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Old 08-17-2013, 04:01 PM   #81
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actually there is some archaeological evidence pro Nazareth in Jesus time.
such as ??

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And of course why the Christian sources can be accepted in some aspects, in spite of the fact that the criterions of authenticity are not perfect
in what aspects??

what do you mean by "criterion of authenticity"?? with respect to what, exactly??
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Old 08-17-2013, 04:18 PM   #82
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Most New Testament studies involves textual analysis, and mythicism would not change much there. The study of Christian origins would still be a field of study, and since most scholars seem to think that Jesus did not start a church, very little would change.

I don't see the political revolution you are talking about. A handful of scholars would have to revise their work.
Well I think it's a huge difference between saying that Christianity appeared in a specific judaic context in the 1st century (very probable apocalypticism and the belief that Jesus was raised from the dead is the main cause) and the version involving strong syncretism, euhemerization, the idea of a dying messiah pre date the beginning of the 1st century and so on. It's one to say that in the 2nd and 3rd centuries Jesus was depicted as osiris, adonis (the hellenization of Christianity) and totally another to claim that the dying and raising gods are the models for Jesus.

It's one to say that the New Testament Studies remained without a valid methodology and totally another things to accept that the conjunction of more criterions of authenticity can nonetheless give us strong heuristics (happily the situation is not so bad as some claim).

It does not seem to me that the changes will be trivial, even in textual criticism there are enough many claims of interpolation made by mythicists (not supported by a majority of scholars at the moment). Probably you wanted to say that many will have to change their works. Except mythicists of course.


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I have not idea what you think you are saying here. What crucial data is there in favor of an earthly Jesus? Do you seriously think that a dubious reference to the "brother of the Lord" has some relevance to an earthly Jesus?
Precisely that. And Paul talks also of Jesus blood and many others. I think mythicists will have to 'patch' a lot more of passages in Paul epistles, each time when one will point out that they are not really talking of a celestial Jesus. Really there is too much mental gymnastics and ad hocness here, basically on a par with the epicycles which had to be added constantly to the Ptolemaic astronomy.


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There has been a huge refusal to even look at the issue of historicity. That's why Ehrman's book was so weak. He didn't have a lot of the usual scholarly debates to hone and test his arguments.
Well for me it offered a much stronger argument than any of the parallelisms with dying and raising gods. It is far from being weak. And think how strong will become when Bayesianism will show that Jesus existed


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Doherty has always been exceedingly polite. You can see how far it got him with the guild. Carrier is a bit more brash, especially with audiences at skeptical conferences, but his approach has always been scholarly.
This is rara avis among mythicists unfortunately. Ehrman never hit the authors he considered serious as mythicists do usually with him ('officially sucks' and so on, it was Carrier and his lack of intellectual modesty which made be doubt even more his 'genial breakthroughs'; now i tend to agree with Ehrman that it is even dubious to talk of a general category of dying and raising gods). I read for example that the authors of 'Bart Ehrman and the Quest of the Historical Jesus of Nazareth' engaged more in ad hominems than in substantial arguments. The approach in my view should be totally different even at the level of epistemology: one can made a reasonable enough argument that Jesus was a myth but a paradigm shift is far from being rational at the moment (more or less what Dawkins said). Maybe in the future.
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Old 08-17-2013, 04:24 PM   #83
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Let's be serious. Mythicists try to demolish an entire field (at least New Testament studies but after seeing how Carrier argued with Tom Stark I think they want to demolish much more than that, everything which is inconvenient in fact) and replace it with their own approaches.
No, actually, mythicism really calls for a single revision to NT methodology: the relaxation of the assumption that the NT texts contain historical data about a historical figure named Jesus who is the founding figure of Christianity. That is an assumption built into the criteria and other approaches used in NT studies. Once you give up that assumption and attempt to get the texts to demonstrate the existence of such a person using rational methodologies used in historical and literary research, then you fail. HJ studies ride on that assumption.

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Now I do not try to defend the people in the New Testament studies but I think there are enough there who use reasonable standards. Ehrman is definitely one of them. It's not as if there is a huge void which mythicists fill with rationality.
I used to think that about Ehrman until he came out with this line about Aramaic going back to Jesus.

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Old 08-17-2013, 05:20 PM   #84
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No, actually, mythicism really calls for a single revision to NT methodology:
Not exactly.

Anything and everything that can dispove the historical Jesus at any cost.


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That is an assumption built into the criteria and other approaches used in NT studies.
It is not built in as much as the most plausible explantion of the evidence we are left with.


Every attempt at a replcement hypothesis that explains the evidence we are left with falls short to the point of laughable.
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Old 08-17-2013, 05:27 PM   #85
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That is an assumption built into the criteria and other approaches used in NT studies.
It is not built in as much as the most plausible explantion of the evidence we are left with.
Claims of "most plausible" are purely subjective and of little value until you can give substance to the claim. Plausibility is not a sufficient condition for historical research as most works of fiction aim to be plausible. You need more than plausibility and your personal feeling as to what is most plausible. You need..., ummm..., e v i d e n c e , not rubbish criteria of christian hermeneutics.

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Every attempt at a replcement hypothesis that explains the evidence we are left with falls short to the point of laughable.
It's certain that the stuff you support is laughable. That's just what you'd expect from people who don't know much about history because they learned their stuff in seminaries rather than in history departments at universities. This is amateur hour, when biblical scholars without training pretend to do history.
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Old 08-17-2013, 06:07 PM   #86
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primary_source




"In the study of history as an academic discipline, a primary source (also called original source or evidence) is an artifact, a document, a recording, or other source of information that was created at the time under study. It serves as an original source of information about the topic ......In scholarly writing, an important objective of classifying sources is to determine the independence and reliability of sources.In contexts such as historical writing, it is almost always advisable to use primary sources if possible, and that "if none are available, it is only with great caution that [the author] may proceed to make use of secondary sources"
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Old 08-17-2013, 06:28 PM   #87
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and, secondary sources are writings about primary sources; with references.

Without a proper/true primary source, in good context, something cannot ought not be called a secondary source.
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Old 08-17-2013, 06:38 PM   #88
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Originally Posted by metacristi View Post
...

Well I think it's a huge difference between saying that Christianity appeared in a specific judaic context in the 1st century (very probable apocalypticism and the belief that Jesus was raised from the dead is the main cause) and the version involving strong syncretism, euhemerization, the idea of a dying messiah pre date the beginning of the 1st century and so on. It's one to say that in the 2nd and 3rd centuries Jesus was depicted as osiris, adonis (the hellenization of Christianity) and totally another to claim that the dying and raising gods are the models for Jesus.
But where's the political revolution? This is just the normal scholarly revision of theories.

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It's one to say that the New Testament Studies remained without a valid methodology and totally another things to accept that the conjunction of more criterions of authenticity can nonetheless give us strong heuristics (happily the situation is not so bad as some claim).
You accept this on faith?

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It does not seem to me that the changes will be trivial, even in textual criticism there are enough many claims of interpolation made by mythicists (not supported by a majority of scholars at the moment). Probably you wanted to say that many will have to change their works. Except mythicists of course.
I cannot think of a single claim of interpolation that is made my a mythicist that is not also made by at least one historicist.

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Precisely that. And Paul talks also of Jesus blood and many others. I think mythicists will have to 'patch' a lot more of passages in Paul epistles, each time when one will point out that they are not really talking of a celestial Jesus. Really there is too much mental gymnastics and ad hocness here, basically on a par with the epicycles which had to be added constantly to the Ptolemaic astronomy.
You act as if the Pauline letters are historical objects that are entitled to some sort of presumption of validity. I do not share this assumption.


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Well for me it offered a much stronger argument than any of the parallelisms with dying and raising gods. It is far from being weak. And think how strong will become when Bayesianism will show that Jesus existed
Nah - it was weak and undeveloped.

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Doherty has always been exceedingly polite. You can see how far it got him with the guild. Carrier is a bit more brash, especially with audiences at skeptical conferences, but his approach has always been scholarly.
This is rara avis among mythicists unfortunately. Ehrman never hit the authors he considered serious as mythicists do usually with him ('officially sucks' and so on, it was Carrier and his lack of intellectual modesty which made be doubt even more his 'genial breakthroughs'; now i tend to agree with Ehrman that it is even dubious to talk of a general category of dying and raising gods). I read for example that the authors of 'Bart Ehrman and the Quest of the Historical Jesus of Nazareth' engaged more in ad hominems than in substantial arguments. The approach in my view should be totally different even at the level of epistemology: one can made a reasonable enough argument that Jesus was a myth but a paradigm shift is far from being rational at the moment (more or less what Dawkins said). Maybe in the future.
I think you need more punctuation and paragraph breaks there, since I can't quite follow this - but it appears you are just giving your subjective feelings - which are ok, but not persuasive.

Take care.
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Old 08-17-2013, 10:02 PM   #89
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.... And Paul talks also of Jesus blood and many others. I think mythicists will have to 'patch' a lot more of passages in Paul epistles, each time when one will point out that they are not really talking of a celestial Jesus. Really there is too much mental gymnastics and ad hocness here, basically on a par with the epicycles which had to be added constantly to the Ptolemaic astronomy...
What?? Please!! You display a lack of knowledge of the Pauline Corpus.

Paul talks FAITH. Paul talks of a resurrected Jesus. Paul talks of mythology. Paul claimed Jesus was a Spirit and the Creator.

Paul was seen of Jesus AFTER he was raised from the dead.

1. 1 Corinthians 15:17 KJV
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And if Christ be not raised , your faith is vain; ye are yet in your sins.
2. 1 Corinthians 15:45 KJV
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And so it is written , The first man Adam was made a living soul; the last Adam was made a quickening spirit.
3. Romans 10:9 KJV
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That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved..
4. Colossians 1:16 KJV
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For by him were all things created , that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by him, and for him..
5. Galatians 1:1 KJV
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Paul, an apostle, (not of men, neither by man, but by Jesus Christ, and God the Father, who raised him from the dead
Apologetics writers of antiquity that mentioned the Pauline Corpus also admit Jesus was born of a Ghost.

See ALL writings of antiquity that make reference to the Pauline Corpus and the nature of Jesus and NONE will claim anywhere that Jesus was human with a human father.

There is simply no evidence that the Pauline Jesus had a human father.

For over a thousand years the Jesus cult preached and documented that their Jesus was the product of a Holy Ghost.

The HJ of Nazareth is without a shred of corroboration.

The Jesus cult preached a Jesus of Faith--a Jesus that was born WITHOUT sexual union.

Justin's First Apolgy 21
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And when we say also that the Word, who is the first-birth of God, was produced without sexual union, and that He, Jesus Christ, our Teacher, was crucified and died, and rose again, and ascended into heaven, we propound nothing different from what you believe regarding those whom you esteem sons of Jupiter.
Jesus of Nazareth is pure unadulterated Myth--Pure Faith.

Jesus of Nazareth is a product of Jewish, Greek and Roman Mythology.
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Old 08-18-2013, 05:50 AM   #90
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Reading what some people say here one would believe that there is no reasonable argument for the historicity of Jesus. Actually this is what I often encounter in mythicist circles (some can even be labelled safely 'priests of mythicism').

I think is pointless to continue a polemics in this direction if some want to believe that be it so. Only that all rational people reckon that there is a reasonable argument pro the historicity of Jesus. Try that of Ehrman for example in 'Did Jesus exist?', which is fully tenable overall (Carrier really has nothing of substance). Or read a sketch of it here (there are 7 parts). Not enough for quasi certitudes but there is enough to settle the matter for the moment.

I weighted the arguments (and believe me or not I happen to know some about research programs and paradigm shifts in science) and I'm afraid mythicism is not really synonymous with simplicity, elegance and best accommodation of data. A BIG breakthrough is needed to provoke a paradigm shift. Until then all I see is politics, I maintain that mythicists are engaged in a huge political 'bloody revolution' to 'gain the power' with all costs. Little in common with rational paradigm shifts. Remain to be seen (I do not write off this hypothesis) what will happen on long run, sometimes metaphysics becomes science way later after its first proposal indeed, but I personally don't think that Carrier's arguments will be able to make mythicism less 'fringe'.
I would recommend that you move beyond bland assertion and into some kind of evidence-based form of argument. Let us see your "weighted arguments" instead of making an unsupported assertion. If you did that, maybe you could convince us. Why you think that your weighting of the arguments should hold more water than our own (many of us have "weighted the arguments" and come to different conclusions), is, for the moment beyond me. From Hair, "What makes you, 1968, so damn superior?"
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