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11-08-2011, 07:46 AM | #21 | ||
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One of my favorites is the conclusion that Jesus must have worked in Sepphoris, and even had a hand building the theater of Sepphoris. The only problem is, the city of Sepphoris does not exist in the world of the New Testament. Rather than speculating that Jesus worked in Sepphoris, the lack of mention of such an important cosmopolitan city (on the doorstep of the oft mentioned but very doubtful town of Nazareth) destroys the geographical pretense of the gospels. |
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11-08-2011, 07:50 AM | #22 | ||||
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The Surgeon's Photo and the First Gospel
Hi Pete,
According toTony Harmsworth in "Loch Ness, Nessie, and Me" Quote:
It was only in 1933 with this single sighting that the legend of the Monster really started. From wikipedi, Loch Ness Monster: Quote:
Thus we have reports of Big Fish, then a report of a monster, a duped photo and the Legend of Nessie is born. Afterwards, we have the historical explanations or postulates developed. If we are looking for analogies, I think we can compare the first gospel, whatever form it took, to the Surgeon's Photo Hoax as the triggering mechanism for the legend and subsequent historical explanations of Jesus. Warmly, Jay Raskin Quote:
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11-09-2011, 06:25 PM | #23 |
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Why the dichotomy? Why does it have to be Nessie OR Jesus? Why not have BOTH?
How do we know that Jesus really went up into the sky? Maybe he actually went to Loch Ness, and has been underwater ever since. Maybe Jesus actually IS the Loch Ness Monster. Like Clark Kent and Superman -- nobody has ever seen the two of them together. |
11-09-2011, 09:43 PM | #24 | |||||
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Hi Philosopher Jay,
If we are looking for analogies, and can compare the first gospel, whatever form it took, to the Surgeon's Photo Hoax as the triggering mechanism for the legend and subsequent historical explanations of Jesus, then we perhaps should also look analogously for the presence of evidence of disbelieving heretics who refused to confess that the Surgeon's Photo Hoax was legitimate forerunner to the Loch Ness Monster. I also think ahdenai made a relevant point above which might send the analogy back to the drawing board. Best wishes Pete Quote:
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11-13-2011, 07:19 PM | #25 | |
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Hi Pete, et al.
I found this rather interesting article from 1987 by Henry H. Bauer on Nessie He points out that Nessie has become both the prototype and stereotype for aquatic sea monsters. I think that Jesus of Nazareth has in a similar way become the prototype and stereotype of Holy Men/Prophets. The article points out that nearly all books published between 1933 and 1988 on the subject accepted the existence of the monster. Newspapers and magazines, even scientific magazines, were much more divided on their opinion. I did an article on my blog about this, more or less summarizing points from this thread. Here's a recent article, this week, on the Canadian Nessie Quote:
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11-13-2011, 08:41 PM | #26 | |
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Continuing in that vein of honesty, we should say that until that day arrives, HJ is just as far fetched as Nessie, and for some of the same reasons. We would expect a breeding population of animals the size of Nessie to leave contemporary evidence of their existence, relics like carcasses, bones, scat, teeth, remains of their prey. We don't find these expected things. Just like HJ. We don't see a Nessie-shaped hole in the ecology of the lake. Fish populations don't rise as Nessie-sightings go down. In other words, there is no need for the hypothesis in the first place. Just like HJ. Loch Ness doesn't have enough of a prey population to sustain a population of large predators like Nessie, so the very concept of such an animal living there doesn't make a lot of sense considering its proposed environment. Much the same way that that there are problems for any of the proposed HJ scenarios - they don't make a lot of sense considering the area at the time. Nessie is just one of a string of fabulous mythic creatures whose legend was started locally and then spread far and wide, like the yeti, or bigfoot. Keeping the legend alive is a lucrative past time, despite the fact that these creatures should properly be viewed as non existent. Just like the 10,000 gods which preceded Jesus Christ, there are a lot of people in this world whose self-identity if not their income depend on the historicity of the HJ. Finally, another aspect that Nessie and the HJ have in common is that the harder one looks for them, the less of them one is able to find. Ask a zoologist if Nessie should be considered as an existent creature, and you will get a one-word reply: "No". Curiously, you won't get the same reply form a historian re HJ. |
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11-16-2011, 07:42 PM | #27 | ||
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The paradox might have something to do with conceptual frameworks. Zoologists sometimes stumble over unclassifiable creatures for example. As to what unclassifiable creatures historians of antiquity may have stumbled over is anyone's guess. A thorough investigation of the evidence is probably long overdue. The parallels between Big N and Big J are monstrous! |
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11-16-2011, 11:24 PM | #28 | ||
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Let me explain: In late April of 2002 we stayed at a resort overlooking Loch Ard. The atmospherics were splendid. Occasionally the opposite bank could be seen, and the island in the middle of the loch. Mostly however, there was a grey mist which uncannily matched the grey water thus rendering a seemless vista from the near bank to eternity. Out of the grey uniformity one could periodically detect darker 'images' - typically of the semi-circular series of hoops beloved of 'Nessie' spotters. They appeared from the gloom, progressed some way across the loch and disappeared again. On the first day I was greatly intrigued and observed them closely. After repeated performances on that and subsequent days it became a mere amusement. I used to lol about, after a hard days touristing, single malt in hand, admiring these standing waves on the surface of the loch. Their darkened hoops resulting from the shadow of the upper crest against the solid grey background. Their ephemeral nature due to the vagaries of the mist as it wafted gently from the surface. To a physicist all this was obvious. However, I was certainly impressed by how 'realistic' it might appear to more gullible souls! As to JC, I await the results of a knowledgeable Bayesian analysis.:constern01: |
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11-17-2011, 08:28 AM | #29 | |||
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Hi Youngalexander,
Thanks for this eyewitness account. There are many gestalt psychological experiments showing how our desire for simplicity and clarity often leads us into perceptual mistakes, for example seeing a face in shadows from a picture of Mars. In the case of Loch Ness, it all is amusing and quite a lot of fun. It would be nice if the case of Jesus the Christ was the same. Unfortunately in the case of Jesus, [as Zaphod alluded to] major institutions providing millions of people with jobs around the world are involved. This adds a great deal of gravity to the case, which it otherwise would not possess. Warmly, Jay Raskin Quote:
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11-17-2011, 08:51 AM | #30 | ||
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The key words here are: "observed distribution". Bayes' theorem can't manufacture data. It rather, depends upon the data out there. No amount of Bayes' manipulations, can change the content of Codex Sinaiticus. |
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