Hugh,
- Our words seem to be passing in the night...
- I would call the others on this thread "non-authenticists," and would see them as (all) claiming "that the carbon dating justifies ignoring any other evidence."
Here's the thing: Carbon dating CORROBORATES the other evidence. The shroud shows up in the Middle Ages, with a bright image; it is declared a fraud; the image fades; the weave is not consistent with a Jewish burial cloth of the time; the shroud's image is inconsistent with the Biblical description; the art style is distinctly Medieval and anatomically impossible; and the carbon dating puts it as a Medieval artifact.
Against this, the only data you've been able to provide in several years is an uncontrolled experiment using no duplicates or standards, performed on threads of unknown provenance, using a method of dubious validity. In two or three years (my how the time flies....) that's the ONLY data you've provided.
Honestly, to my mind the C14 dating is increasingly unimportant. It's a nice trump card, but it's completely unnecessary. The fact that one cannot accept the shroud as authentic without committing heresy is, to my mind, the key issue--in as much as it is evidence that both believers and non-believers in Christ's divinity can accept. It's actually obligatory for anyone who believes the Bible to reject the shroud's authenticity--accepting the shroud of Turin as authentic is to declare the Bible in error, and therefore to destroy the value of the shroud! After that, the rest of the data merely pinpoint the history of the cloth. The heretical aspects of it prove it cannot be the cloth described in the Bible, which means it cannot be the burial shroud of Christ, which means it cannot be authentic by definition.
- There are so many credible scholars who believe the opposite. Can you really just dismiss their opinions?
In what way are they credible? If they aren't, I can--it's one of the nice things about being knowledgeable about sampling methods in general and C14 sampling specifically; I know enough that I can dismiss arguments from people who are obviously ignorant of those fields when those people speak on those topics. If they are credible, they need to substantiate their claims, and establish more evidence to support their side of the argument,
as well as refuting
all of the lines of evidence against authenticity. It's not enough to do either/or; they have to do both.
Giordano said:
I suspect that researching the Shroud is an enjoyable hobby for you, and given that your belief that effective debate requires a highly organized approach, why don't you try this: privately, organize the entire argument from both points of view. You can go back in this thread for the key anti-authenticity arguments. You can begin wherever you wish, but I suggest that the radioisotope argument is the most important (the deal breaker) that you must confront first. For every pro-authenticity position, look up on the web or in your notes the exact argument, the actual facts behind it,, the citation, and the counter-arguments. Write these down in your organizational chart.
I did our side a few weeks ago. Really, all he needs to do is link to that post, a few later posts ammending it, and update his side.