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Old 04-05-2012, 09:07 PM   #71
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Juststeve
It is unlikely in my mind that a Christian interpolator would have used the phrase a most mischievous superstition. Don't you think that odd?
Yes, everyone knows that Christians are robots incapable of creative and sympathetic thought. That is why there are no forged documents associated with early Christianity, no evolution of doctrine throughout the existing texts, no denials of the positions of others, no heretical positions, and no criticism of others' beliefs. It was simply impossible for Christians to imagine themselves or other Christians from the point of view of others.

*sigh*

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Old 04-05-2012, 09:07 PM   #72
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Also attention smeat75 !!

The main problem with Tacitus is that the evidence itself suddenly appeared in the form of a 15th century manuscript discovery of additional material of Tacitus, which was met in the 15th century, with claims of forgery. Its lovely positive evidence for some claims but perhaps its just too good to be true? Think about this for a minute, Examine the history of its appearance in the 15th century,
.
I believe this is incorrect.

"No original copies of the Annals exist and the surviving copies of Tacitus' works derive from two principal manuscripts, known as the Medicean manuscripts, written in Latin, which are held in the Laurentian Library in Florence, Italy.[12] It is the second Medicean manuscript, 11th century and from the Benedictine abbey at Monte Cassino, which is the oldest surviving copy of the passage describing Christians.[13]


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacitus_on_Christ

Although there are claims that the manuscript containing this reference is from the 11th century, according to Arthur Drews:

Drews on Tacitus


Quote:
No one, in fact, seems to have had the least suspicion of its existence until it was found in the sole copy at that time of Tacitus, the Codex Mediceus II, printed by Johann and his brother Wendelin von Speyer about 1470 at Venice, of which all the other manuscripts are copies.[69]
Hence my reference to the 15th century.

The manuscript attesting the Pliny references are of the same ilk.
They appear in the 15th century. But let us return to Tacitus ...



This is apparently a scribal activity on the so-called 11th century manuscript. The section in which Tacitus mentions "CHRESTIANS" was apparently left unnoticed by all and sundry until the late 15th century. This needs an explanation.

We can no longer accept uncritically these manuscripts as positive evidence from antiquity for certain CLAIMS, as has been the case for many centuries. The question as to whether what negative evidence is to be associated with these claims has not yet been satisfactorily answered.
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Old 04-05-2012, 09:19 PM   #73
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Juststeve
It is unlikely in my mind that a Christian interpolator would have used the phrase a most mischievous superstition. Don't you think that odd?
Yes, everyone knows that Christians are robots incapable of creative and sympathetic thought. That is why there are no forged documents associated with early Christianity, no evolution of doctrine throughout the existing texts, no denials of the positions of others, no heretical positions, and no criticism of others' beliefs. It was simply impossible for Christians to imagine themselves or other Christians from the point of view of others.

*sigh*

Vorkosigan


And the moral to this story is that it pays to remember that virtually all Christians, at least all the important ones, were heresiologists.

I suggest that all readers add this word to their dictionary, since it is a fundamental concept in the study of early christian origins.
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Old 04-05-2012, 10:26 PM   #74
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Michael Grant, atheist classical historian, vice-chancellor of Queen's College Belfast, did the standard translation of Tacitus' Annals, said :"if we apply to the New Testament, as we should, the same sort of criteria as we should apply to other ancient writings containing historical material, we can no more reject Jesus' existence than we can reject the existence of a mass of pagan personages whose reality as historical figures is never questioned."
http://www.bede.org.uk/price1.htm

So "mythicists" are arguing with Josephus, Tacitus and Michael Grant and although I do not "know" the regular posters here and have no wish to insult them, arguing with those authorities is extreme fringe theory activity, it's in the realms of Erich von Däniken and space aliens visiting earth and starting ancient civilisations.
Grant is a two edged sword smeat75. The central and only source of so-called Christian history is Eusebius. Unlike the "Biblical Historians", Grant presents liberal doses of negative evidence against Eusebius. For example in his Early Alexandrian Christianity:

Quote:
Eusebius and the Life of Origen

Nearly everything that is recorded about the early history of Alexandrian Christianity lies in the Church History of Eusebius. Many Alexandrian theological writings are preserved, but as might be expected they cast little light on historical events. Now the basic difficulty with Eusebius' work is that it has to be classified as "official history." It therefore contains a judicious mixture of authentic record with a good deal of suppression of fact and occasional outright lies. He wrote it in defence of himself and his friends and their outlook toward the nascent imperial church establishment under God's messenger Constantine.
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Old 04-06-2012, 02:32 AM   #75
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tom Sawyer
I also doubt that there would be a clear line between the two positions and the placement of the line would again depend on the individual. As an example, take Rambo. I've been told that the Rambo character was loosely based on a real person (or an amalgamation of various people). If that's the actually the case, would that loose basing mean that you have a "Historical Rambo" position as opposed to a "Mythical Rambo" position?
Hi Tom, thanks for a stimulating and informative post. I must disagree with your choice of words here:
... a "Mythical Rambo" position? NOPE. Rambo was a legendary, not a mythical fictional character.

That distinction lies at the heart of this thread's theme:
mythicism ALWAYS implies supernatural attributes.

Absent supernatural ability, the account is Legendary, not mythical.

The two words are not synonyms.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
To me the word indicates a hypothesis that no real personality existed at the Genesis of the religion founded on the reverence of a putative crucified Jewish Holy man named Yeshua. That this "person" is wholly mythical with no historical reality of any kind - not a person turned into a God, but a person invented from whole cloth.

I'm not sure that's what everybody else means by "mythicism," though.
Two points:
1. No, not from "whole cloth". The Greek fairy tale about Hercules, a human born of human female inseminated by a god, Zeus, serves as template for the Jesus story, as shown by Mark 1:1 (Byzantine version)
2. mythicism is a category of fiction, characterized by legendary dimensions which embrace supernatural attributes. Absent a claim of supernaturality, the composition can only be described as Legend, not myth.

The Jesus story is a GREEK myth, in the tradition of Hercules, not a Jewish story, written in Greek.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Godfrey
Regarding Pilate's title: I've heard it put forth that Tacitus might have intentionally altered the antiquated title to more accurately convey Pilate's status to contemporary readers.
I doubt this explanation. I have not yet explored Toto's link to Carrier's article, (thanks, I will get to it...), but isn't it more likely that the change was made by an eleventh century scribe?

Quote:
Originally Posted by smeat
written in Latin
, Not GREEK???? Evidence that Tacitus wrote in Latin, not Greek?

Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman
The section in which Tacitus mentions "CHRESTIANS" was apparently left unnoticed by all and sundry until the late 15th century
.
Thank you for reminding us, not only that Tacitus was referring to a sect called Chrestians, where the Greek word has a specific meaning, but also, that evidence of forgery is right in front of us, it is not some kind of wild accusation, based on prejudice. The claim of forgery is based on evidence.

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Old 04-06-2012, 05:15 AM   #76
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Ancient historical evidence that would falsify various theories of the mythical Jesus

A 1st century BCE mythical Jesus theory might be difficult to falsify (See Toledot Yeshu)

A 1st century CE mythical jesus theory might be difficult to falsify, and/or to be distinguished from the mainstream HJ theory.

A 2nd century CE mythical jesus theory would be falsified by unambiguous evidence of the historical existence of a) Jesus, b) the canonical books of the NT, c) the existence of canonical book-following "Christians" (not "Chrestians") in the 1st century.

A 3rd century CE mythical jesus theory would be falsified by unambiguous evidence of the historical existence of a) Jesus, b) the canonical books of the NT, c) the existence of canonical book-following "Christians" (not "Chrestians") in the 1st or 2nd century.

A 4th century CE mythical jesus theory would be falsified by unambiguous evidence of the historical existence of a) Jesus, b) the canonical books of the NT, c) the existence of canonical book-following "Christians" (not "Chrestians") in the 1st or 2nd or 3rd century.


The evidence may be presented in various forms.

Any given source may be forged or corrupted.

Inter-corroboration of evidence between various fields is highly regarded.

(e.g. it would nice to find a shrine, a figurine or a trinket for Jesus before the 4th century)







The "Evidential Bearing Fields" of Ancient History


Part (1): The "Literature Traditions"

the speakers - authors (particularly "historians") and their estimable historicity.
the words - ancient texts: their literature, its philology, and its translations.
the documents - physical written source - original texts (codexes, papyrii, papyrii fragments)
the historians - comments and analyses of the above by past and present ancient historians.



Part (2): The "Field Traditions"

architecture, buildings, monuments
inscriptions in stone and metal and mosaic - the epigraphic habit
sarcophagi, cadavers, burial relics, funerary ornaments
coins (gold, silver and others)
art, paintings and graffitti
sculpture, reliefs, frescoes, ornamental works
archeological relics and other citations



Part (3): The "Analysis Support Traditions & newer technologies"

paleographic assessment of original texts, papyrii and papyrii fragments
radio carbon dating citations
collective and collaborative databases: epigraphic, numismatic, etc.
multi-spectral imaging
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Old 04-06-2012, 06:45 AM   #77
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Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic View Post
When you say "tomb of Jesus," what do you mean by "Jesus," (the Talpiot tomb is a "tomb of Jesus," after all) and how would you prove any skeleton was the skeleton of Jesus?
How could there be a tomb for Jesus if he ascended bodily into heaven?
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Old 04-06-2012, 07:09 AM   #78
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic View Post
When you say "tomb of Jesus," what do you mean by "Jesus," (the Talpiot tomb is a "tomb of Jesus," after all) and how would you prove any skeleton was the skeleton of Jesus?
How could there be a tomb for Jesus if he ascended bodily into heaven?
Is it necessary for a Historical Jesus to have ascended bodily to Heaven?
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Old 04-06-2012, 07:39 AM   #79
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The historical Jesus didn't ascend bodily into heaven. People don't do that in real life.

Steve
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Old 04-06-2012, 07:41 AM   #80
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I doubt this explanation. I have not yet explored Toto's link to Carrier's article, (thanks, I will get to it...), but isn't it more likely that the change was made by an eleventh century scribe?
I doubt it too. But I think a more plausible explanation than a later interpolation is that Tacitus wasn't being as rigorous in his chronicling as he sometimes was, based on the fact that it was a minor point to him. He often used memoirs as sources, among other things, so it may have been an issue with his source material. Or he may have been taking the Christian tradition at face value.

In any case, he doesn't pretend to have firsthand knowledge. As far as I am concerned, he merely confirms the existence of Christians.
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