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02-28-2004, 10:02 PM | #91 |
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NO!
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02-28-2004, 11:42 PM | #92 | ||||||||||||||
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not clear? let me remedy
Family Man,
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Mageth: '...it [the Gospel Crucifixion accounts] is properly a myth and not an historical account' Mageth: 'I do claim to know that the events are not historically verifiable' Mageth: '...the entire canonical Gospels are quite correctly referred to as myth' Mageth: 'The events [Crucifixion details in the Gospels] are the accounts of a religion (or mythology, properly) recorded in a religous [sic] text and are not historically verifiable' Mageth: 'So there's simply insufficient external sources to verify the Gospels. They thus remain myths.' So, it is rather clear from the above and elsewhere that Mageth's position (which we'll call argument 1: A1) is that the Gospel's are of the literary genre that he calls 'myth'. Now, Family Man, your stated position (which we'll call argument 2: A2) is that the Gospels are largely but not wholly myth. His deals with literary classification while yours appears to deal with what you believe to be mythic elements in the narratives. Thus, yours (i.e. A2) and his (i.e. A1) are two different, albeit (perhaps) complimentary, positions. Since I, like you, have only so many resources, I will not attend to A2 (or any other digression for that matter) until A1 has been delineated and dealt with. To that end, I intend to hereafter explicate what A1 is apparently proposing and then call for amendment/revision etc. by A1's backers, if any. As my last few posts in this thread attest, we've had a hard time (which I could imagine at, say, Christian forums, but this is IIDB! Go figure.) finding backers for Mageth's argument. But hope springs eternal. Quote:
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P0. A myth is a tradition based on ostensibly historical events that seeks to explain praxis, belief, phenomena etc. according to a certain worldview (per first sense of myth found in the Merriam-Webster online dictionary) P1. A myth is not historically verifiable P2. The Gospels are based on ostensibly historical events that seek to explain praxis, belief, phenomena etc. according to the Christian worldview P3. The Gospels are not historically verifiable C4. The Gospels are best classified under the literary genre of myth Does anyone object to the above? Does anyone wish to add/modify/delete any lines? If this is Mageth’s position, and he does not wish to defend it, is there another that wishes to pick it up for him? Once we get the positions claims/terms down pat I can ask my more meaningful follow-up questions. Thanks. Regards, BGic |
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02-29-2004, 12:05 AM | #93 | ||
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Mageth's position is, methodologically speaking, conservative. That the Crucifixion scenes are built out of the Old Testament may be new to you, but it is not to scholars. Koester and Crossan, for example, both hold that the Passion as a historical event was completely lost to Christians. They believe this because the Passion as we now have it is apparently made up out of various passages in the OT. Randel Helms also holds this view, as does Robert Price, Hermann Detering, and other scholars. Not only is it made up out of the OT, but its structural features, and overall framework, also suggest literary invention rather than historical knowledge. Crossan, who has argued strongly for this position, notes that if at all three levels, individual events, larger structures, and overall frameworks, the Gospels evince literary invention, then they must be literary inventions. See The Birth of Christianity (Crossan) or Gospel Fictions (Helms), both of which are in the list at the sticky at the top of this page. Really, it is that simple. So in both major senses the Gospels would be myths -- stories that illuminate people's lives and give them meaning, and fictions about the gods and other divine beings. Quote:
If you have specific events in the Crucifixion/Passion Narrative you'd like to discuss, by all means bring them on; we have a whole slew of well-read people here like Mageth who would happy to discuss specifics. Vorkosigan |
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02-29-2004, 07:07 AM | #94 |
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If the number of "supporters" of Mageth makes his argument more palatible to BGC, then kindly add me to the number.
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02-29-2004, 09:36 AM | #95 | ||
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Mageth's and my position are substantially the same and you know it. The only difference I can tell is that I think some history can be gleaned from them, which is a position for which there is sustantial support in scholarly literature. The audacious claim is that they aren't myths, at least from a scholarly standpoint. I'm not even sure that Mageth would disagree with me.
For example, you point out that Mageth's position is: Quote:
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02-29-2004, 11:37 AM | #96 | |
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spin |
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03-01-2004, 06:13 PM | #97 | |
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Re: not clear? let me remedy
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03-01-2004, 06:18 PM | #98 |
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Which would give you an infinite amount of time to type.
Perchance you shall produce Hamlet. --J.D. |
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