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09-12-2007, 02:19 AM | #231 |
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Sorry - is that not the SBL study?
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09-12-2007, 05:09 AM | #232 |
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I had this item (or via: amazon.co.uk) in mind. Sorry if I was unclear. Useful as it is, the paper presented to the SBL conference is only a general discussion of a few issues. The book itself discusses in immense detail the history of the controversy.
There is also the volume of Josephus bibliography (is this by Feldman -- pardon my vagueness but I am on the run) which also indicates the little material denying the authenticity of the short passage. |
09-12-2007, 09:35 AM | #234 | ||
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Far be it for me, a casual skeptic, to spoil the fun...a beggar at the feast so to speak ruining the party. But I'll just put out some points that may be considered if anyone wishes to consider them: 1. The issue of no reference to the TF prior to Eusebius is still a problem. After all, the apologists did not hesitate to criticize non-believers so it can't really be silence due to embarrassment (the theory being the TF was not sufficiently positive to bear reference). So no apologist of the time even mentions the TF. 2. The arabic Josephus is 10th century and does not agree with our Josephus. The theory then is that the 10th century arabic version preserves something closer to the truth of what Josephus actually wrote. This does not rule out stepwise interpolations (this goes for the shorter passage cited by Origen, although I recognize that attacking the shorter passage takes one out further on the limb). That the point of divergence is after an earlier interpolation and that our Josephus is evidence of further "improvements" on something that was deemed inadequate. 3. A straw man has emerged and gained respectibility. It goes like this: We cannot assume that a Jewish historian writing in the first century would not say positive things about a would-be Messiah who founded a tribe called Christians. I agree. We cannot make that assumption. With Josephus it isn't an assumption, it is demonstrated truth that with the one notable exception, Josephus displays no respect for would-be Messiahs. He consistently discusses them in derogatory terms and even points to Vespasian as the Messiah. So the straw man is this: No one argues that Josephus cannot say positive things about Jesus because Josephus is a Pharisee. The argument is that plus Josephus's consistent treatment of messiahs. Okay, I have more, but I have to catch a plane for New York in 40 minutes, so this is a rush job. I probably will be busy for the next several days and this thread will be dead. Maybe I will start a new thread on this subject when I have time. |
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09-12-2007, 05:36 PM | #235 | ||
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spin |
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09-12-2007, 06:21 PM | #236 |
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Yep, two different beasties. I just wanted to point out that the correct one was also included in the editing.
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09-13-2007, 01:11 AM | #237 | ||||
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Certainly, and in view of the immense bibliography, my own opinion is that they never will be.
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The argument is really that "Everyone in Antiquity was familiar with the works of Josephus including Antiquities. We have loads of works by all these people; so many on such subjects that we know that they 'must' have quoted the passage if it existed. None of them quote this passage. Therefore it did not exist." Once stated properly the fallacies of the argument sort of jump out at us, don't they? 1. How do we know that everyone had read this work? How many people actually refer to Josephus at all? What is the transmission history of so large a work as Antiquities, and who knows the relevant bits? 2. How do we know that people 'must' refer to the TF? Which writers, in which works specifically? And isn't there something bogus anyway about us presuming that we know what people 'must' write? 3. 99% of all ancient literature is lost (so Pietro Bembo, N.G.Wilson agrees). Why must we presume that a reference must exist in the extant 1%? 4. Since when was absence of evidence evidence of absence? In truth this argument is not a respectable one. A great many things appear for the first time much later than this. The text of Macarius Magnes doesn't turn up until the 19th century, for instance. Quote:
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All the best, Roger Pearse |
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09-13-2007, 04:38 AM | #238 | |
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I do not know that much about antiquity, but I do know what a straw man argument is. |
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09-13-2007, 09:02 AM | #239 | |||||
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Lots of 'if's in that one, weren't there? It won't do, all this stuff. It really won't do. This is why arguing from the fact that no extant writer before Eusebius quotes this passage tells us nothing except that no extant writer before Eusebius quotes this passage. Eusebius' works are massive collections of quotations. He is the first witness for huge amounts of fragments of Greek philosophy, for instance. Quote:
Incidentally you have used the term 'scholars' three times now, but the only person you mention is Earl Doherty who isn't one. It is a mistake to suppose that most of the people that tend to be accessible on this subject are Josephus scholars, or indeed scholars of any sort. Most, like you and I, are merely interested amateurs. Many are polemicists. All the best, Roger Pearse |
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09-13-2007, 10:02 AM | #240 | ||
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