest of the Christians who initiated the myths differs significantly from the interests of Christians seen in our earliest evidence. I think wrote before to couch_sloth has equal relevance to the points you made, so I will quote myself below.
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The criterion does indeed require a premise that we have a rough idea of Christian interests at the time the relevant myth was told, and I think you bring up a few good points that the criterion is not so useful for those who give serious consideration to alternative possibilities about how Christians thought even if they are only possibilities and not directly implied by the evidence. If we can't trust the earliest relevant evidence to infer about how the earliest Christians probably thought, then I don't think any criteria specific to New Testament history are useful. Ehrman's criteria are appropriate only among those who share his own fundamental methods of reasonable decision-making, but I know of a set of criteria that may be more relevant when there are more fundamental disagreements about what makes for "probable" and "improbable" propositions. It is called, "Argument to the Best Explanation" (ABE), and the five criteria are explanatory power, explanatory scope, more plausible, less ad hoc, and disconfirmed by fewer accepted beliefs. I think "less ad hoc" would be most relevant in this case--the proposal "must include fewer new suppositions about the past which are not already implied to some extent by existing beliefs." ABE is outlined here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Histori...st_explanation
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Old 07-09-2011, 06:45 PM   #13
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I always get the impression that Ehrman is speaking to a class of southern college students who have been indoctrinated into the idea that the Bible is the font of all knowledge, wisdom, and certainty. He knows that what he is telling them is almost too radical for them to absorb as it is, and anything more might provoke a riot.

He accepts that and even admits to being one himself before wising up.
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Old 07-10-2011, 12:51 AM   #14
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Abe, how would you respond to what Richard Carrier said in his interview with Luke Muelhauser below:

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Originally Posted by Richard Carrier
The arguments that have been advanced for it are completely fallacious and wrong. So, the criterion doesn’t even apply. What I do in this book is not only do I point out that often happens but that the criterion itself is defective.

There are many examples and I give several where completely false things that made great difficulties for religious people were invented none the less. We know they’re invented. One of them is the castration of Attis. There’s this Attis cult, there’s this whole religion going on around the time of Christianity, it originates before Christianity.

It spreads through Rome like 100 BC at least, so it’s all over the place. In this there’s the myth that Attis kills… this is a God, the God Attis. Son of a God in fact even, kills himself by cutting off his balls. [laughter] In honor of this, his priests cut off their balls. [laughter]

Now in Roman culture this kind of emasculation is one of the most embarrassing insulting things that you do. It totally dehumanizes you and this whole sort of masculine, macho culture is like that. That’s the worst thing you could do and why on earth would you ever worship a eunuch as your savior?

That’s just disgusting and foul and contrary to all nature. A lot of Romans make this argument. It’s just ridiculous and absurd. It’s like Seneca has a line… If it wasn’t for the vast number of the mad throng you would be certain they were crazy, right?

It’s the only argument you have for them being sane is that there’s so many of them. Other than that there’s no argument really. So, clearly there was no son of God Attis who cut off his balls. That’s clearly a myth, it’s completely made up.

So, this idea that people wouldn’t invent embarrassing things to sell their religion is intrinsically false. It’s the inference, the principle of inference is wrong to begin with. So, the reality is more complicated than that.
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Old 07-10-2011, 01:10 AM   #15
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Notice that Ehrman does not even dream of giving examples of where similar methodologies are used by historians in other fields.

Ehrman also claims that the authors of Mark, Q, M and L were independent of each other.

Yes, mainstream Biblical scholars read one work, the Gospel of Luke, cut it up into pieces and declare that the pieces are independent of each other.


How does that work? How can works that lack provenance and often lack existence be known to be 'independent' of each other? Just how big was very early Christianity that writers could produce works the contents of which were a mystery to other Christian writers, despite being circulated enough to be used by other writers?

And notice that the criteria of multiple attestation is based on mostly hypothetical documents, according to Ehrman, and largely depends on claiming that the author of John's Gospel could never have learned any stories that 'Mark' wrote about from any person who had read 'Mark'.

For 'John' to be independent, 'John' could only have learned about stories that also appeared in 'Mark' by channels that had never had any contact with anybody who had read 'Mark'.

How does that work?
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Old 07-10-2011, 01:22 AM   #16
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EHRMAN
'In Mark, Jesus predicts that the end will come right away, during his own generation, while the disciples are still alive (Mark 9:1, 13:30). By the time John was written, probably from 90 to 95 CE, that earlier generation had died out and most if not all of the disciples were already dead. That is, they died before the coming of the kingdom. What does one do with the teaching about an eternal kingdom here on earth if it never comes? One reinterprets the teaching.'

CARR
But Ehrman argues elsewhere that John was independent of Mark and if something appears in Mark and also in John it is likely to go back to Jesus.

But if John reinterprets teaching found in Mark, how do we know he did not get the teaching from Mark?

How can a work be independent of another work and also reinterpret teaching found in that other work?

If you reinterpret teaching, then you are dependent upon that teaching existing.
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Old 07-10-2011, 06:44 AM   #17
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Originally Posted by beallen041 View Post
Abe, how would you respond to what Richard Carrier said in his interview with Luke Muelhauser below:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard Carrier
The arguments that have been advanced for it are completely fallacious and wrong. So, the criterion doesn’t even apply. What I do in this book is not only do I point out that often happens but that the criterion itself is defective.

There are many examples and I give several where completely false things that made great difficulties for religious people were invented none the less. We know they’re invented. One of them is the castration of Attis. There’s this Attis cult, there’s this whole religion going on around the time of Christianity, it originates before Christianity.

It spreads through Rome like 100 BC at least, so it’s all over the place. In this there’s the myth that Attis kills… this is a God, the God Attis. Son of a God in fact even, kills himself by cutting off his balls. [laughter] In honor of this, his priests cut off their balls. [laughter]

Now in Roman culture this kind of emasculation is one of the most embarrassing insulting things that you do. It totally dehumanizes you and this whole sort of masculine, macho culture is like that. That’s the worst thing you could do and why on earth would you ever worship a eunuch as your savior?

That’s just disgusting and foul and contrary to all nature. A lot of Romans make this argument. It’s just ridiculous and absurd. It’s like Seneca has a line… If it wasn’t for the vast number of the mad throng you would be certain they were crazy, right?

It’s the only argument you have for them being sane is that there’s so many of them. Other than that there’s no argument really. So, clearly there was no son of God Attis who cut off his balls. That’s clearly a myth, it’s completely made up.

So, this idea that people wouldn’t invent embarrassing things to sell their religion is intrinsically false. It’s the inference, the principle of inference is wrong to begin with. So, the reality is more complicated than that.
There is a reason people make things up. There is also a reason people report history. The criteria of embarrassment is not invalid simply because we know that people make up embarrassing things. Should we throw out the criteria simply because we know it is not always reliable?

If the reason something seemingly embarrassing is known (maybe there was a good religious reason Attis cut off his balls) then we can discount the criteria as unreliable.

If the reason something seemingly embarrassing is not known yet there is evidence that it was IN FACT embarrassing, then it should not be discounted as 'evidence' for actual history.

Carrier surely is making a point, but I think it is relevant if we have evidence that something seemingly embarrassing really was or was not really embarrassing to them.
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Old 07-10-2011, 07:15 AM   #18
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So why is the embarrassment of later authors an argument that what 'Mark' said is true?

If Glenn Beck says something so embarrassing that even Rush Limbaugh and Sarah Palin disown it, does that make it likely that what Glenn Beck said was true?
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Old 07-10-2011, 07:19 AM   #19
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Originally Posted by beallen041 View Post
Abe, how would you respond to what Richard Carrier said in his interview with Luke Muelhauser below:

N/A
Well, first of all, I am skeptical of Richard Carrier's claim that "Now in Roman culture this kind of emasculation is one of the most embarrassing insulting things that you do. It totally dehumanizes you and this whole sort of masculine, macho culture is like that. That’s the worst thing you could do and why on earth would you ever worship a eunuch as your savior?" I would like to know specifically where Dr. Carrier gets the impression that emasculation was especially embarrassing. The embarrassment would certainly apply in modern cultures, but some very powerful men in the ancient Greco-Roman world were believed to have been eunuchs (i.e. Halotus, Heraclius and Melito of Sardis).

Secondly, I don't think anyone would claim that non-historical myths that are embarrassing to the myth-tellers are impossible. But I do think that it can help us evaluate probabilities among all competing explanations.

In modern courts of law, there is an analogous principle known as declaration against interest. The principle is that, if a witness says something that is against his or her own interest, then it is more likely to be true and it counts for more than just hearsay. But, it doesn't actually work all of the time. Sometimes, they are still lies. Sometimes, the motivations of the witness are hidden and unknown. Sometimes, the witness is simply crazy. Richard Carrier would be able to pick out a few examples of such things and claim, "AH HA, see?? Declaration against interest is completely useless in courts of law!"

I like Bart Ehrman's approach in this matter. In his examples, the criterion of dissimilarity all alone does not decide any case. It is combined with other useful criteria, such as multiple attestation and contextual credibility. The whole point is to find the most probable hypotheses, and the set of interests of the myth-tellers is a very important element of that.
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Old 07-10-2011, 07:27 AM   #20
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Why would 'Mark' write 'against interest'? Are you claiming that he was forced under duress to tell the truth about Jesus being baptized, because Christians were being taunted by claims that no Elijah figure had anointed their so-called Messiah?

I also see that Ehrman never bothers to give any examples of his criteria actually working. Where are the controls? When have scholars ever used these criteria and got them to work?

Not only does the Emperor have No Clothes, but the tailors can't even be bothered to show us any clothes they have ever made.
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