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10-01-2013, 10:37 AM | #181 | |||
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10-01-2013, 02:48 PM | #182 | |
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Any dates on those documents? I can envision at least five large scale military campaigns undertaken in Eastern Syria, after Julian, and before Timur the lame. Any one of those could have involved encampment at the former Roman Fortress, with rapid erection of a protective wall, using the rubble from the previous wall. Why would an army of a few hundred seek to construct a wall to protect themselves from the Western border? I suspect you know the answer. I don't deny that it is possible that the wall was left undisturbed for 15 centuries, I just don't find it plausible, given the ferocity of attack by Mongols, Turks, Egyptians, and Romans, among others, invading Eastern Syria, seeking control of the Euphrates, during those fifteen centuries. Any geological evidence found in those "mud bricks" at the top of the wall? I would have thought, probably incorrectly, that the Roman Legionaires defending Dura Europos, would have ordered the townspeople to create a supply of bricks to be used on constructing a proper defensive fortification, long before the ultimate attack. Such bricks would have been properly BAKED, not mud. Mud bricks sounds to me, like a hasty afterthought, as would have been appropriate for an invading army, seeking refuge from arrows directed toward the men, gathered around the campfires. I think it highly improbable that Dura Europos' strategic location on the bluff above the river, would have gone unnoticed by fifteen centuries of invading armies. Sam |
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10-01-2013, 03:09 PM | #183 |
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Oh God. This insufferable. Four people with cognitive difficulties can hardly be thought to represent a consensus
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10-01-2013, 04:57 PM | #184 | |||||
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It was absurd to claim 100% probabilty that the Dura fragment was not composed after c 256-257 CE Now, you claim that 14000 coins were found at Dura. You forgot to mention the actual condition of the coins. You very well know that it is NOT the quantity of coins that are found but the quality--it is the condition of the coins that really matters. See http://ddc.aub.edu.lb/projects/archa...ytus08/17.html Michael I. Rostovtzeff: Res Gestae Divi Saporis and Dura Quote:
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10-01-2013, 05:26 PM | #185 | ||||||||
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Carl Herman Kraeling (1897–1966), theologian, historian, and an American archaeologist, earned his B.D. from the Lutheran Theological Seminary in Philadelphia in 1926 and taught New Testament Studies at the Yale University. I don't think Kraeling is going to pass any "overriding bias test". Quote:
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He did not witness the fragment being unearthed. His wife (or someone else) "found it in a basket". Quote:
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These circumstances of the fragment being found "in a basket of finds from the excavation of the embankment" is a type of hearsay , and it must reduce the certainty of any terminus ad quem by some margin from the 100% as ascribed by Kraeling. Would a 90% security for the terminus ad quem date of the Dura Fragment 24 be some form of "middle ground"? Or are these 100% certainty rednecks unwilling to consider any other alternative possibilities? |
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10-01-2013, 05:52 PM | #186 | |
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Syriac nomina sacra
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The Coptic material preserves the Coptic version of the Greek nomina sacra. The question is does the Syriac do the same. After reading through that thread I cant see a final answer was provided. I don't know the answer(s) to this question. OVER |
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10-01-2013, 05:54 PM | #187 |
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Heaven forbid he taught "New Testament studies." Next you'll be telling me about a doctor studying at medical school! We don't want that.
I think you have declared all out war on reality. |
10-01-2013, 05:56 PM | #188 |
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I think you want to get rid of anyone who knows how stupid what you are suggesting really is. The leaves you with aa, duvduv, and watersbreak/avi. At last, a gathering of wisemen!
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10-01-2013, 06:17 PM | #189 | |||||||
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the justification is trivial: Hypothetical Syriac One Gospel Original 1: Someone invents One Gospel in Syriac. 2: Someone invents a Greek translation. 3: Someone invents the Greek nomina sacra. 4: The Dura Parchment 24 is copied from 3 5: Someone invents the Four Gospels For the record, AFAIK at the moment the process is thought to be as follows: Hypothetical Greek Four Gospel Original 1: Someone invents Four Gospels in Greek. 2. Someone invents the Greek nomina sacra. 3. Someone harmonizes the Four to One. 4: The Dura Parchment 24 is copied from 3 FWIW my working hypothesis is that we are dealing with a 90% probability that the Dura Parchment 24 is dated prior to the mid 3rd century. Quote:
90% is my final offer spin. As you know I have moved from somewhere below 50% to this present admission of 90%. That's quite a change of position for me and I have thanked everyone. I think its time for you and a few other people to get down off that 100% pie-in-the-sky ivory tower you're all sitting on. In the business of ancient history NOTHING IS CERTAIN. |
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10-01-2013, 06:30 PM | #190 | ||
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No I don't. The earliest extant manuscript evidence is encrypted. The "sacred names" have been universally suppressed via codification. Even by the heretics! |
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