Slowvehicle,
- The points you have made are exactly what I'm looking for. Carbon dating would be in the top layer of sub-issues (maybe, number 1), and you have listed some of the sub-sub issues within the carbon dating sub-issue.
- Your 6 other points would be listed under "Image."
- Also, you have reminded me that you and others have given me similar lists in the past. I'll start looking for them -- but, you (and others) can probably find them faster than can I.
- Will you allow me to post your comments over on the Porter blog, if I get your specific approval each time?
- Thanks.
Good morning, Mr, Savage!
You appear to have missed this:
Good Morning, Mr. Savage!
It seems to me that you are either overlooking, or intentionally ignoring, the fact that when I (for instance) post a list of evidences that the cloth in question is a manifestly medieval artifact, I have already "organized" the issues I am raising. You could, simply, take (for instance) my last post as an organization of a few (a very few) of the indications that the CIQ is not, cannot be, the burial cloth of a person crucified in the 1st Century CE.
You have pretended all along that "agreeing to disagree" is a valid option. However, unless and until you can demonstrate that the manifestly medieval cloth existed in the 1st Century CE, there is nothing about which to "agree to disagree". You must show (without resorting to the magic of "some patching" that does not show up in photos, and has not been seen by any person with actual access to the CIQ) that the 14C dating is in error--not with allegation, but with substantiation. Without that, the facts of the nature of the graphic images are immaterial. Whatever they are, however they were produced, however they have been "improved" and altered (and by whomever) do not signify; a cloth that was not loomed until the late 13th Century CE could not have been used as a burial shroud in the early 1st Century CE.
If anyone at the Porter Blog, or anywhere else, is interested in facts (as opposed to apologetics), the first step, the very first step, is to deal with the 14C dating, triply attested by independent laboratories. Unless and until that step is taken, unless and until that hurdle is surmounted, the rest is (sorry) immaterial.
You are, of course, free to quote me, as long as you do so honestly, anywhere you find it fruitful.
I would hope that you would not, this time around, flavour your quotes with the cries of "
מָרָא" with which you have seasoned other references to this forum (and its predecessor), in other venues. (Of course, I drink coffee [a
lot of coffee] out of a RoosterTeeth RWBY mug, so my grip on reality is a bit..."BOOP".)
I maintain that the devotees of the "Porter Blog" would be better served by joining in the discussion here, rather than by you serving as intermediary (dare I coin the neologism, "anti-locutor"?) and practicing shuttle debatery.
A more important point is this:
The
14C date is not "in the top layer of sub-issues"; it is, in fact, the
only issue. Follow: Even if the graphic image on the CIQ were, in fact, an anatomically accurate, posturally possible, scripturally feasible and historically defensible photographic image; even if the tattoo, "My dad can smite your tribe", were discernible, and the letters "JC" were embroidered in the corner; triply-redundant
14C dating, from three independent laboratories, indicates that the cloth did not exist before the mid-13
th Century CE, and therefore could not have been used to do
anything, in any way, to anyone, in the early 1
st Century CE.
Unless and until you come to grips with that fact, there truly is nothing upon which to "agree to disagree".
You might better serve "your side" by inviting them here, to read the exchanges for themselves.