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Old 09-30-2013, 02:31 AM   #131
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How it got into the debris remains a mystery. But it was found in debris that had been undisturbed since the 3rd century with 100% probability.
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You claim is a fallacious. There is no known actual evidence to support 100% probability. There is no historical account of the actual seige and no actual written account that the debris was placed at the site 256 CE.
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This is simply nonsense. Why comment when you are totally ignorant of the facts and are not prepared find out how the secure dating was derived? Have you read the source texts?? Stop talking through your nether regions and find out how the site has been dated. That will involve going to a library and opening a book. You might, heaven forbid, have to buy a book.

Archaeology can be your friend when you understand its mechanisms.
What fallacies you post. Why are trying to cover the absurd claims of Toto?

You have no idea that the dates of the capture and final destruction of the city are PRESUMPTIONS.

You have NO idea that the Provenance was PRESUMED and DATING of the Fragment was IMPOSSIBLE by its script.

The very CARL H. KRAELING admitted the dates he PROVIDED are PRESUMPTIONS.

It is NOT possible to have 100% probability based on PRESUMPTIVE dates.

A GREEK FRAGMENT OF TATIAN'S DIATESSARON FROM DURA EDITED WITH FACSIMILE, TRANSCRIPTION, AND INTRODUCTION[/url] BY CARL H. KRAELING, PH.D Page 6

See http://archive.org/details/MN41439ucmf_4

Page 6
Quote:
The embankment along the city wall in which the parchment was found was constructed after 254 and before 256-257.

Of these dates the first is that of Dura Papyrus 90 which was buried under the glacis while the second in the presumptive date of the capture and final destruction of the city by Shapur I.
Please also read about the Provenance of Fragment 24.

The very CARL H. KRAELING admitted the Provenance was PRESUMED because he had NO way of telling where the fragment originated.

See http://archive.org/details/MN41439ucmf_4

Page 5
Quote:
Provenance: There is no way telling exactly where the roll to which our fragment once belonged was written. The natural presumption however, favours Mesopotamia....
Page 5
Quote:
Date: In attempting to date the fragment by its script the natural procedure would be to fall back upon the extensive body of evidence for the Greek and Latin paleography of Mesopotamia which Dura have produced. But this is unfortunately impossible...
It is virtually impossible to produce 100% probability from Presumptions and Guessing.
All this nonsense just shows that you actually haven't got a clue what you're talking about. You are certainly not dealing meaningfully with the Dura diatessaron. Talking about the glacis is fine for the dating of Dura Pap. 90, as an indicator for Pap. 24, but the latter was not found in the glacis, but under the embankment within the city wall. Why did you surreptitiously omit the fact that the date of the embankment under which the papyrus was found has a rather secure dating "after 254 and before 256-7" (p.6)? It's there in the source you are selectively quoting. By not quoting it you are doing yourself a severe injustice. How can anyone take you seriously when you blatantly manipulate the source material like that? You could not have missed it. In fact you've even cut and pasted it. The text cannot both be under the embankment and placed there after 257. It is inconsequential to this thread how long before that time the document was produced and palaeography is irrelevant here in ad quem dating. The most significant thing you have is the word "presumptive" and you ignore the rest, crapping on about 100% probability, because Toto mentioned the notion once and you cling to it like a pedantic blowfly on a prized dollop of faeces.

When you wake up from your daze and wipe the egg off your face, hopefully you'll regain some sense and stop talking nonsense. The topic is the ad quem dating of the Dura diatessaron which is supplied by the deposit under the embankment. All the rest is you wasting your breath.
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Old 09-30-2013, 06:58 AM   #132
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I would hope that that also means that you will have to factor in the frescoes from the "christian" building as well.
Yet another lone exemplar? No "christian" churches in Rome, Alexandria, Antioch, Athens, Caesarea. No "christian"church-houses in Rome, Alexandria, Antioch, Athens, Caesarea. But here we have way out at Dura, all dressed up like the "Shroud of Turin", a genuine and the lone exemplar "Christian House-Church".

Quote:
They include more recognized christian imagery with the healing of the paralytic and Jesus and Peter out on the sea of Galilee, as well as the tomb and the women. There's an inscription therein reading "X I [chi iota] is yours; remember Proklos" and a graffito, "X I remember the humble Siseos" and in the context of the frescoes it is very hard not to read "X I" as "Christ Jesus". There is no reason to ignore the christian content in the frescoes when there is sufficient indication of christian content in the Dura diatessaron.

Confirmation Bias

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Confirmation bias (also called confirmatory bias or myside bias) is a tendency of people to favor information that confirms their beliefs or hypotheses.[Note 1][1] People display this bias when they gather or remember information selectively, or when they interpret it in a biased way. The effect is stronger for emotionally charged issues and for deeply entrenched beliefs. They also tend to interpret ambiguous evidence as supporting their existing position. Biased search, interpretation and memory have been invoked to explain attitude polarization (when a disagreement becomes more extreme even though the different parties are exposed to the same evidence), belief perseverance (when beliefs persist after the evidence for them is shown to be false), the irrational primacy effect (a greater reliance on information encountered early in a series) and illusory correlation (when people falsely perceive an association between two events or situations).


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Originally Posted by spin
....it is very hard not to read "X I" as "Christ Jesus".....

But why don't we see it plastered all over the streets and graveyards of Rome and Alexandria and Antioch and everywhere all over the entire Roman empire. Why did it just happen to turn up here all the way out at Dura? What other secure "XI" inscriptions and/or graffiti exist any earlier that the mid 3rd century? Arguably zero.


LONE early EXEMPLAR: Dating method of an early "Christian Fragment" other than via palaeography. (i.e archaeological terminus ad quem)

LONE early EXEMPLAR: Mural of Jesus H Christ in person. (Guaranteed!)

LONE early EXEMPLAR: Mural of the Apostle Peter. (Bonus Guaranteed!)

LONE early EXEMPLAR: Mural of the Woman at the Tomb (Extra Bonus Guaranteed!)

LONE early EXEMPLAR: "X I" inscription

LONE early EXEMPLAR: "X I" graffiti




ONE LONE EXPLANATION: "This must be "christian" is a classic case of Confirmation Bias.


Alternative Explanation?

No we don't need any alternative explanations other than the one Yale Divinity College provides? How could there be any other reasonable explanation for all these events here at Dura? These paintings are too early to be about Homer, so its just got to be Jesus and .. and .... NO, it is not necessary to consider for one moment there may be alternative explanations for this evidence. And no, it's not just 99% certain, it is 100% certain.

Yale Divinity college are expert witnesses.

Therefore all this is 100% Christian.
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Old 09-30-2013, 07:54 AM   #133
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Revision of hypotheses ....

It is generally being presumed that the Dura Fragment 24 represents a harmony of the four gospels,
and that this harmony most likely has a Syriac source. For example see:

The Dura Parchment and the Diatessaron
Author(s): Jan Joosten
Source: Vigiliae Christianae, Vol. 57, No. 2 (May, 2003), pp. 159-175
Published by: BRILL
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1584632



However there is at least one other logical alternative to be considered, and I'd like to discuss it.

Namely that the four gospels are a four-fold expansion of an earlier and single Syriac source narrative
which appeared sometime before the mid 3rd century and employed nomina sacra and was focussed upon
an (historical?) figure (who was not the Gospel Jesus) and who is represented by the "IH" (IĒ, Iota Eta) code.

This figure behind the "IH" code is of course usually taken to be representing the first two letters of the name ΙΗσους = Jesus. But this may not necessarily be the case. We could be dealing with a single (Syriac) literary tradition which was later USED by those who fabricated the four (Greek) gospels.
The strange thing about this nomen sacrum is that there is no possible Syriac explanation for it. It presupposes a Greek tradition behind it (just as the other two do)....
The presence of Greek nomina sacra do not preclude an earlier Syriac original. For example one influential author of that epoch and that general area of the empire, who wrote voluminously in Syriac, and may have been immediately translated to Greek, is Bardaisan

Quote:
Bardaisan (Syriac: ܒܪ ܕܝܨܢ, Bardaiṣān), also Latinized as Bardesanes (154–222), was a Syrian gnostic[1] and founder of the Bardaisanites. A scientist, scholar, astrologer, philosopher and poet, Bardaisan was also renowned for his knowledge of India, on which he wrote a book, now lost. Bardaisan was born on 11 July 154, in Edessa, which, in those days, was alternately under the influence of the Roman and the Parthian Empire. Edessa was a metropolis of Osroene......
I know that later 4th century Coptic uses nomina sacra, and that a fair amount of Christian related manuscripts (all later than the 4th century) are also preserved in Syriac. But I don't know whether these Syriac manuscripts use Syriac nomina sacra, like the Coptic nomina sacra are in the Coptic manuscripts.
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Old 09-30-2013, 08:37 AM   #134
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It is virtually impossible to produce 100% probability from Presumptions and Guessing.
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All this nonsense just shows that you actually haven't got a clue what you're talking about. You are certainly not dealing meaningfully with the Dura diatessaron. Talking about the glacis is fine for the dating of Dura Pap. 90, as an indicator for Pap. 24, but the latter was not found in the glacis, but under the embankment within the city wall. Why did you surreptitiously omit the fact that the date of the embankment under which the papyrus was found has a rather secure dating "after 254 and before 256-7" (p.6)? It's there in the source you are selectively quoting. By not quoting it you are doing yourself a severe injustice. How can anyone take you seriously when you blatantly manipulate the source material like that? You could not have missed it. In fact you've even cut and pasted it. The text cannot both be under the embankment and placed there after 257. It is inconsequential to this thread how long before that time the document was produced and palaeography is irrelevant here in ad quem dating. The most significant thing you have is the word "presumptive" and you ignore the rest, crapping on about 100% probability, because Toto mentioned the notion once and you cling to it like a pedantic blowfly on a prized dollop of faeces.

When you wake up from your daze and wipe the egg off your face, hopefully you'll regain some sense and stop talking nonsense. The topic is the ad quem dating of the Dura diatessaron which is supplied by the deposit under the embankment. All the rest is you wasting your breath.
Again, you don't even understand what you are talking about.

I am quoting Carl H Kraeling's A GREEK FRAGMENT OF TATIAN'S DIATESSARON FROM DURA.

He is the one who admitted his presumptions.

See http://archive.org/details/MN41439ucmf_4
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Old 09-30-2013, 08:54 AM   #135
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I would hope that that also means that you will have to factor in the frescoes from the "christian" building as well.
Yet another lone exemplar? No "christian" churches in Rome, Alexandria, Antioch, Athens, Caesarea. No "christian"church-houses in Rome, Alexandria, Antioch, Athens, Caesarea. But here we have way out at Dura, all dressed up like the "Shroud of Turin", a genuine and the lone exemplar "Christian House-Church".
Not at all like the Shroud of Turin. The Shroud is an obvious fake, and is one of 40 similar fake burial cloths of Jesus, none of which have any chance of being earlier than the middle ages.

The house church at Dura was preserved only due to a unique set of circumstances.

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Confirmation Bias

...
Denialism
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Old 09-30-2013, 08:56 AM   #136
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...

I know that later 4th century Coptic uses nomina sacra, and that a fair amount of Christian related manuscripts (all later than the 4th century) are also preserved in Syriac. But I don't know whether these Syriac manuscripts use Syriac nomina sacra, like the Coptic nomina sacra are in the Coptic manuscripts.
You know that Coptic is written in a variation of the Greek alphabet?
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Old 09-30-2013, 09:32 AM   #137
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
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Originally Posted by spin View Post
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post

Revision of hypotheses ....

It is generally being presumed that the Dura Fragment 24 represents a harmony of the four gospels,
and that this harmony most likely has a Syriac source. For example see:

The Dura Parchment and the Diatessaron
Author(s): Jan Joosten
Source: Vigiliae Christianae, Vol. 57, No. 2 (May, 2003), pp. 159-175
Published by: BRILL
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1584632



However there is at least one other logical alternative to be considered, and I'd like to discuss it.

Namely that the four gospels are a four-fold expansion of an earlier and single Syriac source narrative
which appeared sometime before the mid 3rd century and employed nomina sacra and was focussed upon
an (historical?) figure (who was not the Gospel Jesus) and who is represented by the "IH" (IĒ, Iota Eta) code.

This figure behind the "IH" code is of course usually taken to be representing the first two letters of the name ΙΗσους = Jesus. But this may not necessarily be the case. We could be dealing with a single (Syriac) literary tradition which was later USED by those who fabricated the four (Greek) gospels.
The strange thing about this nomen sacrum is that there is no possible Syriac explanation for it. It presupposes a Greek tradition behind it (just as the other two do)....
The presence of Greek nomina sacra do not preclude an earlier Syriac original. For example one influential author of that epoch and that general area of the empire, who wrote voluminously in Syriac, and may have been immediately translated to Greek, is Bardaisan

Quote:
Bardaisan (Syriac: ܒܪ ܕܝܨܢ, Bardaiṣān), also Latinized as Bardesanes (154–222), was a Syrian gnostic[1] and founder of the Bardaisanites. A scientist, scholar, astrologer, philosopher and poet, Bardaisan was also renowned for his knowledge of India, on which he wrote a book, now lost. Bardaisan was born on 11 July 154, in Edessa, which, in those days, was alternately under the influence of the Roman and the Parthian Empire. Edessa was a metropolis of Osroene......
I know that later 4th century Coptic uses nomina sacra, and that a fair amount of Christian related manuscripts (all later than the 4th century) are also preserved in Syriac. But I don't know whether these Syriac manuscripts use Syriac nomina sacra, like the Coptic nomina sacra are in the Coptic manuscripts.
You shouldn't cut off significant information and trivialize the argument you are not understanding. Read it again:

[t2]It presupposes a Greek tradition behind it (just as the other two do), but although the Greek form Ιησους provides an obvious candidate to explain the iota-eta, you must provide a functional alternative that explains the iota-eta, which will be extremely hard if you presuppose a Syriac original without a clear Greek explanation.[/t2]

The Syriac doesn't get you to a iota-eta nomen sacrum. If you have no significant way of explaining its existence, you have no explanatory power and your quibbling is useless.
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Old 09-30-2013, 10:11 AM   #138
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I would hope that that also means that you will have to factor in the frescoes from the "christian" building as well.
Yet another lone exemplar? No "christian" churches in Rome, Alexandria, Antioch, Athens, Caesarea. No "christian"church-houses in Rome, Alexandria, Antioch, Athens, Caesarea. But here we have way out at Dura, all dressed up like the "Shroud of Turin", a genuine and the lone exemplar "Christian House-Church".
Actually not a lone exemplar. Both the diatessaron and the baptistry reflect a similar, if not the same, religion.

Bleeding about lone exemplars is merely saying that there is Intentional Design in the whims of what history leaves behind.

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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Quote:
They include more recognized christian imagery with the healing of the paralytic and Jesus and Peter out on the sea of Galilee, as well as the tomb and the women. There's an inscription therein reading "X I [chi iota] is yours; remember Proklos" and a graffito, "X I remember the humble Siseos" and in the context of the frescoes it is very hard not to read "X I" as "Christ Jesus". There is no reason to ignore the christian content in the frescoes when there is sufficient indication of christian content in the Dura diatessaron.
Confirmation Bias
All this means is that you have no response. You cannot accept what it looks like even in an iconic context that strongly points to the religion we know as christianity and that gave the diatessaron which has a nomen sacrum ΙΗ which supports the initial. Toto's reference to denialism is apt.

Edit to be clear: there is no Syriac source for the combination iota-eta in the nomen sacrum. It requires a Greek name such as Ιησους. Can you find even one alternative??? In fact a search of the LXX for words starting with Ιη, gave only one word (232 times). You cannot explain ΙΗ through Syriac and the only example that appears in the LXX is Ιησους. No-one else has a name starting with the same two letters.

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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
....it is very hard not to read "X I" as "Christ Jesus".....
But why don't we see it plastered all over the streets and graveyards of Rome and Alexandria and Antioch and everywhere all over the entire Roman empire.
You may as well try to tell me that Mithraism sprang fully formed from the end of the first century with the appearance of the first known mithreum in Caesarea Maritima. Arguments from silence require to proponent to say why the silence is significant.

Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Why did it just happen to turn up here all the way out at Dura? What other secure "XI" inscriptions and/or graffiti exist any earlier that the mid 3rd century? Arguably zero.


LONE early EXEMPLAR: Dating method of an early "Christian Fragment" other than via palaeography. (i.e archaeological terminus ad quem)

LONE early EXEMPLAR: Mural of Jesus H Christ in person. (Guaranteed!)

LONE early EXEMPLAR: Mural of the Apostle Peter. (Bonus Guaranteed!)

LONE early EXEMPLAR: Mural of the Woman at the Tomb (Extra Bonus Guaranteed!)

LONE early EXEMPLAR: "X I" inscription

LONE early EXEMPLAR: "X I" graffiti

ONE LONE EXPLANATION: "This must be "christian" is a classic case of Confirmation Bias.
This stuff is just filler.

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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Alternative Explanation?

No we don't need any alternative explanations other than the one Yale Divinity College provides? How could there be any other reasonable explanation for all these events here at Dura? These paintings are too early to be about Homer, so its just got to be Jesus and .. and .... NO, it is not necessary to consider for one moment there may be alternative explanations for this evidence. And no, it's not just 99% certain, it is 100% certain.

Yale Divinity college are expert witnesses.
It's funny that you should try to impugn the evidence because it was found by scholars, some of whom were funded by Yale Divinity College. This was a joint effort with the French Academy of Inscriptions and Belles-lettres. As a joint mission perhaps you might want to argue that the French who worked there at the same time as the Americans and who signed off on all things are also open to your attempt at ad hominem?

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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Therefore all this is 100% Christian.
So, we have a text from Dura Europos which evinces three nomina sacra for which you have no explanation for, but you deny that christianity with the same nomina sacra has anything to do with it. We have in a context of a) a paralytic being healed and carrying off his bed, b) two people walking on water (one the same who healed the paralytic), c) three women going to a tomb, d) a woman at a well, and e) the good shepherd, all of which are known from christianity (even though the good shepherd is known elsewhere but with the others adds to the christian ethos),.. in that context the initials Χ Ι with heavy religious significance, initials which you have no explanation for whatsoever, and you want us not to consider Christ Jesus as a reasonable expansion?

You have no explanations, no evidence, nothing to justify your denialism. There is no benefit for you position. It seems like the scene from Monty Python where John Cleese negates everything that is said to him for want of a cogent argument.
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Old 09-30-2013, 10:15 AM   #139
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It is virtually impossible to produce 100% probability from Presumptions and Guessing.
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Originally Posted by spin View Post
All this nonsense just shows that you actually haven't got a clue what you're talking about. You are certainly not dealing meaningfully with the Dura diatessaron. Talking about the glacis is fine for the dating of Dura Pap. 90, as an indicator for Pap. 24, but the latter was not found in the glacis, but under the embankment within the city wall. Why did you surreptitiously omit the fact that the date of the embankment under which the papyrus was found has a rather secure dating "after 254 and before 256-7" (p.6)? It's there in the source you are selectively quoting. By not quoting it you are doing yourself a severe injustice. How can anyone take you seriously when you blatantly manipulate the source material like that? You could not have missed it. In fact you've even cut and pasted it. The text cannot both be under the embankment and placed there after 257. It is inconsequential to this thread how long before that time the document was produced and palaeography is irrelevant here in ad quem dating. The most significant thing you have is the word "presumptive" and you ignore the rest, crapping on about 100% probability, because Toto mentioned the notion once and you cling to it like a pedantic blowfly on a prized dollop of faeces.

When you wake up from your daze and wipe the egg off your face, hopefully you'll regain some sense and stop talking nonsense. The topic is the ad quem dating of the Dura diatessaron which is supplied by the deposit under the embankment. All the rest is you wasting your breath.
Again, you don't even understand what you are talking about.

I am quoting Carl H Kraeling's A GREEK FRAGMENT OF TATIAN'S DIATESSARON FROM DURA.
You need to quote things for their relevance. You simply failed. To remind you yet again, the topic was an ad quem indication for the diatessaron. That's in the o.p. That's what is supplied by the dating of the embankment found in Kraeling's monograph. That's what you are supposed to be talking about. Not the rest of your nonsense.

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Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post
He is the one who admitted his presumptions.

See http://archive.org/details/MN41439ucmf_4
I'm glad you've discovered a source for the document. However, it is irrelevant to the o.p. where the document was produced, as is the palaeographic indication, given the archaeologically supplied terminus ad quem.
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Old 09-30-2013, 10:28 AM   #140
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This forum is so funny. It should be renamed 'Welcome to Reality for Conspiracy Theorists.' This is just ridiculous. I sometimes think these people who quibble with reality are apologists pretending to be 'mythicists' or whatever else they claim to be. I can't believe there are people who aren't totally embarrassed by making an ass of themselves over and over again.
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