FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Philosophy & Religious Studies > History of Abrahamic Religions & Related Texts
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 01:23 AM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 03-30-2013, 07:16 AM   #331
Talk Freethought Staff
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Heart of the Bible Belt
Posts: 5,807
Default

.

Please continue this discussion (as you have for several days since that time) without bringing moderator activities into the topic.
Atheos is offline  
Old 03-30-2013, 07:41 AM   #332
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 3,058
Default

Quote:
You have a conveniently bad memory.

I have agreed for the sake of the OP that Christians wrote Matthew in the 1st century.
Yes, you have. But the only reason you have for doing so is to exclude data that counts against your subversion thesis. If you don't take this position (quite counter to everything you've been about the date of the origin of Christianty and Christian writings) , then you have to admit that your thesis is wrong since there is pre 4th century evidence from "pagan writers" which shows that they used δαίμων to mean "evil spirit". It's an example of having your cake and eating it too.

And do you not recognize that it commits you to saying that all post 1st century writers who used δαίμων to mean evil spirit, like Philostratus and Pausanius ( Graeciae descriptio Book 6, chapter 6, section 11) knew and read the NT. Where else did they get the idea that δαίμων meant evil spirit if not from there? Are you willing to agree to that as well?




Quote:
Quote:
You have failed to provide such an instance.
This suggests you cant provide one.
Quote:
I have provided at least one -- in Philostratus.
Quote:
Who wrote in the 3rd century, and about whom I have already corresponded [sic ??, corresponded with whom?]
And misread.

Quote:
but we can return to Philostratus again after the pre-Christian (traditionally 1st century) instances are examined.
Quote:
Quote:
And there's Aristophanes Eq.112.
Well I guess we're just going to have a look at your claims one by one.
Quote:
Quote:
There's also Homer Odyssey 10.64 (τίς τοι κακὸς ἔχραε δαίμων) where, as you've probably not noted, especially if you've read, as you must, the Odyssey in English, the δαίμων spoken of is described as evil,
But is not the "daimon" here expressly made evil by the term κακὸς ?
Made or described for what it was known to be? In any case, it's testimony that non/pre Christian Greeks knew that a δαίμων could be (and was) an evil Spirit. And that is what is at issue.




Quote:
Quote:
and, as LSJ notes, Josephus AJ 8.2.5
Josephus is late 1st century,
So what? So is Matthew. Are you saying that Josephus read Matthew? Did his readers? If not, and if Josephus knew (how could he?), as he must if δαίμων was something that only Christians knew to mean "evil spirit", that his readers would not comprehend or know what he was saying or thinking a δαίμων was in this passage, why would he have used δαίμων and not some other word?

Quote:
Quote:
Alexander Aphr. Pr.2.46;



Alexander of Aphrodisias? If so, late 2nd early 3rd century can wait.
Why? Are you saying that Alexander has read Christian literature or knows of the way Christians used δαίμων? And if he was unaware that δαίμων was used with a meaning other than what he thought it meant, wouldn't what was said in Matthew have been incomprehensible to him?

Quote:
Quote:
Aretaeus. SD (Concerning Epilepsy) 1.4 -- a text in which Aretaeus is directly commenting upon our passage in Hippocretes' "Sacred Disease" and in which he not only speaks of the known practice of expelling of evil spirits, but uses the exorcism terminology that the NT uses when Jesus expels demons to do so (πρᾶξις ἐκβάλλουσα δαίμονας,
We have already seen that in the Hippocrates instance the "daimon" is not itself evil.
We have seen no such thing. In fact just the opposite. And in any case, the issue is what Aretaeus thinks.


Quote:

Quote:
and in PMag.Par (= Greek Magical Papyri =C. Wessely, Wiener Denkschr. xxxvi (2) (1888) pp. 44–126, pp. 139–148; partly in A. Dieterich, Eine Mithrasliturgie, Leipzig 1903, pp. 1ff., and A. Deissmann, Light from the Ancient East, London 1919, pp. 258 ff) 1227 among others.
Isn't this after the 1st century?

If so, it can wait with the other later instances.
Quote:
Matthew does not appear to have many earlier precedents if any.
Leaving aside the fact that these are not all instances to be adduced, all we need is one to show that your claim is bogus.

OK. I'm done with this. I refuse to deal any longer with someone who not only shifts his claims about the date of the origin of Christian literature in order to exclude data that would show other claims he makes about Christianity are not true, but who continues to misread and misrepresent the evidence presented to him against these claims.

In any case, it's tine for you to put up or shut up, Pete. Write up your claim about the meaning of δαίμων in pre Christian literature and how it was "subverted" by Christians and send it to the Classics List to see what those who read Greek and who know the literature think of your claim, not to mention your exclusion of the use of cognates of δαίμων and adjectivised uses of the term as illegitimate for determining what non/pre Christian writers thought δαίμων meant.


Here's the address: CLASSICS-L@LSV.UKY.EDU

Or if that's too much for you at the moment, write up an argument that δαίμων does not mean evil spirit in Philostratus Life 4, and send that in for review

Jeffrey
Jeffrey Gibson is offline  
Old 03-30-2013, 11:24 AM   #333
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: seattle, wa
Posts: 9,337
Default

yes the "for the sake of the OP" argument is a complete cop out Pete. You add all the other evidence you evade for your 4th century conspiracy theory and it comes to either

1. conceding this debate Jeffrey or
2. giving up on your whole conspiracy theory

Since I know you will never admit to 2 let's have you concede and move on. You can't use this line of argument any more
stephan huller is offline  
Old 03-31-2013, 05:34 PM   #334
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeffrey Gibson View Post
Quote:
You have a conveniently bad memory.

I have agreed for the sake of the OP that Christians wrote Matthew in the 1st century.
Yes, you have. But the only reason you have for doing so is to exclude data that counts against your subversion thesis.
Just a minute. On at least one, and possibly a few occasions in this thread, I have stated that I am not excluding the data from the 1st, 2nd and 3rd centiuries, but relegating the examination of that data to a second phase study.


Quote:
If you don't take this position (quite counter to everything you've been about the date of the origin of Christianty and Christian writings) , then you have to admit that your thesis is wrong since there is pre 4th century evidence from "pagan writers" which shows that they used δαίμων to mean "evil spirit". It's an example of having your cake and eating it too.

But is there such evidence as you assert? You have furnished a good number of instances which turned out to be instances of "daimonion" and not "daimon" and thus not relevant to the specific nature of the OP. In other instances, I have responded that the translator of the Greek could just as easily have rendered the term "daimon" by the term "spirit" rather than "demon".


Quote:
And do you not recognize that it commits you to saying that all post 1st century writers who used δαίμων to mean evil spirit, like Philostratus and Pausanius ( Graeciae descriptio Book 6, chapter 6, section 11) knew and read the NT. Where else did they get the idea that δαίμων meant evil spirit if not from there? Are you willing to agree to that as well?
But is there such evidence as you assert?

I would like to see this evidence and evaluate it independently.

Let's look at the Pausanius instance, since I have already made a response to the Philostratus instance in another thread.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Pausanius ( Graeciae descriptio Book 6, chapter 6, section 11)

[6.6.7] On his return to Italy Euthymus fought against the Hero, the story about whom is as follows. Odysseus, so they say, in his wanderings after the capture of Troy was carried down by gales to various cities of Italy and Sicily, and among them he came with his ships to Temesa. Here one of his sailors got drunk and violated a maiden, for which offence he was stoned to death by the natives.

[6.6.8] Now Odysseus, it is said, cared nothing about his loss and sailed away. But the ghost of the stoned man never ceased killing without distinction the people of Temesa, attacking both old and young, until, when the inhabitants had resolved to flee from Italy for good, the Pythian priestess forbad them to leave Temesa, and ordered them to propitiate the Hero, setting him a sanctuary apart and building a temple, and to give him every year as wife the fairest maiden in Temesa.

[6.6.9] So they performed the commands of the god and suffered no more terrors from the ghost. But Euthymus happened to come to Temesa just at the time when the ghost was being propitiated in the usual way; learning what was going on he had a strong desire to enter the temple, and not only to enter it but also to look at the maiden. When he saw her he first felt pity and afterwards love for her. The girl swore to marry him if he saved her, and so Euthymus with his armour on awaited the onslaught of the ghost.

[6.6.10] He won the fight, and the Hero was driven out of the land and disappeared, sinking into the depth of the sea. Euthymus had a distinguished wedding, and the inhabitants were freed from the ghost for ever. I heard another story also about Euthymus, how that he reached extreme old age, and escaping again from death departed from among men in another way. Temesa is still inhabited, as I heard from a man who sailed there as a merchant.

[6.6.11] This I heard, and I also saw by chance a picture dealing with the subject. It was a copy of an ancient picture. There were a stripling, Sybaris, a river, Calabrus, and a spring, Lyca. Besides, there were a hero-shrine and the city of Temesa, and in the midst was the ghost that Euthymus cast out. Horribly black in color, and exceedingly dreadful in all his appearance, he had a wolf's skin thrown round him as a garment. The letters on the picture gave his name as Lycas.

The translator here has opted for "ghost" and not "evil demon".

Quote:
Originally Posted by Lexicon
II. δαίμονες, οἱ, souls of men of the golden age, acting as tutelary deities, Hes.Op. 122, Thgn.1348, Phoc.15, Emp.115.5, etc.; “θεῶν, δ., ἡρώων, τῶν ἐν Ἅιδου” Pl.R.392a: less freq. in sg., “δαίμονι δ᾽ οἷος ἔησθα τὸ ἐργάζεσθαι ἄμεινον” Hes.Op.314; τὸν τὲ δ. Δαρεῖον ἀγκαλεῖσθε, of the deified Darius, A.Pers.620; νῦν δ᾽ ἐστὶ μάκαιρα δ., of Alcestis, E.Alc.1003 (lyr.), cf.IG12(5).305.5 (Paros): later, of departed souls, Luc.Luct.24; δαίμοσιν εὐσεβέσιν, = Dis Manibus, IG14.1683; so θεοὶ δ., ib.938, al.: also, ghost, Paus.6.6.8.
Pausanius refers to this "ghost" but also describes it as the "Hero". The story is that one of Odysseus' sailor's violated a maiden and was stoned to death by the locals. The Hero's ghost as a result in this story, gets stuck into the locals. The oracle commands them to propitiate the Hero but as they are engaged in this, along comes the boxer Euthymus in shining armour and wins the day against the "ghost".

The ghost is not made explicit as an "evil demon". It was supposed to be the ghost of a Hero who sailed with Odysseus, who was stoned to death and somehow started to take revenge. The Pythian priestess ordered them to propitiate the Hero, setting him a sanctuary apart and building a temple, and to give him every year as wife the fairest maiden in Temesa. Is the Pythian priestess therefore "evil" because of these commands involving "the fairest maidens" in town each year?

Therefore I don't see how this instance in Pausanius may be classified into the same category as Matthew's instance, where no such background data or story is provided for the "daimon".










Quote:
Quote:
Matthew does not appear to have many earlier precedents if any.
Leaving aside the fact that these are not all instances to be adduced, all we need is one to show that your claim is bogus.

OK. I'm done with this. I refuse to deal any longer with someone who not only shifts his claims about the date of the origin of Christian literature in order to exclude data that would show other claims he makes about Christianity are not true, but who continues to misread and misrepresent the evidence presented to him against these claims.

I reject your notion that I am excluding data.

I have followed up most of the citations you have provided, one by one, only to find that they are not as unambiguous as you would have me believe. The Pausanius "ghost" instance above is a typical example.


Quote:

.... write up an argument that δαίμων does not mean evil spirit in Philostratus Life 4, and send that in for review.
I have already responded to this in another thread as follows:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Philostratus' "Life of ASpollonius of Tyana" c.220 CE


[§10] With such harangues as these he knit together the people of Smyrna; but when the plague began to rage in Ephesus, and no remedy sufficed to check it, they sent a deputation to Apollonius, asking him to become physician of their infirmity; and he thought that he ought not to postpone his journey, but said: "Let us go."

And forthwith he was in Ephesus, performing the same feat, I believe, as Pythagoras, who was in Thurii and Metapontum at one and the same moment. He therefore called together the Ephesians, and said: "Take courage, for I will today put a stop to the course of the disease."


And with these words he led the population entire to the the theater, where the image of the Averting god has been set up.[2] And there he saw what seemed an old mendicant artfully blinking his eyes as if blind, as he carried a wallet and a crust of bread in it; and he was clad in rags and was very squalid of countenance. Apollonius therefore ranged the Ephesians around him and said: "Pick up as many stones as you can and hurl them at this enemy of the gods."

Now the Ephesians wondered what he meant, and were shocked at the idea of murdering a stranger so manifestly miserable; for he was begging and praying them to take mercy upon him. Nevertheless Apollonius insisted and egged on the Ephesians to launch themselves on him and not let him go. And as soon as some of them began to take shots and hit him with their stones, the beggar who had seemed to blink and be blind, gave them all a sudden glance and his eyes were full of fire. Then the Ephesians recognized that he was a demon spirit, and they stoned him so thoroughly that their stones were heaped into a great cairn around him.

After a little pause Apollonius bade them remove the stones and acquaint themselves with the wild animal they had slain. When therefore they had exposed the object which they thought they had thrown their missiles at, they found that he had disappeared and instead of him there was a hound who resembled in form and look a Molossian dog, but was in size the equal of the largest lion; there he lay before their eyes, pounded to a pulp by their stones and vomiting foam as mad dogs do. Accordingly the statue of the Averting god, Heracles, has been set up over the spot where the ghost was slain.

This is translated from the Greek to English by F.C. Conybeare. I am assuming the original Greek word translated as "demon" was "daimon". But how do we know that Philostratus, if he had been standing by Conybeare and had known English, would have translated "daimon" as "demon" and not for example a "spirit" or a "semi-divine being inferior to the Gods". Do you understand my point with this question?

It was Coneybeare who rendered this equivalence, and not necessarily Philostratus.

You have not made any substantive response to this argument.






εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia
mountainman is offline  
Old 03-31-2013, 05:59 PM   #335
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by stephan huller View Post
Pete,

You can't just switch your dating of the gospel 'for the sake of the OP.' What kind of nonsense is this?

The OP is not necessarily about the dating of Matthew. It is about another issue. Namely whether Matthew has in fact subverted the meaning of the Greek "daimon" [δαίμων] in his Gospel, and who followed suit in the Gospels of Mark and Luke - perhaps in the 5th century, or at least somewhere between Matthew's authorship date (whenever that may have been) and the assembly of the Greek Textus Receptus.


Quote:
The fact that you make claims like this about a particular word and then switch the dates of the gospel just to save your thesis can hardly be said to be 'because of the OP.' You are doing this to save your argument which is not the same thing.

The real argument in the OP in case you have not surmised it, is the investigation and examination of all instances of use for the Greek term "daimon" [δαίμων]. I stated a number of times I would deal with the BCE instances first, and then move on to the CE instances, which I am now proceeding to do.

See the above post for Pausanius and Philostratus.

If you disagree with my assessments of the textual evidence feel free to speak up.





εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia
mountainman is offline  
Old 03-31-2013, 06:02 PM   #336
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Then the Ephesians recognized that he was a demon spirit, and they stoned him so thoroughly that their stones were heaped into a great cairn around him.
This correction is understandable by you, because of your commitments.

:realitycheck:

But it was the recognition that he was a demon that caused the Ephesians to stone him. The implication is clear that the use of demon is intended here. It wasn't just a (neutral) spirit, but something perceived to be a malevolent being, thus deserving to be stoned. We usually use demon. That's what the text signifies.

:tombstone:
spin is offline  
Old 03-31-2013, 06:38 PM   #337
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Then the Ephesians recognized that he was a demon spirit, and they stoned him so thoroughly that their stones were heaped into a great cairn around him.

This correction is understandable by you, because of your commitments.

But it was the recognition that he was a demon that caused the Ephesians to stone him.
This is false. To the Ephesians at first he appeared to be harmless. The storyline is that only Apollonius recognised the "daimon" as such. It is to be assumed that Apollonius (as a master physician) had identified this "daimon" as the cause of the sickness in the city. Apollonius had to literally coerce the Ephesians to commence the stoning. At this stage the storyline is that the "daimon" gave them all a sudden glance and his eyes were full of fire.

It was only at this point that the Ephesians recognised him to be a "daimon". Before that they didn't have a clue.


Quote:
Originally Posted by CONTEXT

Now the Ephesians wondered what he meant, and were shocked at the idea of murdering a stranger so manifestly miserable; for he was begging and praying them to take mercy upon him. Nevertheless Apollonius insisted and egged on the Ephesians to launch themselves on him and not let him go. And as soon as some of them began to take shots and hit him with their stones, the beggar who had seemed to blink and be blind, gave them all a sudden glance and his eyes were full of fire. Then the Ephesians recognized that he was a demon spirit, and they stoned him so thoroughly that their stones were heaped into a great cairn around him

Quote:
The implication is clear that the use of demon is intended here. It wasn't just a (neutral) spirit, but something perceived to be a malevolent being, thus deserving to be stoned. We usually use demon.

We do now. The question is when did this (usual) practice commence.

So far it looks like a traditionally dated Matthew.


Quote:
That's what the text signifies.

Before this implication is accepted, it is necessary and useful to see how Philostratus uses the term elsewhere in the same work, a fact mentioned above somewhere.






εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia
mountainman is offline  
Old 03-31-2013, 07:37 PM   #338
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Then the Ephesians recognized that he was a demon spirit, and they stoned him so thoroughly that their stones were heaped into a great cairn around him.
This correction is understandable by you, because of your commitments.

But it was the recognition that he was a demon that caused the Ephesians to stone him.
This is false. To the Ephesians at first he appeared to be harmless. The storyline is that only Apollonius recognised the "daimon" as such. It is to be assumed that Apollonius (as a master physician) had identified this "daimon" as the cause of the sickness in the city. Apollonius had to literally coerce the Ephesians to commence the stoning. At this stage the storyline is that the "daimon" gave them all a sudden glance and his eyes were full of fire.

It was only at this point that the Ephesians recognised him to be a "daimon". Before that they didn't have a clue.
Going back to what I posted earlier and adding in the useless clarification that you've just been through.

(After Apollonius's insistence) it was the recognition that he was a demon that caused the Ephesians to stone him properly. The recognition that he was a demon caused them not to throw a few stones, as they had before they recognized the demon, but to turn him into a cairn, through pelting him with so many stones.

Christ, given that you've posted it at least twice, you should actually read it. You've vaguely noted the immediate prior sentence:

And as soon as some of them began to take shots and hit him with their stones, the beggar who had seemed to blink and be blind, gave them all a sudden glance and his eyes were full of fire.

That's what caused them to see that he was a demon. When the Ephesians saw the sudden glance and eyes full of fire from the blind man they knew he was something worthy of being stoned. That recognition of being a demon caused him to do a serious job of stoning him. Until that recognition, they were half-hearted, needing coercing. The text cannot be plainer.

The only problem you have here with this being seriously stoned is that you've been bogarting that joint.

Your attempt to assert the falsity of my comment was a failure.
spin is offline  
Old 03-31-2013, 08:03 PM   #339
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post

And as soon as some of them began to take shots and hit him with their stones, the beggar who had seemed to blink and be blind, gave them all a sudden glance and his eyes were full of fire.

That's what caused them to see that he was a demon. When the Ephesians saw the sudden glance and eyes full of fire from the blind man they knew he was something worthy of being stoned. That recognition of being a demon caused him to do a serious job of stoning him.

So next time I see someone giving me a sudden glance with eyes full of fire I will be absolutely sure that I am in the presence, not of a spirit, but a demon. I see. Did you gain such confidence in classifying spirits and spooks and demons in the field? Perhaps some work experience with Ghostbusters?


What of the other references?





εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia
mountainman is offline  
Old 03-31-2013, 08:16 PM   #340
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post

And as soon as some of them began to take shots and hit him with their stones, the beggar who had seemed to blink and be blind, gave them all a sudden glance and his eyes were full of fire.

That's what caused them to see that he was a demon. When the Ephesians saw the sudden glance and eyes full of fire from the blind man they knew he was something worthy of being stoned. That recognition of being a demon caused him to do a serious job of stoning him.
So next time I see someone giving me a sudden glance with eyes full of fire I will be absolutely sure that I am in the presence, not of a spirit, but a demon.
So the next time you see someone who you had believed to be blind giving you a sudden glance with eyes full of fire, you might act like an ignorant Ephesian.

But, back to the text, it makes the recognition that he was a demon to be the cause of them stoning him properly, ie being a demon was the cause of the serious job of stoning, indicating that being a demon in this case was sufficient to cause what happened, ie he deserved to be stoned and was thus bad. Being a demon here is bad.
spin is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 11:52 AM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.