JaysonR
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- May 16, 2013
- Messages
- 1,816
It is not a well established fallacy, as we just began the discussion, and any attempt by me to have you clarify your assertions results in you addressing my person rather than answering questions.Your statement is a well established fallacy. I have presented my sources at ALL TIMES.
Jesus of Nazareth is a figure of mythology based on the DSS, Ignatius, Justin Martyr, Aristides, Tertullian, Origen, Hippolytus, Lactantius, Arnobius, Eusebius, Rufinus, Clememt of Alexandria, Jerome, Chrysostom, Augustine of Hippo, Ephraem the Syrian, gMark, gLuke, gJohn, gMatthew, the Pauline Corpus, Acts of the Apostles, the non-Pauline letters, Revelation and other writings.
We have not established much at all, aside from what was already known prior to your propositions; that texts of comments upon the subject matter exist across a stretch of time ranging (mostly) from 2nd c CE to 4th c CE and that the canonized texts earliest surviving copies are extant from no earlier than the 2nd c CE.
This information has been widely known for a considerable time, and the field has not arrived at your proposition of Egyptian authorship for the purposes of pulling off a hoax upon the world.
The field has generated several propositions of mixed caliber, but yours is unique in authorship assertion and motive; both aspects you have yet to account for aside from simply citing dates from citations.
I don't know why I continue to engage you in your cited fallacy. (I'm kidding; I couldn't resist the humor of the typoI draw conclusions from what I examine. It is a fallacy that I cite commentaries and call it sufficient.
Why are you engaged in open fallacies?
Yes, you draw conclusions from what you examine, and this is fine, but you don't really engage with conversation very well.
Instead, if there is a question regarding the accuracy of your conclusion, or that your conclusion causes a disjointing between other known pieces of information, then you (for some reason I don't really understand) refuse to answer for even your own comments.
Yes, and your presentation leaves volumes of material unaddressed and stands in conflict (until you explain some more) with several points of known information.I have already presented evidence from antiquity for my theory that the Jesus story and cult was initiated in the 2nd century or later and most likely in Egypt.
Again, I am not against you or your proposition, and even still stand willing to help you with flushing it out more if you would like.
