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12-15-2011, 01:12 AM | #511 | |
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12-15-2011, 04:27 AM | #512 | |
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When I was in my teens, an acquaintance who was living in Bangkok, Thailand, with her diplomat parents, would tell stories about the weird teachers at the International School of Bangkok. One was an old lady who spoke Thai, French & English fluently. When excited, this acquaintance said, she would unconsciously slip French or Thai words/verbs into her English sentences, which amused her students beyond measure.
Latinisms themselves mean nothing. Even the Gemara of the Talmud has them. As for the last point, R H Charles's opinion that Aramaic was the original language of the Ethiopic translation of the Books of Enoch (1 Enoch), based on Aramisms, turned out to be spot on. DCH Quote:
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12-15-2011, 08:20 AM | #513 |
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Language is often a problem and for good reason as according to Erickson in "Adulthood" (1978) the English language does not have a word for what he described as "yellow maturity" after the ripening of humanity (jen-shu). I think he tried to show that it is something he found all over the world except in English where it just seems to mean 'grow older' . . .. And then of course the best we can do is call a poustinic a hermit and that should tell you enough.
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12-15-2011, 02:17 PM | #514 |
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Oh, rubbish, DCH. I've been through only some of these Latinisms here. They are much more than just a few Latin words transliterated. So, unless you want to show Latin loan translations (such as satis facere and give or take counsel), bound Latin morphemes (-ian, as in Herodian or christian) or Latin syntax in the Gemara, you seem to be talking rot.
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12-15-2011, 02:55 PM | #515 | |
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All he has done is make an assertion. He has provided no actual evidence. He just makes the claim that the greek phrase must have come from the Latin, satis facere. Why? As usual because Spin says so. There is no attempt in any way to show that it can't come from a semitic tongue. This is what Spin needs to demonstrate. I'd venture to say Spin hasn't even considered it. So now he can either ignore or stubbornly stick to his error and go and make up a reason why this can't be the case. And that's where it will get interesting |
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12-15-2011, 07:09 PM | #516 | |||||||||||||
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John 18:1b, 1d,ii. 3,vi. 10b,v. 12,iv. 13b,i. 15-19,xiii. 22,ii 25b,ii. 27-31,vii. 33-35,vii. (36-40);x. 19:1-19,xl. 21-23,viii. 28-30,vii. 38b,iii. 40-42;vi. 20:1,iv. 3-5,viii. 8,ii. 11b-14a,iv. 19b,ii. 22-23,v. 26-27,viii. 30,ii. From which John 20 can be subtracted as Resurrection accounts not well enough paralleled in the Synoptics, and they are not listed by Teeple in his "S" portion. In gJohn the ear of the slave is not restored, either. Quote:
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12-15-2011, 08:03 PM | #517 | |
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So next time you put forward one of your creative thoughts, follow it either with: "This is of course just an unsupported assertion." or "We know this, because... [and present arguments]". |
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12-15-2011, 09:29 PM | #518 | ||
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12-15-2011, 11:46 PM | #519 | |||||
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I dont like your constant shifting. YOU said there is no supernatural in the Passion. I pointed out there is. Then YOU suddenly come back with this nonsense about what I think. I think the Passion is a fiction because of its literary features, not because it contains the supernatural. A story may have supernatural occurrences but still fundamentally be true -- the Roman historians like Tacitus frequently discuss supernatural events but no one would call their works fiction. So let's not hear that claim that I think the tale is fiction because it has the supernatural. It's not totally not true. Quote:
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Such reconstructions of history, especially in quasi-Leninist organizations like the early Christian church, are common. Historical legitimacy is a key source of social authority in such groups. Quote:
What I'd like to see, for once, is the complete argument for any passage, as I've asked dozens of times. The Passion would be great. Pick some passages from the Passion and derive, step by step, how you know that they come from a source. Don't bother to write about post #XYZ or refer me to a document elsewhere. Show me the step by step procedure. Vorkosigan |
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12-16-2011, 09:49 AM | #520 |
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So mythicists believe that a quasi-Leninist organization produced the New Testament, Vork? So that's so commonly known that you don't even have to mention anyone who has established that?
What you used to say was impossible, you now admit as possible, which undermines your claims that there were no eyewitnesses. You don't dismiss them a priori now. Apparently you just dismiss a priori any parts you "know" can't happen. Then what prohibits believing that Q, Nicodemus's Discourses, and the Passion Narrative are very early and from eyewitnesses? Anything supernatural can easily be sorted out from them. In my Post #516 I listed the John 18 and 19 verses that would work for you for the Passion Narrative. You admit there could be contemporary sources for gMark, but you overlook my previous work showing that there are seven layers to gMark. Up to now you had just flatly denied this. Why should I develop this again so that you and spin can once again focus on this peripheral thesis to my main thesis that there are seven written gospel eyewitness records? Neither one of you seem to admit comparative analysis with the other gospels. You just reiterate that gMark has uniform style throughout, which is not the issue. Rather it is that one element of that style, the Latinisms, was mostly quite naturally introduced when gMark was presented to a Roman audience. "That is", if you need explanation of what I am saying. Your concluding demand is unreasonable. If you don't believe what top scholars like Temple, Nicol, Freed, Fortna and Teeple have done with the Signs Source, why would you beliieve me is establishing what even a greater number of scholars have done with the Passion Narrative? They remain hung up debating whether there is dependence on the Synoptics, there is a mutual source, or each gospel is independent. It's mostly a matter of deciding who you can believe and who is just arguing for a dogma. There's mostly the latter whether you look at Fundamentalists, atheists, or the middle. "Consensus" seems to be the standard dogma, quite apart from evidence--as I have pointed out, and you yourself fell into it after denying it, there is no evidence that gLuke must have been written after gMark was completely finished and published in Rome, yet scholars say so all the time. |
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