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Old 10-26-2011, 05:58 AM   #21
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Originally Posted by Sheshbazzar View Post

Such as?
Please provide some specific examples of the texts and verses that you think '-might- be accurate reports of events that actually took place.'
Where? Which?

Designate exactly which texts it is, that form the basis of your support for a HJ.

You have not explained what you mean, in this context, what you mean by 'accurate reports of events that actually took place.'
Without this you are only suppling an empty generalization with no discernible substance.

Without these specifics being supplied, by YOU, so that the context and likelihood of any them being 'accurate reports of events that actually took place.' can actually be by others (us) examined and weighed as to their likelihood.

Most of us have also read these selfsame texts (repeatedly) and are quite certain of their fabricated nature. What we then need to know, is what specifically it is that causes you to differ?

Without this, this thread is also doomed to become another loop endless of unspecified, and thus unanswerable generalizations.
Being certain of their fabricated nature is just being dogmatic, not rational.

As for 'which parts are true and which aren't', this is a red herring. In this regard, the means for assigning probabilities is no different than for countless other figures from ancient history. Yes, even in religious texts and for magicians and those thought to have been divine. Unless you are willing to deal with these on a similar basis, then you are being inconsistent as well as irrational.
What is your methodology Archibald? Just eliminate from the gospels anything that offends your modern sensibilities and then assume the remainder is historical fact? That appears to be the real criteria of embarrassment!

So modern questers for the Historical Jesus are engaged in creating their own Jesuses, modern constructs that ancient Christians would have rebelled against with all vigor. No wonder almost every "Historical Jesus" resembles his maker.
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Old 10-26-2011, 06:06 AM   #22
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.....; other of the statements in the canonical Gospels using the name Jesus might or might not be literally accurate reports of events that actually took place;
Such as?
Please provide some specific examples of the texts and verses that you think '-might- be accurate reports of events that actually took place.'
Where? Which?

Designate exactly which texts it is, that form the basis of your support for a HJ.

You have not explained what you mean, in this context, what you mean by 'accurate reports of events that actually took place.'
Without this you are only suppling an empty generalization with no discernible substance.

Without these specifics being supplied, by YOU, so that the context and likelihood of any them being 'accurate reports of events that actually took place.' can actually be by others (us) examined and weighed as to their likelihood.

Most of us have also read these selfsame texts (repeatedly) and are quite certain of their fabricated nature. What we then need to know, is what specifically it is that causes you to differ?

Without this, this thread is also doomed to become another loop endless of unspecified, and thus unanswerable generalizations.
Being certain of their fabricated nature is just being dogmatic, not rational.
Perhaps from your personal point of view.
Others having also closely examined these selfsame texts arrive at the conclusion that they consist of religiously motivated fabrications, and that is the rational position.
Quote:
As for 'which parts are true and which aren't', this is a red herring.
Sorry, but I must disagree with this claim. Unless the specifics are openly examined, no valid judgments can be rendered by any party as to any claim to what '-might-' ' be literally accurate reports of events that actually took place;'
Either you are willing to lay your cards on the table, in the sight of all, or you are attempting to bluff.
Quote:
Originally Posted by archibald
In this regard, the means for assigning probabilities is no different than for countless other figures from ancient history.
And for these 'other figures from ancient history' the same questions are commonly raised, and fact is separated from the obvious fictions.
Any supposed 'historical' Jebus should be expected to be able stand up to this same rigorous examination.
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Originally Posted by archibald
Yes, even in religious texts and for magicians and those thought to have been divine.
Unless you are willing to deal with these on a similar basis, then you are being inconsistent as well as irrational.
Where have I indicated that I do not, or that I am not willing to deal with any ancient -text- on a similar basis?
Again. There must be some specific text and passages specified to be examined and judged, not just generalized allegations of some degree of historicity.
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Old 10-26-2011, 06:11 AM   #23
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Originally Posted by archibald View Post
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Originally Posted by Sheshbazzar View Post
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Originally Posted by J-D
.....; other of the statements in the canonical Gospels using the name Jesus might or might not be literally accurate reports of events that actually took place;
Such as?
Please provide some specific examples of the texts and verses that you think '-might- be accurate reports of events that actually took place.'
Where? Which?

Designate exactly which texts it is, that form the basis of your support for a HJ.

You have not explained what you mean, in this context, what you mean by 'accurate reports of events that actually took place.'
Without this you are only suppling an empty generalization with no discernible substance.

Without these specifics being supplied, by YOU, so that the context and likelihood of any them being 'accurate reports of events that actually took place.' can actually be by others (us) examined and weighed as to their likelihood.

Most of us have also read these selfsame texts (repeatedly) and are quite certain of their fabricated nature. What we then need to know, is what specifically it is that causes you to differ?

Without this, this thread is also doomed to become another loop endless of unspecified, and thus unanswerable generalizations.
Being certain of their fabricated nature is just being dogmatic, not rational.

As for 'which parts are true and which aren't', this is a red herring. In this regard, the means for assigning probabilities is no different than for countless other figures from ancient history. Yes, even in religious texts and for magicians and those thought to have been divine. Unless you are willing to deal with these on a similar basis, then you are being inconsistent as well as irrational.
Well indeed, so let's set the same standards for this "Jesus" fellow as we would for, say, Empedocles - also reputed as a magician and wonder-worker as well as what we call a "philosopher".

There's a fair bit of triangulation for him, from several sources. Even if we take Diogenes Laertius as a "main source" equivalent to the Christian cult texts, there are enough little mentions of him here and there outside that text, throughout the corpus of ancient literature, to make it a fairly solid deal that the miraculous healing was mythology layered on top of a real man (some of it apparently fostered by himself, amusingly). And of course we have his own words too.

So for this "historical Jesus" we don't have external triangulation and we don't have his own words.

Shouldn't that make the hypothesis of a human Jesus ... rather tentative? You know, if you're using the same standards as you'd apply to other miracle-working magician figures.

Or take Appollonius of Tyana - his legend has even even more fantastic stuff than Jesus or Empedocles in some ways, but there's some triangulation from several sources, and there's even some archaeology for him IIRC.

The point is, people aren't applying the same methods - they're wishfully thinking a historical Jesus into existence when, by any normal standards of history and the academy, he'd just be a not-terribly-well-supported hypothesis that some obscure academics might argue for and against without any firm outcome.
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Old 10-26-2011, 06:44 AM   #24
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The point is, people aren't applying the same methods.....
No. Some people are. You're not. Speak for yourself. :]

Btw, run that case for Buddha past me again.

You've been busted, George.
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Old 10-26-2011, 08:00 AM   #25
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Since DNA was brought up let me say that we are dealing with RNA that has no genes but is carried by DNA and so is historical but pertaining to RNA makes it a love story that speaks to the blood in our veins urging us to die to our ego that sets us apart and so making us one, once again, and eternity reigns without pain until the seond death does us part.
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Old 10-26-2011, 09:11 AM   #26
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Originally Posted by gurugeorge
Yes I think that's broadly on the money - except with the caveat that many Christians evidently believed their (what we understand as) fictional supergod existed and sojourned on Earth for a time, and some believed he "had DNA" (so to speak) while others didn't.
Thanks for this comment, George.
From my narrow minded perspective, it is not terribly important, and surely not useful, to focus on what "people believed". I have no idea what people TODAY believe, let alone those alive 2000 years ago.

I don't look at the HJ vs. MJ argument in terms of popular "belief". What anyone believes, or doubts, is irrelevant to me.

When I wrote that HJ meant a genuine human being with human DNA, that's what I meant, not, "people believe that he had DNA". I seek to communicate the fact that Jesus of Nazareth did have human DNA. That's HJ, not, "people suppose", or "people imagine", or "people wish that", or "people believe" that Jesus of Nazareth possessed human DNA. "HJ" means, irrespective of what people believe or deny, that there was once a real living human being, named Jesus of Nazareth, who could cure epilepsy by waving his hands in the air. That is HJ.

MJ, by contrast, also has NOTHING to do with people's beliefs. It doesn't matter one iota, if 10 billion souls disagree with me. What counts, here, is not people's beliefs, what counts is DNA. Jesus didn't have any. It does not matter whether or not I believe it. What matters is, Jesus was a fictional character, not a living, breathing human being. That is MJ.

Neither HJ, nor MJ depend AT ALL, on the quantity of folks who accept one or the other hypothesis. If I am alone, on the planet, believing in MJ, that's fine. No problem. What does matter, is Jesus' DNA, not my belief. Either he had it (HJ), or he didn't (MJ). End of story.


Quote:
Originally Posted by archibald
Since the extant ones are indeed Koine literature, I don't think anybody is going to argue with you on that one.
I think you may have misunderstood me. My writing is notoriously sloppy. I wrote "Koine literature", meaning, NOT Koine theology, and NOT Koine history.

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Originally Posted by jakejonesiv
But I think your suggestion to define terms is a good one.
I agree with your assessment of J-D's input.

Quote:
Originally Posted by J-D
Well, then, what if the plot I imagine is the plot of the Romance Of The Three Kingdoms? Are the characters of that story, Liu Bei, Cao Cao, and the rest, 'historical' or 'mythical', in the sense of those words you are using?
I don't know a lot about Chinese culture and civilization, and I would certainly defer to your apparent superior knowledge of that great culture, but, I believe, perhaps in error, that CaoCao, at least, was a real human being. I know too little to comment on the other characters of the romance.

For me, it is simple: historical = DNA was present; fictional = DNA not present, at any time; mythical = fictional + superhuman traits (flying through the air, for example)

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Old 10-26-2011, 09:15 AM   #27
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Originally Posted by archibald View Post
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Originally Posted by Sheshbazzar View Post

Such as?
Please provide some specific examples of the texts and verses that you think '-might- be accurate reports of events that actually took place.'
Where? Which?

Designate exactly which texts it is, that form the basis of your support for a HJ.

You have not explained what you mean, in this context, what you mean by 'accurate reports of events that actually took place.'
Without this you are only suppling an empty generalization with no discernible substance.

Without these specifics being supplied, by YOU, so that the context and likelihood of any them being 'accurate reports of events that actually took place.' can actually be by others (us) examined and weighed as to their likelihood.

Most of us have also read these selfsame texts (repeatedly) and are quite certain of their fabricated nature. What we then need to know, is what specifically it is that causes you to differ?

Without this, this thread is also doomed to become another loop endless of unspecified, and thus unanswerable generalizations.
Being certain of their fabricated nature is just being dogmatic, not rational.

As for 'which parts are true and which aren't', this is a red herring. In this regard, the means for assigning probabilities is no different than for countless other figures from ancient history. Yes, even in religious texts and for magicians and those thought to have been divine. Unless you are willing to deal with these on a similar basis, then you are being inconsistent as well as irrational.
Cool, but I think they are asking you to actually assign those probabilities that, as you say, is no different from what we do for countless other figures from ancient history.

Start at Mark 1:1, if you like, and give it a go.
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Old 10-26-2011, 09:28 AM   #28
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Cool, but I think they are asking you to actually assign those probabilities that, as you say, is no different from what we do for countless other figures from ancient history.

Start at Mark 1:1, if you like, and give it a go.
Well, I'm really not sure why you're asking. When it comes to the details of what a person is supposed to have done or not done on a particular occasion, particularly a minor figure like this (though it's also true, to some extent, of almost all figures from ancient history), it becomes harder to assign probabilities. There is a range, starting with likliehood of mere existence, moving on to some very basic items (eg. in this case, 'if existed was more likely a prophet than a rally chariot driver or chef'), moving on to slightly more open question (was crucified?) and...eventually...stuff like, 'did or did not ride a donkey into Jerusalem'.

Now, personally, I don't tend to go beyond the first issue, or possibly the second (since there are no reports of winning races or recipes for banana bread in the surviving texts). Beyond that, I am almost entirely agnostic, personally speaking.

So, it seems to me question is still a red herring, because (a) it's not central and (b) lack of confidence for this sort of knowledge is the norm. Did Theudas really lead 400 people to the Jordan on the promise the waters would part, for example?
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Old 10-26-2011, 09:44 AM   #29
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Originally Posted by archibald View Post
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Originally Posted by dog-on View Post

Cool, but I think they are asking you to actually assign those probabilities that, as you say, is no different from what we do for countless other figures from ancient history.

Start at Mark 1:1, if you like, and give it a go.
Well, I'm really not sure why you're asking. When it comes to the details of what a person is supposed to have done or not done on a particular occasion, particularly a minor figure like this (though it's also true, to some extent, of almost all figures from ancient history), it becomes harder to assign probabilities. There is a range, starting with likliehood of mere existence, moving on to some very basic items (eg. in this case, 'if existed was more likely a prophet than a rally chariot driver or chef'), moving on to slightly more open question (was crucified?) and...eventually...stuff like, 'did or did not ride a donkey into Jerusalem'.

Now, personally, I don't tend to go beyond the first issue, or possibly the second (since there are no reports of winning races or recipes for banana bread in the surviving texts). Beyond that, I am almost entirely agnostic, personally speaking.

So, it seems to me question is still a red herring, because (a) it's not central and (b) lack of confidence for this sort of knowledge is the norm. Did Theudas really lead 400 people to the Jordan on the promise the waters would part, for example?
Let's start at the beginning of your post.

Why do you call Jesus a minor figure, exactly?
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Old 10-26-2011, 10:13 AM   #30
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Cool, but I think they are asking you to actually assign those probabilities that, as you say, is no different from what we do for countless other figures from ancient history.

Start at Mark 1:1, if you like, and give it a go.
Well, I'm really not sure why you're asking. When it comes to the details of what a person is supposed to have done or not done on a particular occasion, particularly a minor figure like this (though it's also true, to some extent, of almost all figures from ancient history), it becomes harder to assign probabilities. There is a range, starting with likliehood of mere existence, moving on to some very basic items (eg. in this case, 'if existed was more likely a prophet than a rally chariot driver or chef'), moving on to slightly more open question (was crucified?) and...eventually...stuff like, 'did or did not ride a donkey into Jerusalem'.

Now, personally, I don't tend to go beyond the first issue, or possibly the second (since there are no reports of winning races or recipes for banana bread in the surviving texts). Beyond that, I am almost entirely agnostic, personally speaking.

So, it seems to me question is still a red herring, because (a) it's not central and (b) lack of confidence for this sort of knowledge is the norm. Did Theudas really lead 400 people to the Jordan on the promise the waters would part, for example?
Let's start at the beginning of your post.

Why do you call Jesus a minor figure, exactly?
Hi dog-on,

This is another instance of the historicist limbo. The historicist shrinks Jesus (hence temporarily a minor figure in Archibad's post) to "explain away" the lack of independent confirmation. We see this again and again with the healing miracles, feeding of the multitudes, the Triumphal entry, the Cleansing of the Temple, etc. If there were a shred of historicity to these events as described in the gospels, the fame and notoriety of the deeds of Jesus could never have escaped notice.

But rather than come to the reasonable conclusion that we are dealing with ahistorical material, it is assumed the gospel version must be an exaggeration of a historical core. But the “core” turns out to be so trite and pointless that no one would care about Jesus to begin with it.

So as soon as they think they have passed safely under the bar, they immediately start to "dance" the incident back up again, investing it with much symbolism and significance as they can without realizing that they have inadvertently raised the level of the Limbo bar so recently passed under.
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