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Old 06-05-2006, 09:23 PM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto
The only place that exact quote appears on the internet is on Acharya S's page. Others quote only "We must get rid of that Christ" which implies to me a particular interpretation of the Christ principle. Emerson was not looking for the Historical Jesus, or trying to disprove him.

Perhaps this will help (or perhaps not):
Thanks for the information Toto. I came across that Emerson quote
used in Edwin Johnson's "Antiqua Mater" and wondered what Emerson
was on about. I am impressed with other Emerson written literature
concerning nature. EG:
http://www.vcu.edu/engweb/transcende...uretext.html#1


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Old 06-05-2006, 09:41 PM   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GakuseiDon
Why did Eusebius use "tribe of Christians" once, in Josephus? Why didn't he add it to all the other materials you are claiming he wrote? And what do you think he meant by using "tribe of Christians"?
By this "tribe of christians" I think Eusebius was looking at the
line of descent (canonical, apostlic, etc) of his subject matter.

He used Josephus as an authoritative priority date such that
things relating to this "tribe of christians" might be inferred (by
the Eusebian interpolation of Josephus) to have occurred in
the time of Josephus.

The word "christian" is the trade marked item which he added
to all the other materials (of 100-300CE) to support the notion
that this line of descent of "the tribe of christians" extends
to this very day
.

I believe that the mainstream theory related to BC&H asserts
that the inference that there was anything christian on the
planet prior to the writings of Eusebius, is true, and is in
fact based upon the inferred truth of the Eusebian account
as a history.

I question the truth of this inference, by testing the inverse
of the inference, and finding that the inverse of the inference
(ie: there were in fact no christians until the fourth century)
quite consistent with the available historical and scientific
evidence.




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Old 06-05-2006, 09:47 PM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gstafleu
What is all this about a "tribe of Christians?" My impression, both from this forum and various readings, is that Christianity started as a bunch of movements (Jewish Christianity, Pauline Christianity, Gnostics...), not as a single "tribe." But that doesn't mean that Eusebius wrote the whole NT from scratch, just that it is a political compilation of documents.
We are testing out the hypothesis that in fact the new testament
was written in the fourth century, under the editor-in-chief and
harmoniser (of possibly multiple sponsored writers) Eusebius, the
lot sponsored by Constantine, for the purpose of short-changing
his newly acquired empire.

Mainstream scholarship has accepted as true the inference written
by Eusebius into his works, that he is quoting the "ancient men" of
the past 300 years. We believe that this inference may not be true.



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Old 06-05-2006, 10:06 PM   #14
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris Weimer
Conjecture.
Conjecture.
Conjecture.

...(trim)...
The inference that the subject matter of the fourth century historian
Eusebius was actually historical subject matter is a conjecture shared
by the mainstream thinkers of all ages to date.

Quote:
This just confirms that you have this anti-Christian bias
The only confirmations going on are in your mind. My thesis has
to do with history, and I am exploring the possibility that in fact
the history of christianity commenced in the fourth century.

Quote:
Merely saying that c.d. is consistent with your position does not prove it. Show some evidence.
On the contrary, I am sensible enough to realise that there is never
any such thing as this "evidential proof". For the present time I am
quite happy to understand that my position is not inconsistent with
what are determined to be historical and scientific possibilities.

Quote:
I take it you know none of the languages I mentioned. Come back when you can at least read Greek.
I seek other's expert opinions on such matters, and assimilate
their readings, translations and notes. Your stringent egoic
requirement is spurious to issue of the inference in question.

Have a nice day.



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Old 06-05-2006, 10:36 PM   #15
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Quote:
Originally Posted by darstec
What has occurred since then is that some writings from various periods a few around the fourth century BCE and a few around the third century BCE were discovered in sealed tombs, the contents of which were carbon-dated.
What are these sealed tombs? I know only of the Wadi ed-Daliyeh fragments from the time of Alexander. Are these your fourth c. BCE material?

Quote:
Originally Posted by darstec
Then the writing style was compared to what paleographers used, and their data was corrected. However nothing of the sort was done for the first or second centuries CE. First and second century CE paleography is guesswork primarily established by proclamation. Can you point me to ANY first or second century CE writing that has been carbon-dated? I think not since you ignored that part of my original post.
A few of the Bar-Kochba texts were carbon-dated as controls for the DSS.


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Old 06-05-2006, 11:23 PM   #16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman

Constantine inspired the fabrication in order to short-change the empire.
Who is going to argue with the boss? Eusebius probably had the unenviable
task of harmonising a number of sponsored writers.



www.mountainman.com.au
A problem here is that the Roman Empire was not the whole world.
The phenomenon existed outside the empire as well.

Aphraht who lived in the Parthian empire, was writing at this time as well. He dates his fifth demonstration he tells us the years from alexander 311 b.c to his time were 648 years meaning he wrote in 337 a.d.

Demonstration 14 is formally dated the month of shebat 655 meaning 344 C.E.

It makes no sense to attribute this kind of influence from Rome inside the Parthian Empire.

So the Constantine theory will have to go.

Note too that despite Catholic aplogetics the belivers in the parthian empire were theologically ecclisiastically as well as geographically seperate from those inside the Roamn Empire, so the conspiracy theories fall down on this point.
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Old 06-05-2006, 11:46 PM   #17
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Quote:
Originally Posted by judge
A problem here is that the Roman Empire was not the whole world.
The phenomenon existed outside the empire as well.

Aphraht who lived in the Parthian empire, was writing at this time as well. He dates his fifth demonstration he tells us the years from alexander 311 b.c to his time were 648 years meaning he wrote in 337 a.d.

Demonstration 14 is formally dated the month of shebat 655 meaning 344 C.E.

It makes no sense to attribute this kind of influence from Rome inside the Parthian Empire.

So the Constantine theory will have to go.

Not so fast ... the dates you mention above are all post Nicaean.
Information has been known to infiltrate across borders of all empires,
within a few years.

At Nicaea, Constantine offered subscription to the new and strange
religion to anyone wanting to sign the creed in the year 325 CE.
He was offering free food, free gifts, free copies of the literature,
construction of churches, and the generous military protection and
sponsorship that is attendant with a supreme imperial mafia thug.

12 years is plenty of time for Aphraht to have obtained the general
drift of the Constantinian inspired fabrication of the Galilaeans.



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Old 06-06-2006, 03:46 AM   #18
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman
12 years is plenty of time for Aphraht to have obtained the general drift of the Constantinian inspired fabrication of the Galilaeans.
Was Eusebius a Galilaean? If not, who was Julian referring to? And why the use of plural?
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Old 06-06-2006, 03:50 AM   #19
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Why would Eusebius/Constantine create a religion with a fake history of large numbers of fake previous heretical beliefs?

Did he also have all the gnostic gospels written to back up such created heresies?

That's a hell of a lot of writing
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Old 06-06-2006, 06:13 AM   #20
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Quote:
Originally Posted by yummyfur
Why would Eusebius/Constantine create a religion with a fake history of large numbers of fake previous heretical beliefs?

Did he also have all the gnostic gospels written to back up such created heresies?

That's a hell of a lot of writing
I think Ockham is having a day off.
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