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04-28-2008, 04:46 PM | #21 | |
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More evidence that Jesus Existed Than "X"
Hi Tammuz,
As far as I know, nobody has written a book or even an article seriously questioning the non-existence of Socrates and/or Plato. On the other hand, over the last 150 years, dozens of books and many articles have appeared which question the existence of the Jesus of Nazareth character. Questioning the existence of extremely well documented historical personages seems to be a rhetorical strategy of Christians to deal with the increasingly problematic evidence/non-evidence of Jesus' existence. It reminds me of the medieval strategy of dealing with the existence of God question. The solution was to declare that God existed more truly than anything else. Warmly, Philosopher Jay Quote:
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04-28-2008, 05:57 PM | #22 | ||
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There are Billions of people who Believe that Jesus was real and have not a single historical source to support their position. And, Wikipedia, has "scholars" not "historians", and "most scholars" can mean "most christian scholars". |
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04-28-2008, 06:48 PM | #23 | ||||
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Also consider the humanist Will Durant: Quote:
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Here is a further list of Jesus theories and the people who support them, some religious, some not. |
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04-28-2008, 06:58 PM | #24 | |||
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Why in the case of Jesus do people use the contrived JM hypothesis, when it does not at all explain better the data we have? Having a REAL Jewish prophet explains the data much, much, much better, regardless of whatever details we might believe about him. Quote:
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04-28-2008, 07:07 PM | #25 | ||||
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You throw vague insults around with abandon. Please provide some details, and explain why this is even remotely relevant. |
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04-28-2008, 07:29 PM | #26 | ||
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04-28-2008, 08:44 PM | #27 | ||
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04-28-2008, 08:49 PM | #28 | |
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04-28-2008, 08:55 PM | #29 | |||
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First the "humanist Will Durant": read here. Then the "atheist Michael Grant": read our very own Toto in one of those clearer moments here. The analysis cited from Durant in this thread would be considered nowadays as sloppy. Durant was not a historian in the field we are dealing with. The source of the quote is probably circa 1945 and a lot of historical methodology has been reconsidered and elaborated on. I carved up some of this comment by Durant in the thread linked to in this post, but to show the outdatedness of the methodology, a large number of scholars in the biblical field now consider the historicity of David in doubt, some even consigning him to legend. Most of Michael Grant's scholarly work was published in the 1950s and 60s spending the rest of his career writing mainly non-specialist works. Again his methodology regarding Jesus reflects a bygone day. Grant simply doesn't know that he doesn't have to form an opinion with insufficient data. It's a case of either historical or mythical, so he has to opt for historical because he can't go for mythical. I've attempted to show in this forum that neither in this matter are particularly acceptable. One should reject both on insufficient evidence pending further evidence which clarifies the issue either way. If people want to get serious, citing opinions of non-religionists, they need to get up to date with the field, citing recent opinions, not cut-and-pastes of long cold reheats. As to Bart Ehrman, what else can you expect? Ehrman is a text scholar who has studied christian literature for decades for much of that time as a believer. His life's work is dedicated to the "historical Jesus". For chrissake, don't you think it's silly to cite Ehrman in this context? Instead of this bubble and squeak you need a little fresh meat. spin |
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04-28-2008, 08:57 PM | #30 | |
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