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Old 11-23-2011, 03:46 PM   #31
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Isn't it interesting that it is called:

The Historical Argument for Jesus of Nazareth

rather than the historical evidence for Jesus?

That alone already speaks volume about the quality of the evidence. Why, afterall, would you need to make an argument if the evidence was good enough?
An argument can consist simply of a presentation of the evidence, and certainly ought to at least include such a presentation.
Still, I think that the choice of word speaks volume.

Would you write a book "the historical argument for Napoleon"? It seems to me if there is no doubt about a historical character (and that is the position of Ehrman and co about Jesus), you would phrase your book differently. Searching "historical argument for" on google, it doesn't seem like it's a phrasing historians would use.

About the analogy of a trial, well duh, the very idea of a trial applied to history is that there is doubt over something and the truth needs to be established. You wouldn't write a "the historical argument for Obama" book, would you?
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Old 11-23-2011, 11:18 PM   #32
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Why, afterall, would you need to make an argument if the evidence was good enough?
On further reflection, I revise my previous response as follows.

You are assuming a separability that does not hold. A presentation of evidence just is an argument. It makes no difference how good the evidence might be. Whenever you claim "X is evidence for Y," you are arguing for Y. If the evidence is good enough, then the argument is irrefutable, but it does not thereby cease to be an argument.
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Old 11-24-2011, 06:35 AM   #33
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It is clear that Schweitzer personally had no doubts about the historical substance of the figure of Jesus. However, the passage from which I quoted criticizes not only Robertson/Smith/Drews, saying that "their errors are manifest and must be exposed" but also the historians of religion who, "do not seriously question the more general view of their opponents (the mythicists of his time), but only their boldest assertions". He says further that history of religion has "sunk to the level of vulgarization". I would consider Ehrman's ill-advised past comments that we know more about Jesus than most historical figures of antiquity fitting such description. It is simply not true.

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Hi Jiri

I'm not sure whether we are arguing at cross-purposes.

My main point was that history of religion (Religionsgeschichte) is being used here to describe a specific type of academic approach to the study of religion. It is more specific than 'scholars interested in religious history'.

See Biblical Interpretation - History of Religion

Andrew Criddle
I see your point now and register the quotation marks around the term 'the history of religion' when first used in the passage. The defenders of Jesus' existence have opponents 'in the field of the history of religion'.

Thanks, Andrew, for pointing out my error.

Despite my misreading the term, I still think my point to Ehrman is valid. Schweitzer considered the Jesus mythicism a serious challenge that needed a substantial response. In the very next paragraph from which I quoted he says:

This [i.e. the general trend to mythicism in academia] explains why those who defend the existence of Jesus do not seriously question the more general view of their opponents in the field of the history of religion, but only their boldest assertions. But in fact a critical survey of the much famed findings on which Drews and his associates base their findings would be more than useful at this time.

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Jiri
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Old 11-24-2011, 07:45 PM   #34
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So some scholars, even the most ardent skeptics, just don't care enough about mythicism to look into it at all. So it is not a surprise to find that scholars only know about the term through ridicule or scoff or some internet blog, and know absolutely nothing about Carrier or Thompson, or even Price for that matter. Ehrman wasn't even aware of Price's books on the subject when he interviewed for the Infidel Guy some years back.
You can hardly expect Ehrman to accept Price's views if he has never heard of him.

As Paul says in Romans 10 'And how can they believe in the one of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone preaching to them?'

Happily, people have preached about Bob Price to Ehrman, so he has now heard of him.

I wonder why Paul had to concern himself with why Jews had not heard of Jesus.

I suppose Jesus was the Bob Price of his day, an obscure person , with a handful of followers, who people only heard about when his followers insisted that they hear about this guy. Otherwise they had little clue that he had even existed, just as Ehrman had no clue that Price existed.

I can't help think that if Bob Price was known in his day as a healer and exorcist, and if his ideas were so controversial that his death had to be arranged by the Establishment, then Ehrman would have heard of him.

But, just like the supporters of Jesus, supporters of Price have to explain why people have not heard of him.
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Old 11-24-2011, 08:08 PM   #35
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I suppose Jesus was the Bob Price of his day
Ughh :vomit: That's just wrong on so many levels ...
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Old 11-25-2011, 05:20 AM   #36
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When all else fails bring in the German. The only language for scholarship. So precise. Germans have a natural advantage for thinking clearly. Although it can be taken to absurdity a la Heidegger. Although he certainly had his brilliant moments too - "Geschichte im eigentlichsten Sinne ist der hochste Gegenstand der Religion, mit ihr hebt sie an und endigt mit ihr" Phänomenologie des Religiösen Lebens 60, 322, citing Schleiermacher
One of my youthful idols, the American Marxist sociologist, C.Wright Mills made a great quip directed at the Frankfurt School. He said of Horkheimer, Adorno, Marcuse and Co. that they are the epitome of the German philosophy's obsession with syntax at the expense of semantics. I wonder what he would have said of Heidegger had he bothered.

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Old 11-29-2011, 09:45 PM   #37
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The two things we already know about Ehrman are that he is nobody's fool and that he is thorough. That he got stuck some place might be a natural consequence of his view that the texts have been extensively forged. It might be easy to defend the gospels as historically reliable by someone like Craig Evans, but Ehrman knows that the text accounts are not disinterested accounts on any point. Maybe, he realized - as none of the learned scholars seems to yet - that if Mark ended at 16:8, Jesus did not appear to his disciples until Matthew contradicted Mark's gospel. That would be a huge revelation to Christians !

Mark tells us obliquely that Jesus was not preached as rising from the dead until Paul received the news in his body !

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Jiri
Could very well be - he got stuck some place......
Reading the riot act to the ahistoricists looks to be not as straightforward as he might want.....
I agree.
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