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Old 07-26-2007, 12:09 PM   #11
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Heinrich Schliemann believed the traditional tales in the Iliad and found a city on the Hellespont. True, he proved nothing else about the story but he did make a major archaeological find.

Herodotus claimed that the Etruscans were from Lydia originally and Livy repeats the tale by claiming the Etruscans were refugees from Troy.

Recent genetic testing has indicated that Herodotus was right.

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedi...ck=2&cset=true


Of course, balanced against those you have the Fountain of Youth, El Dorado, the Northwest Passage. So traditional tales should be investigated. It seems that only when religion is involved will people cling to them beyond reason.
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Old 07-26-2007, 01:22 PM   #12
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Anyone remember that game "Telephone"?
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Old 07-26-2007, 03:27 PM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
I didn't mention the Jesus myth, except in my quote of your post that started this. This thread is only about your claim that tradition can be a source of historical evidence. :huh:
Let me skip right to the point then. You yourself noticed that historical truths can survive up to five generations, and yes, of course, there are many factors in play.

You remark that:
Quote:
Sylvia Rodriguez remarks, in the context of a dispute between an anthropologist and some Pueblo Indians who object to his interpretations of their culture:
The argument was that the Pueblo indians were not investigated for the time when the Spanish contacted them, because it had been for more than 5 or 6 generations.

That's five or six generations. From the time of Pilate to the Simon Bar Kokhba is only 100 years, at the very most 5 generations, but in actuality likely less. Much more likeky, even, is that Christian writings were earlier than Bar Kokhba. Conservatives, Christian and non-Christian alike, like James Crossley, date Mark to the time of Paul, but overwhelming scholarship place it internally at the beginning or end of the Jewish War. Most likely when Mark was penned, only one generation had passed. The author of Mark, if penned in 70 CE, would have known people who lived in that very era.

On to Amsbury:

Quote:
A few years ago I had occasion to compare notes with another participant in certain public events of the thirties, and with documentary and chronological records of those same events. While the records may themselves have had flaws, I am convinced as a result that truly reliable oral historical tradition does not necessarily survive the first generation.
I offered this to Toto to be fair - here was a critique. However, he accepted it uncritically. First of all, the above means that a retelling of a tale told by an eyewitness is not going to be perfect. That doesn't mean that it should be disregarded as it is regularly done here.

However, in as April DeConick's research points out, societies in which oral tradition is a dominating force provide points of accuracy far beyond that of a society which is decidedly literate.

Finally, remarking Amsbury, honestly, he compared notes once for one event. I sent you a note, Toto, to keep in mind, not as proof of anything. It wasn't, though, a study of any kind, nor is it generally accepted by anthropologists, historians, or ethnographers. Not revealing this information was a bit misleading of you.

You also remarked that Ruth Finnegan said that in African cultures they're not to be trusted.

Read again:

Quote:
The common assumption that "oral tradition" is something uniform, something that can be treated as an undifferentiated and self-evident entity, leads to the tendency of some historians and others to speak of "oral tradition" generally as a source, without apparently feeling the need - which would be obvious in the case of documentary sources - to describe and analyze the detailed source material.
The oral tradition needs to be described and analyzed as source material. Here, it is often rejected entirely as merely "tradition". You'll find now that Toto offers up a great strawman. Whoever said that all tradition must be accepted uncritically? No one. Is it reliable? Well, that depends.

If anyone followed that thread, when show_me_mercy asked me if I thought it was reliable, I asked him to clarify. It would not be reliable to reconstruct perfectly, i.e. all the oral tradition in the Gospels do not go back to Jesus. However, that doesn't mean that some doesn't.

Now, in light of the above, is it fair that tradition here is unquestionably thrown out? Or should it, as I have been advocating, critically examined first?
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Old 07-26-2007, 03:38 PM   #14
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Originally Posted by GenesisNemesis View Post
Anyone remember that game "Telephone"?
While the examples are humourous, they don't really reflect what goes on in an oral culture.
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Old 07-26-2007, 05:18 PM   #15
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Chris:

1. A statement by a researcher that oral testimony is not valid after 5 or 6 generations is not proof that oral testimony is valid up to 5 or 6 generations. So it is a waste of your time to try to calculate the number of generations between Jesus and the earliest Christian writings.

2. I am not saying that it is impossible for oral traditions to contain some fact. The question here is whether scholars regularly look to tradition - oral or written - for information. So far, you haven't provided me with anything that indicates scholars have some sort of method for extracting historical facts from tradition (other than finding some independent confirmation of the facts - in which case the tradition is superfluous.) Ruth Finnegan's article is full of examples where oral tradition is not in fact reliable, and examples where the tradition is in fact a reflection of the current conditions.

Can you provide a source for this assertion:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris Weimer
However, in as April DeConick's research points out, societies in which oral tradition is a dominating force provide points of accuracy far beyond that of a society which is decidedly literate.
All I can find is, on her blog, is this reference
Quote:
Originally Posted by April DeConick
As I continue to prepare my paper "Memory and the Sayings of Jesus: Contemporary Experimental Exercises in the Transmission of Jesus Traditions," I find myself drawn to all kinds of studies on orality and literacy.
But I don't see any indication that she has done research in the accuracy of oral tradition, or that she even has much of an interest in that topic. She says:
Quote:
Originally Posted by April DeConick
What our early Christian literature is, is literature produced within orality, often as a support for oral performance behaviors, including reading which was an oral-aural enterprise.
(Could she be referring to the gospels as Greco-Roman theater?)

Oral performance has its own rules, but preserving historical accuracy is usually not the aim, as opposed to connecting with the audience, entertaining them and providing moral instruction.
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Old 07-26-2007, 06:01 PM   #16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
1. A statement by a researcher that oral testimony is not valid after 5 or 6 generations is not proof that oral testimony is valid up to 5 or 6 generations. So it is a waste of your time to try to calculate the number of generations between Jesus and the earliest Christian writings.
Oh, and I suppose you have a better statement?

Quote:
2. I am not saying that it is impossible for oral traditions to contain some fact.
Then why are Christian traditions excluded from this?

Quote:
The question here is whether scholars regularly look to tradition - oral or written - for information.
I gave you Finnegan's article, the first couple pages of which contain many references. In particular: P. D. Curtin, "Field
Techniques for Collecting and Processing Oral Data," Journal of African History 9 (1968), 367-385.

Quote:
"Far from rejecting oral tradition, or any type of evidence, they point out that even the recognized forgery can sometimes be made to serve as indirect evidence. Oral tradition is therefore anything but a new source. Classicists have mined Homer for all manner of data, just as medievalists have used Beowulf or the Chanson de Roland-to say nothing of Froissart's Chronicles and much more.

The traditional canon of historical scholarship is clear and universally accepted in the profession: every relevant source must be taken into account, but no source is to be accepted uncritically...No source has to be used, but all must be examined to see whether they can yield evidence to help solve the problem at hand.
Quote:
So far, you haven't provided me with anything that indicates scholars have some sort of method for extracting historical facts from tradition (other than finding some independent confirmation of the facts - in which case the tradition is superfluous.) Ruth Finnegan's article is full of examples where oral tradition is not in fact reliable, and examples where the tradition is in fact a reflection of the current conditions.
You're right. I just gave you another paper on methodology, something which before you didn't ask for. But nevermind about shifting goalposts, you go ahead keep on asking me for research. I don't mind.

Quote:
Can you provide a source for this assertion:
You already found it. It was in that very blogpost you cited, Sweeney's book.

Quote:
Oral performance has its own rules, but preserving historical accuracy is usually not the aim, as opposed to connecting with the audience, entertaining them and providing moral instruction.
Actually, that was primary aim for most ancient literature. As I said somewhere else very, very recently, modern history is just that - modern!
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Old 07-26-2007, 07:28 PM   #17
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The goalposts are where they always have been: can you find a scholar who supports the idea of deriving historical fact directly from tradition?

You can send me Curtin's article if you think it supports that.
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Old 07-26-2007, 07:33 PM   #18
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Oh, hi! I already did that. You can have Curtin's article too.

PS - This interchange is turning me into a staunch advocate of "you must be within the guild" - scholars would never get any work done if they kept giving out free articles!
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Old 07-27-2007, 12:05 AM   #19
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
The goalposts are where they always have been: can you find a scholar who supports the idea of deriving historical fact directly from tradition?
This thread is a good example of why I dislike the use of the word 'tradition' (except for the handing down of manuscript texts) -- it's confusing you all. Try expressing your thoughts without using the word.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
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Old 07-27-2007, 12:34 AM   #20
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Moreover, I found a very solid reference stated explicitly:

David M. Pendergast, "The Historical Content of Oral Tradition: A Case from Belize," The Journal of American Folklore 101.401 (1988): 321-324.

Quote:
Ethnographic fieldwork carried out with Southern Paiute informants three decades ago provide support for the view that oral tradition could contain historical fact transmitted over very considerable period (Pendergast and Meighan 1959).
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