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10-01-2013, 10:34 PM | #211 | ||
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10-01-2013, 10:37 PM | #212 | |||
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10-01-2013, 11:07 PM | #213 |
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The evidence is strong enough to feel safe assuming that Christianity existed in the third century. That's a baby step for most people but for you that's a big step.
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10-01-2013, 11:31 PM | #214 | ||
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You abandon all reasonable analysis when you PRESUME all 14000 coins found were minted before c 256-257. I made no such presumptions. |
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10-01-2013, 11:50 PM | #215 | |||||
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That's just an assertion you spew for lack of reasonable response. You are only presumption. Every thread you seem to have started presumes your conclusions and never get past the presumption. Go and read the coin information rather than continue to show your ignorance. I've linked to at least once source on the coins (and there are photographs of the coins for you to peruse) and referred you to another, when you provided a link to an article in the same journal. |
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10-01-2013, 11:51 PM | #216 | ||
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It is clear from those who have examined the limited evidence that Presumptions and Guessing were employed because of the lack of any historical details of the siege of Dura. It must first be PRESUMED that there was no activity at Dura any time after the siege by Shaphur. |
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10-02-2013, 12:50 AM | #217 | ||
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I don't think anyone could have predicted that this fragment would become a key part of an argument showing that Christianity existed before the fourth century. That was not an issue on anyone's mind at the time. |
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10-02-2013, 01:48 AM | #218 | ||||
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You figure it out. The occupants stopped doing things. The coins stopped being dropped. No more inscriptions were made. No more references to the city in historical records other than by Shapur I who said he destroyed it. If you call the result a presumption, I'd guess that everything in your life is based on such presumptions. There is nothing reasonable about what you are advocating. Wake up. |
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10-02-2013, 01:53 AM | #219 | |||
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10-02-2013, 03:47 AM | #220 | ||||
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As a result of this situation, which persists today, the significance of the Dura Parchment 24 was extremely unique, because it offered a method of dating (by means of an archaeological terminus ad quem) which was NOT entirely reliant upon palaeographical assessment. That Kraeling (or anyone else in the field in 1933 etc) was not aware of this unique significance cannot be maintained. Quote:
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a) palaeographical assessment b) the rise of the codex implied a later century c) the use of parchment mitigated towards a later century. But don't take my quick summary of this article as representative. Read through the article and you will see that the generally accepted dates for papyri, following the opinions of Grenfell and Hunt (while they lived) were, with few exceptions, quite late (i.e. the 4th century was often cited). Quote:
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