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

View Poll Results: Check off everything you would need to see to say a guy was a "Historical Jesus."
God 1 2.63%
Resurrection 3 7.89%
Healed miraculously and drove out real demons 3 7.89%
Was a conventional (non-supernatural) faith healer and exorcist, but did not do miracles 13 34.21%
Performed nature miracles such as walking on water 3 7.89%
Was born of a virgin 2 5.26%
Said all or most of what is attributed to him in the Gospels 4 10.53%
Said at least some of what is attributed to him in the Gospels 21 55.26%
Believed himself to be God 2 5.26%
Believed himself to be the Messiah 5 13.16%
Was believed by his followers to be God 1 2.63%
Was believed by his followers to be the Messiah 16 42.11%
Was involved in some kind of attack on the Temple 9 23.68%
Was crucified 27 71.05%
Was from Nazareth 8 21.05%
Was from Galilee 12 31.58%
Had 12 disciples 3 7.89%
Had some disciples, not necessarily 12 25 65.79%
Raised the dead 2 5.26%
Was believed by his disciples to still be alive somehow after the crucifixion. 17 44.74%
Multiple Choice Poll. Voters: 38. You may not vote on this poll

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 03-29-2012, 01:15 PM   #101
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Calgary, Alberta Canada
Posts: 2,612
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by JonA View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rick Sumner View Post

If that "historical person" was anything other than a Jesus in keeping with the gospel narrative, then "historical Jesus" is a meaningless term for him, for the same reason we don't have an "historical Alice."
Obviously false, since the historical Santa Claus didn't live at the north pole, didn't ride a sleigh carried by flying reindeer, and had operations limited to much less than the entire world.
If I suggested that you could, through historical critical method, extract an "historical Santa Claus" from the Coca Cola ads featuring a fat red guy you would rightly tell me I was being absurd.

You can't apply historical method to unprovenanced literature. It is based on the idea that you can, through careful exegesis, turn secondary sources into primary sources. You can't.
Rick Sumner is offline  
Old 03-29-2012, 01:59 PM   #102
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Birmingham UK
Posts: 4,876
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rick Sumner View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic View Post
I'm not trying to extract anything from the Gospels, I'm trying to find out whether the mythicist position requires any possible "Historical Jesus" to be defined only as magic Jesus or else he's not Jesus.
Every single item on your list is extracted from the existing sources. It has to be, there are no other sources to use. The problem is that the sources you are using are not historical evidence. The only surviving material is literature, not historical information.

Quote:
Some of these answers sound, frankly, evasive and obfuscatory. If you'rte going to deny that a historical Jesus existed, then at least clarify what you're saying never existed.
I'm not denying anyone existed. So perhaps it sounds evasive because you're making baseless assumptions. If anything it's rather amusing that you'd suggest I'm a mythicist. What I'm stating is that historical criticism can tell you exactly nothing when all you have are literary sources. The items on your poll mean nothing, because they are extracted not from historical evidence, but from a story.
Hi Rick

If I argued that we cannot extract a historical Socrates because all our contemporary sources, (Plato, Xenophon, Aristophanes...), are literary sources rather than historical evidence, how would you reply ?

Andrew Criddle
andrewcriddle is offline  
Old 03-29-2012, 02:16 PM   #103
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by andrewcriddle View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rick Sumner View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic View Post
I'm not trying to extract anything from the Gospels, I'm trying to find out whether the mythicist position requires any possible "Historical Jesus" to be defined only as magic Jesus or else he's not Jesus.
Every single item on your list is extracted from the existing sources. It has to be, there are no other sources to use. The problem is that the sources you are using are not historical evidence. The only surviving material is literature, not historical information.

Quote:
Some of these answers sound, frankly, evasive and obfuscatory. If you'rte going to deny that a historical Jesus existed, then at least clarify what you're saying never existed.
I'm not denying anyone existed. So perhaps it sounds evasive because you're making baseless assumptions. If anything it's rather amusing that you'd suggest I'm a mythicist. What I'm stating is that historical criticism can tell you exactly nothing when all you have are literary sources. The items on your poll mean nothing, because they are extracted not from historical evidence, but from a story.
Hi Rick

If I argued that we cannot extract a historical Socrates because all our contemporary sources, (Plato, Xenophon, Aristophanes...), are literary sources rather than historical evidence, how would you reply ?

Andrew Criddle
I'd respond with genre (certainly not tradition), perspective (Aristophanes is highly critical and often ridicules real people) and provenance (you know the context and time of writing)!
spin is offline  
Old 03-29-2012, 02:34 PM   #104
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic View Post
I would argue that the "Historical Alice" is simply the real, historical person that Lewis Carol invented stories about...
In this context what does "historical" mean? Is it any different from "real" here?
spin is offline  
Old 03-29-2012, 03:45 PM   #105
Moderator -
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Twin Cities, Minnesota
Posts: 4,639
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic View Post
I would argue that the "Historical Alice" is simply the real, historical person that Lewis Carol invented stories about...
In this context what does "historical" mean? Is it any different from "real" here?
Anything real is automatically historical. Everything that happens, happens historically. Whether that history can always be perceived by historical method is not the same thing as if it's historical. Unknown history is still history.
Diogenes the Cynic is offline  
Old 03-29-2012, 03:52 PM   #106
Moderator -
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Twin Cities, Minnesota
Posts: 4,639
Default

By the way, my driving motivation in studying Christian origins (something I've pursued for the better part of two decades, including getting a BA in religion and Classical Languages) is to find out what really happened. I am not invested in any particular answer, I just want to KNOW the answer. No answer would disappoint me. My satisfaction would come only in the knowing, not in the answer itself. The only thing I'm certain of is that nothing supernatural occurred.
Diogenes the Cynic is offline  
Old 03-29-2012, 04:01 PM   #107
Contributor
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: MT
Posts: 10,656
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic View Post
By the way, my driving motivation in studying Christian origins (something I've pursued for the better part of two decades, including getting a BA in religion and Classical Languages) is to find out what really happened. I am not invested in any particular answer, I just want to KNOW the answer. No answer would disappoint me. My satisfaction would come only in the knowing, not in the answer itself. The only thing I'm certain of is that nothing supernatural occurred.
Great spirit, and I think even the anti-supernaturalism is ideologically a priori and superfluous, in my opinion. I would be comfortable with believing in supernatural phenomena if it were truly plausible (such as if supernaturalism happened observably and sensibly day to day). The only thing I am absolutely certain about is that I exist in some form (cogito ergo sum). Every other claim is less certain to various magnitudes. The exceptional focus on anti-supernaturalism seems to reinforce some of the anti-religious delusions among atheists.
ApostateAbe is offline  
Old 03-29-2012, 06:12 PM   #108
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic View Post
I would argue that the "Historical Alice" is simply the real, historical person that Lewis Carol invented stories about...
In this context what does "historical" mean? Is it any different from "real" here?
Anything real is automatically historical. Everything that happens, happens historically.
This doesn't help me understand what you mean by "historical" or how it differs significantly from "real" (at least "real in time"). It still sounds to me like 'the "Historical Alice" is simply the real, historical person' is functionally tautological, saying "the real person" or "the historical person" making little difference, and that "Everything that happens, happens historically" is not much different from "Everything that happens, happens".

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic View Post
Whether that history can always be perceived by historical method is not the same thing as if it's historical. Unknown history is still history.
This seems to be a plea for a species of ontology that doesn't need an epistemology, god's book of life.

Is history a kind of knowledge or not? If it is, then "Unknown history is still history" is unreasonable. Surely history is the fruit of historical methodology and doing history is applying historical methodology, the attempt to reclaim the past (which historians stitch into a narrative for future historians to rip to shreds in hindsight for its lack of perspective). "Historical" is past reclaimed (as much as it can be).
spin is offline  
Old 03-29-2012, 06:13 PM   #109
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic View Post
I'm not trying to extract anything from the Gospels, I'm trying to find out whether the mythicist position requires any possible "Historical Jesus" to be defined only as magic Jesus or else he's not Jesus.

Some of these answers sound, frankly, evasive and obfuscatory. If you'rte going to deny that a historical Jesus existed, then at least clarify what you're saying never existed.
In the field of history it is not an absolute fact Jesus existed, it is technically just a hypothesis that many people believe to be true. I think you need to understand this clearly.

Based on the assessment of all the evidence available to them within their own conceptual framework, the historicists take this hypothesis as true and then construct their theories about the HJ.

Antithetically, based on the assessment of all the (same) evidence available to them within their own conceptual framework, the mythicists do not talke this hypothesis as true. Instead they use the hypothesis that Jesus did not exist as their hypothetical starting place.
mountainman is offline  
Old 03-29-2012, 06:21 PM   #110
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic View Post
.... it's indisputable the Christian religion had a beginning, and asking whether it started as a personality cult is a historical question.
The question is WHEN did it begin - in which century: -1, 1, 2, 3 or early 4th. We know it exploded at Nicaea and was fully legalised AD 381 CE for example, therefore the indisputable answer has to be either -1, 1, 2, 3 or early 4th. Again any one of these answers (-1, 1,2,3 or 4) represents a hypothesis (this time about chronology) and most people seem to think it was the 1st century, although many think it may have been the 2nd century.

The hypothesis about the HJ (as a YES (HJ) or NO (MJ)) coupled with the above hypothesis of the century of the J-Church generates all contemporary mainstream theories (HJ and MJ) about the history of christian origins. At present there appears to be insufficient evidence by which any agreement can be reached to objectively say any one of these theories are any better than another. There is certainly no really unambiguous evidence by which any of all these competing theories can be said to have any real concensus of opinion.
mountainman is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 10:35 PM.

Top

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