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Old 10-09-2011, 02:30 AM   #41
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Hi mm,

I read that archived thread.

IMO, Apollonius is slightly ahead of Jesus in the historicity stakes, because there are works attributed to him. It's not conclusive that the person saying they were his is correct, since all is lost, and the reports about them come via that later person, so I would not estimate the 'gap' to be as high as you suggest.

Cheers.
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Old 10-09-2011, 02:32 AM   #42
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I think there are better odds that Socrates was historical.

The writings about him were contemporary accounts by people who claimed to know him. We don't have anything comparable about HJ.
I don't know how you have been asking me questions on my thread
"Gospel Eyewitnesses" without reading the thread? I'm now up to six of my seven purported eyewitnesses to Jesus.
I read a bit of your theory. I'm not among the hard core bible geeks here; I'm more interested in the interpretative angle.

But it looks to be a hard sell to me. Even assuming that generations of editing, copying and translating have not obscured the styles you attempt to analyze, your choices of witnesses appears to be pure speculation. I couldn't get into it; couldn't take it seriously.

And again, from a spiritual point of view, which I assume is your motivation, I don't see the point. Eternal truth that depends on singular historical instances is lunacy to me.
I agree. It's hard sell, and speculation.

If there were eyewitnesses, they are lost. As it is, we are left with reports, some decades later, that the stories originated from eyewitnesses. Although this is plausible, it can't be read, historiographically, as eyewitness reports, by any means.
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Old 10-09-2011, 02:48 AM   #43
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Returing to your questions in this and other threads, it is possible to associate a spectrum of historicity values to the various positions that comprise the spectrum of beliefs about the historicity (or otherwise) of Jesus. The following table shows "historicity value", and has been copied from another recent thread entitled Developing table as beginner's guide to Jesus positions
That is a very interesting table, mm. It's spin's, I think?

I'm not sure if it leads to conclusions, or is meant to, but it's a neat and colourful summary.
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Old 10-09-2011, 02:59 AM   #44
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This is countered by the theological embarrassments found in the Bible.

Your argument here for mythicism is so broad that you can't consider it one specified argument for it. That's basically the whole idea why mythicists reject the historical Jesus.
Yes. There are always arguments and counters.

Don't you agree, in principle, that there are things on both side of the scales?

That is the broad reason why I started another thread in tandem with this one. Perhaps you would be willing to be the first to record your list?




http://www.freeratio.org/showthread.php?t=307327
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Old 10-09-2011, 03:31 AM   #45
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Yes, in almost any debate, there are arguments both sides. The question is how strong is the argument of one side compared to the other.

Anyway, I just posted in that thread.
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Old 10-09-2011, 03:39 AM   #46
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Hi V,

Hm. Not entirely sure about this. I know it's a popular theory around here, but I'm not sure. It certainly seems incorrect to say the 'entire story' has only literary source material. Parallells with literary sources are very much to be expected in the circumstances, I think. Arguably, there is other material also.
You're welcome to present any evidence that "other material" may be found in there (that is not identifiably Markan creativity). You won't be able to. Also, you should think about how such "other material" could be identified. What methodology permits you to say that?

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This is one part which puzzles me. Which writers? Not Luke, for example. He appears to treat his sources ( including Mark, temporarily assuming he does use it) like history, and starts his own 'history' accordingly.
No, he doesn't. He merely wishes to give the impression that he does. But if you look at his treatment of Mark's material, he is well aware that Mark is making up things by creating off the OT and follows this pattern. One reason
we know the Gospel authors were making new, not merely recording fulfilled prophecy, is that they frequently deepened and extended each other's work, as well as made errors that point to the origin of their stories. For example, in the Gethsemane scene, the writer of Luke realized that the writer of Mark parallels 3 Kings (LXX). However, the writer of Mark declined to supply the angel that ministers to Elijah in that passage, so Luke added it, along with additional language from the Septuagint. Such changes point to both the origin of the passage, and its creation at the hands of the Gospel authors. It also says volumes about how they themselves regarded the stories they were telling.

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Granted, it's not objective history, especially not objective history as we know it today, but this was 2000 years ago, and historiography was in its infancy.
The issue isn't what 2000 years ago was, but scholars today. What methodologies do scholars possess for sifting the material to find history that are reliable, useful, and widely accepted? None. So if you are asserting "there's history down there" then show me your methodology. Otherwise you are just making faith statements that have the good fortune to enjoy wide social acceptance.

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But the point is, he appears to believe it. He treats his sources (including Mark, perhaps) as something other than an allegory or story. In a nutshell, he appears to think it's historical. He tells us this in his opening lines.
Luke is the stage in evolution that brings us to the HJ. The writer of Mark clearly has no HJ in mind when he invented his story, but by Luke's day someone had realized the usefulness of a full-blown historical figure for establishing the legitimacy of their wing of the Church. Luke is writing faux history, the opening is a lie presented to legitimize the copied and expanded and altered story within. You know perfectly well that Luke had two major sources, Mark and Q, and his story is a reworking of them.

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So, the idea that mark's Gospel was essentially seen as allegory or literary fiction seems to be a very recent notion, and I can't quite take your point above. Unless you can show me that some other later writers viewed such material as literary rather than historical.
You're aware that the treatment of Mark as non-literal is at least as old as Origen, right?

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I agree, to an extent. Even the best methodology is limited. Having said that, the methods they use have been very effective down the years in stripping away a lot of the accretions and interpolations and stories which may be non-historical (birth narrative for example). I think they have, on the whole, does quite a good job of decimating their own texts. But it can never be conclusive as to whether they have winnowed out an historical core.
It's not the "winnowing" that's the issue, but the assumption of a historical core. The historical core is the undefeatable idea at the heart of HJ studies; it is one of the irrefutable conceptions that Popper talked about in his famous chapter in Conjectures and Refutations -- if an idea can't be refuted, it's false. And there is no evidence that can ever refute the "historical core" assumption. Adherents will continue to hold to it irrespective of the evidence offered. If new evidence or methods are developed, then the historical core will expand, if new refutations are invented, then it will contract. But no evidence can ever refute it.

Really, you can't start with the idea that there is history down there. The start must be a null start with no assumptions -- then you have to discover through analysis what you're looking at.

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Yes. Of course, writing in a certain genre is one thing. Including historical material is another, and one doesn't rule out the other.

Perhaps it's better to say 'material believed to be historical' or 'stories received', since the Gospel writers almost certainly didn't have anything more than that to work with. But to say they only had, or used, literary sources is speculation. Luke himself refers to eyewitness accounts, for example. I see no reason not to believe that he also incorporated such material. That doesn't mean the material was historically accurate, of course. But it was probably not (at the estimated time of Luke writing) too late, historically, in the circumstances (where there may very likely have been few written accounts and many oral ones) for someone to be reporting passing on alleged eyewitness accounts indirectly, that is to say from stories.
No problem. Identify the "eyewitness" material used in Luke. Good luck!

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I'll agree that they do not seem to. This is probably the main reason I might suspect he was non-historical. It's first on my own list at my 'Nutshell' thread, which I started at the same time as this one. There are explanatons for this, from scholars, but I'm not sure I'm convinced.
Thanks. Two things were formative for me -- first understanding this point about the lack of HJ references in the epistles, and then reading the discussion on methods in Crossan's The Birth of Christianity.

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Are there any glaring contradictions in the epistles? If not, then can we conclusively say 'didn't know' or do we have to stick to 'didn't write about in these letters', even if we agree that this seems odd, to us now? Personally, I do think it an odd omission, and since, in this thread, I am trying to explore, in some ways, MJ leaning arguments, I would be interested in you elaborating on that specific question (the one in my previous sentence).
We can only go with the evidence -- there's no mention of an HJ, and there are "glaring contradictions" in the sense that the story presented in the Pauline and other epistles contradicts the gospel tales, and even the assumption of historicity of some Jesus. 1 Cor 7 has always struck me as particularly interesting in that light. There Paul gives instructions about marriage. Now -- toss out the gospels and just imagine Jesus is a human. Being human, he automatically has a marital state. But Paul never refers to that state in his discussion -- Jesus' particular marriage is not a model, and his lack of marriage is not something to be concerned about. It is as if Jesus never had a marital state that had any influence on Paul's thinking. There are several places where Paul appears to contradict the gospel tales, notably in Romans where he calls upon believers to support the authorities as if Jesus had never been executed by them....

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Religions fruit up their texts. What isn't clear is whether there is an historical core, in individual cases.

Interestingly, if Sai Baba had lived in those times, later writers wouldn't have had to fruit up the stories much. It's possible Jesus was similar.
See above for my remarks on the irrefutable, infinitely elastic historical core.

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Old 10-09-2011, 03:56 AM   #47
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I will believe the myth lovers only when the deniers provide proof that Blue Monkeys Fly Out of Their Butt
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Old 10-09-2011, 08:21 AM   #48
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You're welcome to present any evidence that "other material" may be found in there (that is not identifiably Markan creativity). You won't be able to. Also, you should think about how such "other material" could be identified. What methodology permits you to say that?
Of course, it's obvious, given the limitations of what we can and can't know for sure, that it is possible that mark simply combined literary sources with literary inventions of his own, but there is no evidence for that either. Quite the contrary, Luke corroborates the assertion (note I said assertion) that material was handed down.

Look, V, neither I nor you nor anyone can prove what the material is. It might be better, in this thread at least, which was started for a particular reason, for us not to get into a t’is/t’isn’t irresolvable wrangle. :]

There is little doubt that Mark used literary sources of whatever kind were available (including, arguably, Paul, which I think hints that Mark did not read Paul the way, Doherty, for example, tries to).

In short, I see no reason to assume what you asserted, which was, in any case 'literary sources'. I thought you meant all literary/nonhistorical sources.

Btw, historians are well used to treating ancient religious texts with caution. There is nothing unique in this. It is one thing to say that a text is unreliable. It is another to say it is all fiction. They have methodologies for this. The methodologies don‘t permit them, myself, you or anyone to say anything for certain. :]


What’s your methodology for telling whether the entire texts do not contain ‘historical’ material? The question can be turned around, you see. There is no final resolution.

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No, he doesn't. He merely wishes to give the impression that he does.
Surely you are just mind reading here?

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But if you look at his treatment of Mark's material, he is well aware that Mark is making up things by creating off the OT and follows this pattern.
No, it is not obvious that he is well aware. For all we know, he may believe it. Equally, he may know that some of it is tenuous or egged up, and he may indulge in this himself. This is not unusual, in this sort of ancient religious text. However, I do think it entirely plausible that the actual fervent followers who put pen to papyrus believed at least some, if not a lot of it.

And again, you refer to Mark as 'creating off the OT' as if it were necessarily the case. There is no basis for certainty of that sort, I’m afraid, unless you mean 'in part, creating off the OT', in which case very few intelligent people would disagree.

I also think you are applying the word 'history' in a very modern sense. It seems to me that people like the gospel writers were not alone in playing fasst and loose with it, reporting unlikely events as history, or adding to each others accounts. None of this suggests that there are no 'stories they have heard' in there. And more to the point, no indication that they subscribed to the modern idea that it was all fiction or allegory.

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The issue isn't what 2000 years ago was, but scholars today.
In relation to the context of the time, which I was discussing, it is the issue.

I already took the point about the limitations of methodologies available to modern scholars.

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So if you are asserting "there's history down there" then show me your methodology. Otherwise you are just making faith statements that have the good fortune to enjoy wide social acceptance.
First, I'm not asserting that, I‘m saying it‘s one valid option.

Second, it's a bit unfair to say that an analysis based on certain methodologies suggests the possibility that there is historical material in there is anything but a faith statement, or 'social acceptance' either.

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The writer of Mark clearly has no HJ in mind when he invented his story,
Actually, he most clearly does give that impression. Plus, please stop saying 'he invented his story'. I think, of the two of us, you appear to be doing the assuming, actually. :]

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Luke is writing faux history, the opening is a lie presented to legitimize the copied and expanded and altered story within. You know perfectly well that Luke had two major sources, Mark and Q, and his story is a reworking of them.
Faux history it may be, depending on what we mean by faux. If we mean deliberately lying or pretending he doesn't think it's fiction, then no, there's no way, I think, to tell if it's faux in that sense. Personally, I doubt it. You on the other hand think it. Brill. Let’s agree to disagree.

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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan View Post
You're aware that the treatment of Mark as non-literal is at least as old as Origen, right?
I never said it was all literal. There is a range. Did Origen think it was all literary, with no historical basis? I do not know the answer to this by the way. It's an honest question. I admit I'd be surprised if he did. But if he didn't, your citation of him doesn't change anything.

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It's not the "winnowing" that's the issue, but the assumption of a historical core.
No one is assuming an historical core.

And neither side can refute the other.

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Really, you can't start with the idea that there is history down there.
I don’t.

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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan View Post
The start must be a null start with no assumptions -- then you have to discover through analysis what you're looking at.
This is what I do. I just arrive at a different position to you.

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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan View Post
No problem. Identify the "eyewitness" material used in Luke. Good luck!
I don’t need to. Look, you asserted that later writers ‘knew’. All I said was that the written evidence suggests otherwise. You say the later writers are lying. Fine.

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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan View Post
Thanks. Two things were formative for me -- first understanding this point about the lack of HJ references in the epistles, and then reading the discussion on methods in Crossan's The Birth of Christianity.
I haven’t read that particular book. Can’t say I’m a huge fan of Crossan’s general conclusions, but he’s entitled to his approach and his conclusions and he’s not the worst by a long shot, as far as I can see.

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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan View Post
We can only go with the evidence -- there's no mention of an HJ, and there are "glaring contradictions" in the sense that the story presented in the Pauline and other epistles contradicts the gospel tales, and even the assumption of historicity of some Jesus. 1 Cor 7 has always struck me as particularly interesting in that light. There Paul gives instructions about marriage. Now -- toss out the gospels and just imagine Jesus is a human. Being human, he automatically has a marital state. But Paul never refers to that state in his discussion -- Jesus' particular marriage is not a model, and his lack of marriage is not something to be concerned about. It is as if Jesus never had a marital state that had any influence on Paul's thinking. There are several places where Paul appears to contradict the gospel tales, notably in Romans where he calls upon believers to support the authorities as if Jesus had never been executed by them.…
Not with you. Are you suggesting Jesus was married?

Regarding the material in 1 Cor 7. Orthodox Hjers seem to take this as evidence of the epistle writer being aware of some of Jesus’ teachings. Mjers, I think I have seen, may suggest it’s a later addition. Me, I don’t know.

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See above for my remarks on the irrefutable, infinitely elastic historical core.
Ok, but here I was simply saying that if Sai Baba had lived at the time, his story wouldn’t have needed to be fruited up.

Vorkosigan, it's a pleasure doing business with you, and please feel free to respond, but I am not sure if we aren't getting a little bit away from my OP.

I'm sorta trying to avoid turning this into a general MJ versus HJ thread, too much. :]

Cheers

A.
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Old 10-09-2011, 08:48 AM   #49
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Getting back to comparisons with apollonius of Tyana.

Is he another candidate, like Sai baba?

Certainly, there are many similarities.

I believe I also read that Christian writers alleged he didn't exist? Is this true? If so, it's rather interesting in itself, as an example of one bunch saying the other bunch's man didn't exist. :]

I have an inkling i've read that their motive in doing so may have been to try to eliminate a competitor. in which case, it strikes me that if he was seen as a competitor, the similarities may hve been quite strong?

Just throwing his out for discussion. Not sure of my 'facts'. :]
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Old 10-09-2011, 09:15 AM   #50
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My favorite criterion is Lord Raglan's Hero Pattern, something that I've discussed in several earlier threads.
Interesting reading. Thankyou.

My only reservation, given the 'Hero' criteria, is whether it is entirely .......appropriate to measure Jesus against them, but I can see that it's not completely inappropriate either, because at the very least, the criteria can be applied and we can see how he scores.
What is interesting is scoring the various books separately; e.g. Paul's letters; then the Gospel of Mark; then each of the other Gospels; then the Second Century literature. The Gospel of Mark gives a very low score. It shows how legends are added to the man.
Interesting.

Don and Ipetrich (and indeed everyone reading),

Have you read 'Jesus of Nazareth: Millenarian Prophet' by Dale allison?

Here (below) is his short 'detached Note' on some 'common features of millenarianism'. In its approach, it seems to share some intentions with Lord Raglan's comparative 'Hero Criteria' assessments above, though Allison does not do scoring for individuals or individual cults, instead making a list of 19 suggested common characteristics.

http://books.google.com/books?id=Vb2...page&q&f=false

Happily, the whole 'chapter' (pages 78-94) is in the google preview. Well worth a read. Not conclusive, of course.

It compares 'Millenarian Prophets' in item 13, on page 89.

Note he cites (on page 90) Cohn's* researches for 'Medieval millenarism' as concluding, 'a millenarian revolt never formed except around a prophet...'

Interesting stuff, eh? And I DO like a book with plenty of relevant footnotes.

* For those who worry about scholarly bias (as do I), Norman Cohn was (died in 2007) a professional British academic historian and university professor of History (Sussex University).
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