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03-21-2006, 11:56 PM | #21 | |||||
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When you see the word "mythicist", you think of the respectable side like Doherty and Wells only, but others see the whole range. Reread jjramsey's comment with Acharya in mind. It might be better to use a separate descriptor perhaps for those mythers who use primary sources. Perhaps "primary sources mythicists"? Quote:
On Doherty: do YOU understand his case, Toto? I've gone through his book a few times, and tried to track down as many of his sources as possible, so I understand it as well as anyone, and I think a lot better than most Doherty supporters. Would you be able to summarize Doherty's view of the sub-lunar realm/"world of myth"/"fleshy dimension overlapping our own"? And the sources that support his idea? Does Plutarch support it, in your opinion? On Wells: he no longer regards himself as a mythicist AFAIK. From my article here: In the 1990s however, Wells moved away from a "pure mythicist" stance. As he says here: "Recent work on Q led me to accept that the gospels (unlike the Pauline and the other early epistles) may include traditions about a truly historical itinerant preacher of the early first century".As Wells goes on to explain here: "I have argued that the disparity between the early documents and the gospels is explicable if the Jesus of the former is not the same person as the Jesus of the latter... In the gospels, the two Jesus figures -- the human preacher of Q and the supernatural personage of the early epistles who sojourned briefly on Earth as a man, and then, rejected, returned to heaven -- have been fused into one. The Galilean preacher of Q has been given a salvivic death and resurrection, and these have been set not in an unspecified past (as in the Pauline and other early letters), but in a historical context consonant with the date of the Galilean preaching. Quote:
This is what Carrier says: Carrier: Muller is wrong to imply there is no evidence the "higher and lower worlds" view "was believed by anyone in the first three centuries." The evidence for that is solid.... But Muller was talking about "higher and lower worlds" in the sub-lunar realm., "the higher world" being where Christ was crucified according to Doherty. Muller is right here -- there is absolutely no evidence for this, and even Doherty has backed away from talking about different "dimensions" in the sub-lunar realm, using instead "different locales". Carrier misunderstood Muller on this, and I think that he is still formulating his views on the subject, since according to Ted Hoffman says later: "Carrier has noted that the "sublunary sphere" was a catch-all phrase referring to the realm of the earth, everything below the orbit of the moon". Thus, no higher or lower world. That's why I think he is heading down the same path as I did with regards to mythicism. |
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03-22-2006, 12:09 AM | #22 | |
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That makes no sense at all in terms of Platonism. Can you back your statement? Or can you summarize Doherty's position on the location of Christ's crucifixion and the evidence (rather than speculation) for placing it there? |
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03-22-2006, 05:12 AM | #23 |
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The HJ sympathizers need to explain the following:
The HJ hypothesis, OTOH, will bleed, bury its head in the sand, frown, twiddle its fingers, huff and puff, scream and kick, attempt special pleading, beg the question or, at best, provide answers that cannot fit in one consistent framework. It is important to note that the Platonic worldview was nonsensical and constructed from incomplete and erroneous knowledge. To expect Doherty to explain someone elses nonsense logically, is to shift the burden of proof and raise a red herring. |
03-22-2006, 07:22 AM | #24 | |
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03-22-2006, 10:44 AM | #25 | ||
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(Specific Platonists certainly held views inconsistent with other Platonists but that is different from claiming that a specific Platonist position is radically inconsistent or incoherent.) Andrew Criddle |
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03-22-2006, 11:15 AM | #26 | |||||||||||||
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I can't say it is a big problem. If one is trying to argue that "Nazarene" wasn't a reference to "Nazareth," but the name of a member of a sect, then it is a rather peculiar coincidence that the name of this sect sounds like the name of an actual place. If you want to argue that Nazareth didn't exist in the first century, and that references to it are anachronisms penned by second-century writers, then you will have to explain why a second-century writer would put in Jesus' mouth a prediction that by that time would be obviously false, such as Mark 9:1, "there are some standing here who will not taste death until they see that the kingdom of God has come with power." Quote:
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03-22-2006, 12:10 PM | #27 | |
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Another question is, exactly which Jesus is supposed to be historical? I take it that the Sunday school version (virgin birth, miracles, resurrection) is not seriously considered as a candidate for historicity (am I wrong here?). If we are not looking for a "fully loaded" historical Jesus, isn't the debate, as far as Christianity is concerned, pretty academic? I think that is what the OP was getting at. Any light weight Jesus (cynic, teacher, prophet, cult leader, general itinerant,...) cannot bear the weight of Christianity. So without a full fledged Jesus the cathedral of Christianity collapses anyway. And in that case the whole MJ vs HJ debate is of historical but not much religious interest. |
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03-22-2006, 01:46 PM | #28 | |||
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03-22-2006, 05:32 PM | #29 |
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IMO the Jesus debate is a no-win for Christians, which is EXACTLY why they seek so hard to simply dismiss the MJ claims, because they don't want to get into the details of supporting claims for HJ.
The only way to even try to defend HJ is bascially to completely strip Jesus of all his myster and power, reducing him to an unknown, obscure man. If you actually get into it, then in order to defend HJ you have to claim that: God choose to come to earth to make things right by going to a small town, taking the form of an illiterate man, and having a small band of followers, while leaving no personal written record or any first hand accounts of him during the height of the Roman Empire, when the population of Rome was mostly literate, and Rome had many capability to spreading news and information across Europe. The only way to defend HJ is to claim that he was obscure and not well known, and admit that "Christianity" didn't really spread until well after his death, by people who had never seen Jesus. The Jeuss debate is a lose-lose for Christians, so they continue to say that "there is no debate". |
03-22-2006, 06:10 PM | #30 | |||||
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