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02-18-2010, 09:12 AM | #141 |
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Very interesting input Rick.
Or rather: what may be true. This statement is valid for all human sciences IMO, but considering the criteria that are at our disposal to decide on those distant historical matters (i.e. nothing compared to the reliability of a physics lab test bench), we are even farther to any certainty. |
02-19-2010, 07:42 PM | #142 | |
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02-19-2010, 10:46 PM | #143 | |
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One does not claim that Homer was a proponent of the "historical Achilles". Homer presented the offspring of a sea-goddes and a human king, but still a myth.. The belief that Jesus existed as both fully God and man, it is not at all about history since no such entity ever existed. HJ denotes the nature of existence not the belief of existence. Marcion believed his Phantom son of God Jesus existed and was actually on earth, but his belief cannot alter that Gods are considered mythological. Jesus Christ was considered a son of a God by Eusebius, therefore Eusebius was presented as a mythological entity. The writer using the name Eusebius gave the world a 6 for a 9, an MJ for an HJ. "Blessed are those who have not seen me but still believe" the words of Jesus to the King of Edessa according to Eusebius. Now, who could have seen HJ? |
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