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Old 03-04-2008, 12:03 PM   #411
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A word/statement/communication means what the author thinks he means when he says it.
OK. If you say something to me, how do I determine what you think you mean?

I suppose I could ask, after every statement you make, "What do you mean by that?" but that is obviously not going to be a useful tactic, is it?

It seems to me that one is forced to make certain assumptions about how one's interlocutors will construe the words one uses, and then be prepared to revise those assumptions if one discovers that they are incorrect.
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Old 03-04-2008, 01:13 PM   #412
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Bullshit. So you claim to be able to read the mind of C.S. Lewis to discern his intent. The intent of the author has nothing to do with whether a work is in the genre of fiction or non-fiction.
Given your ridiculous definition of fiction, you could proclaim almost anything you liked was fiction, so I don't think you really need to try to argue anything.

"[N]on-fiction" is not a genre, just as "non-detective" is not. In fact, fiction isn't a genre either.

With regard to Lewis we have both his own comments, comparable works and the content of his efforts to have some idea of his intent.


Rubbish. It is possible at times to derive intent from the literature itself, especially when you know what genres were available to the writer. Writers don't write in a vacuum, but reflect their times.


You've read too much fantasy.


How do you tell what is and what is not fiction in the period when you don't know the standards or contexts for the works you are analyzing? How do you know Tacitus was not writing fiction? Is there not material which you'd consider not veracious in his works? Was Tacitus able to retrieve the words of all the speeches that he wrote into the mouths of his subjects?

Declaring things to be fiction doesn't make them so.


Doh! as a criterion. The literature claims that supernatural beings are real. In fact people of the time tended to believe that they were real. You are unjustifiably projecting modern sensibilities onto ancient people.


How do you know?


Name one word in the Hittite language. You can't? It must have been a fiction. Please use a bit of logic.


Have you checked them all out? Obviously not. You are not able to do so. Another logical problem you won't face is that you assume uniformity for what you haven't experienced. Hamlet says, "there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt about in your philosophy."


Many of these have been used in historical texts. Some of the great historians of the past were extremely rhetorical.


Sorry, but this is utter rubbish.


You may be right (though certainly not with Enoch).


You may be right again. Or at least the Jesus Seminar. But it's irrelevant. If a person's life has been embellished it doesn't mean that the person didn't exist. (And remember here, I don't say Jesus existed. I'm complaining about the simplistic nature of your methods of analysis.)


This says nothing to me. Perhaps you needed to explain a little more what you had in mind regarding Honi. At the moment I recall only basically what Josephus says.


Midrash is not necessarily on a scale of fiction. As I said, it is a manner of explanation... through illustration. What it deals with can be fiction or not.


I constructed a simple chiasmus for you with regard to Columbus. Does it make Columbus any less historical??


Again, you are manipulating ordinary language:
1 An act or instance of lying; an intentional false statement; an untruth. OE.
b Something that deceives; an imposture. M16.
2 A charge of falsehood. obs. exc. in give the lie to below. L16.
3 An anecdote, a tale, a tall story. Orig. & chiefly Black English. M20.
- NSOED
The first two indicate intent. The third is not standard.


This didn't follow from what it ostensibly comments on.


If Boadicea was a doll, then yes it probably was fiction, but I'm happy to see that you'll stop and make a bit of room in your theory for a bit of other input.


For most people this still won't work. Is Robin Hood fictional? I don't mean the TV or film character, but the figure referenced in records from Plantaginet era England. You cannot verify the truth of Robin Hood, so is the figure fiction? For most people, Robin Hood is in the too hard to handle category because there just isn't enough information. It is only you with your weird view of fiction that can meaninglessly decide.


One doesn't even have to assert fact, you fail through lack of information.


There are quite a lot of assertions that still may be true, though unverified. If someone asserts that Origen had a brother, do you say that is fiction because you lack a means to verify it?


No. Verification makes a claim definite, be it positive or negative.


Except your idiosyncratic view of fiction.


As I said, fiction is not a genre. Mystery is a genre of fiction. If a person knows the word "genre", they will have no difficulty understanding my last assertion.

Genre regarding the gospels must be brought up. We see simplistic views stated on the issue of what the gospels are from both believers and non-believers. If you don't know why an author wrote texts, you have more difficulty interpreting them. If the writers were working from what they considered to be veracious sources, thy may have been attempting to present the information to the best of their abilities. They might have been writing fluent garbage in doing so. Try reading Lucian of Samosata's "How (Not) to Write History" to understand some of the ancient problems in presenting history.


I'm glad you don't assume your conclusions.

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How could it matter what the definition of various genres are or which one applies? - how does not answer any pertinent questions?
I guess you aren't interested in what the writers were doing because you already know that what they were doing is irrelevant. It's all fiction according to you wide-sweeping definition. Net that are too wide usually catch too much.

People in the real world will know that my position is not one of belief, they will know that I don't support a HJ or a MJ approach. They'll know that I whinge about good methodology, which doesn't allow you to go beyond the evidence. That means that I allow myself fewer conclusions than the committed person. But then, most things that I accept are usually fairly hard to argue against logically.


spin

This is hopelessly naive. "Intent" of an "author" are both constructs of the reader, as Foucault has shown, or rather result from a relationship between reader and text. See "What is an Author?"

Authors are constructed by readers and don't exist in reality -- they aren't the guys who wrote the text, since that whole process has passed into history. Text create authors, not vice versa.

Accordingly, the author's intent is a construct of the reader, and has nothing to do with some putative process of some person's mind. Intent is an artifact of discourse, not something we have access to directly.
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Old 03-04-2008, 01:17 PM   #413
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[Fiction is anything that is false or presented as truth that cannot be objectively verified to be true.
This is of course circular since history is textual. The categories of "true" and "false" are dubious when applied to history, which are always narratives and always constructed, not mere mirror images of some preexisting truth in history. Texts make history, through narrative.
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Old 03-04-2008, 04:20 PM   #414
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If you want to interpret an absolute absence of anything about Peter and James and create a thoughtful silence from that, I will accept your creative license with a chuckle. But it is not in the text.
So you imagine Peter and James were not thinking about the debate before offering their responses?
No. I expect they were at least contemplating. They may have been silent. They may have been quite active with Peter on one side and James on the other, or both joining against the Pharisee party, or their positions may have been formed in the debate. That is my point. The text does not tell us. Sso assuming any position not given us by the text is speculation.



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Rejecting your interpretation of the offered compromise as indication of prior conflict as unfounded certainly does not constitute glossing over or ignoring it. James offers a compromise so that must mean he was in prior conflict with the Pharisees as well!!

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I am in agreement with many of your rants on information I presented that is in Galatians and not Acts.
Since I have only pointed out a single error on your part, your "agreement" rings quite hollow though I do appreciate the frustration that is showing. You have yet to indicate that you truly do understand that, contrary to your claim, Acts does not depict Paul in conflict with James or Peter. Instead, you dodge and duck and play games. Boring.
I used "glossed over" because while I have been bringing it up, it was not clear how you considered it.

But then you said it ... and I agree...
"James offers a compromise so that must mean he was in prior conflict with the Pharisees as well!! "
The compromise was in conflict with both parties.

Maybe we agree on the content of the text, even if not thoroughly on the interpretation.

- The Apostles and elders welcomed Paul and Barnabas as brothers.
- Paul was not depicted in direct conflict with Peter and James.
- We do not know where P&J stood during the debate because the text does not tell us.
- We can see that the Pharisee party had some voice in Jerusalem, though perhaps not in the leadership.
- Peter did eventually make a statement in clear support of the Antioch party.
- No conflict regarding the position of the "pillars" was revealed until the final compromise.
- The compromise offered by James resulted in a letter with instructions that were in conflict with BOTH sides of the argument as is the nature of a compromise.

Do we agree?
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Old 03-04-2008, 04:27 PM   #415
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If you tell me something that I'm certain is untrue, then I can call what you say a mistake, or I can call what you say a lie.

What is the difference? Or are you saying there is no difference between a lie and a mistake?
Words don't have exact meanings. Dictionaries disagree. Some words mean different things in Pittsburgh and New York. Some words mean different things in 1950 then they did in 1970.

Lexographers collect examples of how a word is used and analyze the examples to determine a few abstract (approximate) definitions for the word. Its not magic - its just the lexographers best guess (opinion) about how a word is generally used. Words can have dozens of subtly different uses so a few definitions in a dictionary are at best, approximations.

A word/statement/communication means what the author thinks he means when he says it.

Lie and mistake are synonyms, but like almost all synonyms their most likely meanings are slightly different.

In response to some author's false statement, If I say they are mistaken, then that probably infers that I think its just an error and that they are not being irresponsible (e.g. "Atlanta is east of Pittsburgh" is just a mistake).

In response to some author's false statement, If I say it is a lie, then that probably infers that I think its original source is dishonest and that the author may or may not be morally responsible (e.g. "Hitler was an atheist" is a lie from some apologist web site).

Saying that something that someone says is a lie is not the same thing as saying that someone is a liar. However, it does raise the issue.

In fact, people often respond to statements, that they know are false, by saying that they are lies instead of calling the author a liar, just because they are not sure whether the author is being deceitful or not.

I don't think that someone is a liar unless they are in some way morally responsible for the falseness of what they are saying.

If someone is a liar and you call them a liar, then they are likely to be highly offended, but you should offend them anyway, unless its too dangerous to do so e.g. your wife or mother-in-law.

A false statement is not necessarily a lie, is it?

Does not lie imply the intent to deceive. Lies can be filled with true statements, but structured to deceive.
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Old 03-04-2008, 04:52 PM   #416
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Originally Posted by patcleaver View Post
[Fiction is anything that is false or presented as truth that cannot be objectively verified to be true.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Gamera
This is of course circular since history is textual. The categories of "true" and "false" are dubious when applied to history, which are always narratives and always constructed, not mere mirror images of some preexisting truth in history. Texts make history, through narrative.

You consistently confuse history and apologia. John F Kennedy's assasination is history regardless of the conspiracy theories. Martin Luther King's assasination is history even if the wrong person was charged for his murder.

On the other hand, Jesus, the disciples and Paul are all apologia, there are only internal inconsistent, contradictory and fictious based anecdotes. No external credible non-apologetic source can account for those characters.
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Old 03-04-2008, 07:10 PM   #417
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A false statement is not necessarily a lie, is it?

Does not lie imply the intent to deceive. Lies can be filled with true statements, but structured to deceive.
As a noun, lie is sometimes used without meaning that the author has intent to deceive (see meaning 3 below). So when you say that some statement is a lie, that alone is ambiguous whether you mean that the author intends to deceive. Of course the context of the communication could resolve the ambiguity.

Also, as a verb without an object, lie is sometimes used without meaning that the author has intent to deceive (see meaning 7 below). Again it is ambiguous, but the context in which its used could resolve the ambiguity.

Even, as a noun, liar only means someone who tells lies. That does not necessarily require intent to deceive - its ambiguous about intent.

We can often resolve the ambiguity and determine the meaning of a word by the circumstances. For example, if you publicly renounce someone of being a liar, or lying, or telling lies, those circumstances probably imply that you think they had intent to deceive.

-----------------

from dictionary.com (edited to remove pronunciation.)

lie
–noun
1. a false statement made with deliberate intent to deceive; an intentional untruth; a falsehood.
2. something intended or serving to convey a false impression; imposture: His flashy car was a lie that deceived no one.
3. an inaccurate or false statement.
4. the charge or accusation of lying: He flung the lie back at his accusers.
–verb (used without object)
5. to speak falsely or utter untruth knowingly, as with intent to deceive.
6. to express what is false; convey a false impression.

li·ar
–noun a person who tells lies.

--------------------------

Legally, proving that someone committed the crimes of fraud or perjury or forgery or larceny by trick usually requires proving that the accused had intent to deceive, but even then we do not have to read the accused’s mind - we can conclude that there was intent from the circumstances.

This discussion is off topic - we should drop it or start another thread.
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Old 03-04-2008, 08:45 PM   #418
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No. I expect they were at least contemplating.
And "contemplating" is so far from "thoughtfully considering" as to cause you to chuckle? You are wasting my time with these games.


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I used "glossed over" because while I have been bringing it up, it was not clear how you considered it.
I've been quite clear indicating it has no basis in the text.

Quote:
But then you said it ... and I agree...
"James offers a compromise so that must mean he was in prior conflict with the Pharisees as well!! "
The compromise was in conflict with both parties.
So James was in prior conflict with both parties? That makes no sense.

Quote:
Maybe we agree on the content of the text, even if not thoroughly on the interpretation.
I think you've lost sight of the claim in question, regarding Paul in Acts you wrote:
Quote:
It was years before he ever returned to Jerusalem...it was in part to confront the Apostles for some of their teachings regarding Gentiles.
Despite your dodging and game-playing, we have seen that this is simply not true. Paul went to the Apostles to resolve his dispute with the Pharisee believers.

Quote:
- The Apostles and elders welcomed Paul and Barnabas as brothers.
Not "greeted suspiciously" as you originally claimed?

Quote:
- Paul was not depicted in direct conflict with Peter and James.
Paul is not depicted in any conflict with Peter or James.

Quote:
- No conflict regarding the position of the "pillars" was revealed until the final compromise.
Even the final compromise fails to indicate any conflict.

Quote:
- The compromise offered by James resulted in a letter with instructions that were in conflict with BOTH sides of the argument as is the nature of a compromise.
Nonsense. The text is explicit in describing the reaction to the letter as positive.

"Which when they had read, they rejoiced for the consolation."

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Do we agree?
No, you are still reading conflict into the passage. Your original claim continues to have no basis in Acts.
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Old 03-04-2008, 10:49 PM   #419
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This is hopelessly naive.


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"Intent" of an "author" are both constructs of the reader, as Foucault has shown, or rather result from a relationship between reader and text. See "What is an Author?"

Authors are constructed by readers and don't exist in reality -- they aren't the guys who wrote the text, since that whole process has passed into history. Text create authors, not vice versa.

Accordingly, the author's intent is a construct of the reader, and has nothing to do with some putative process of some person's mind. Intent is an artifact of discourse, not something we have access to directly.
I'm pleased to see that you struggle on with your quest for Foucault 101, but your tone comes through anyway, so unfortunately your post mocks your message. You need to write with a tone of impassive inscrutibility. Any author will tell you that text creates readers.

The snake oil you are flogging is the sound of one hand clapping. You're sitting in the dark hard at work and breathing heavily in a peepshow with your eye on the glass telling yourself you can't see the body on the other side. Text doesn't come into existence without author.


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Old 03-05-2008, 12:16 AM   #420
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the Marcionite Paul is of course in rigorous opposition to the pillars who are all deceivers, like the churchfathers.

the Catholic corruptor of the epistles moderated the opposition somewhat, in harmonisation with the Paul of the apostolic acts who was just an auxiliary apostle.

Klaus Schilling
You have the most fascinating positions. I would truly like to see the justification or a source for it.


Take some time and read some of the articles at this website, very interesting stuff:

Radical Criticism
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