That update was from 2012.
That update was from 2012.
Hugh and Ward,
- Everyone else will be asking me for citations and links. Please let me know if and when you need them.
- Here’s my situation.
1. (I’ve been busy on another project.)
2. I think that everyone here -- besides me -- believes that
a. While we can never be totally sure about essentially any conclusion, there is not enough doubt about the carbon dating results to warrant serious weighing of any other evidence. (IOW, this case was effectively closed by the carbon dating.)
b. And besides, the other evidence supports inauthenticity anyway…
3. Since I do want the shroud to be authentic, I can’t fully trust my own current conclusions about this — but so far, I do disagree on both counts.
4. I’ll try to tackle the latter count, but first, I need to shed its blocker — if I can. (I used to play American football.)
5. Mostly, I’m really surprised that you two are so confident about the carbon dating (the “blocker”) – so, that’s what I will try to focus on for now.
6. Unfortunately, it will take me awhile to dig up the real evidence for my claims in that regard.
7. Consequently, I’ll present a lot of my claims before I can (even in my own opinion) adequately support them – figuring that you guys can fill in most of the blanks yourself, and then confront me about the rest.
8. I’ve previously listed my different areas of concern re the dating, but here’s an updated list:
9. The emotionality in the 10 years of negotiation leading up to the test.
10. Significant protocols determined, but not followed.
11. The size and location of the sample.
12. Potential of repair, contamination and “new" linen.13. Church (rather than scientists) selects sample.
14. Sample selected at the last moment, after two hours of “ecumenical” debate.
15. Final step in procedure seen by only 2 people, and not videotaped.
16. No test for chemical composition.
17. No archeologist involved.
18. STURP deliberately excluded.
19. Gove eventually excluded.
20. A clear age gradient within the sample.
21. Here’s a quote from “The Coming of the Quantum Christ” by John Klotz.
[Professor Emanuela] Marinelli related to the Valencia Conference [in 2000] how competent scientists attacked the execution of the process and charged the labs with concealing the data necessary to determine adequately what they had done in their experiments. She cited a fifteen point critique of Philippe Bourcier de Carbon delivered at an international symposium in Rome in 1993: 14 (1) Absence of a formal report of the sampling; (2) Absence of a video archive on the final steps of the samples packaging; (3) In the official reports, contradictions about the cutting and the weight of the samples by people in charge of the sampling (4) Breaches of the protocols initially planned for the operation of dating; (5) Rejection of the usual procedure of double-blind test; (6) Refusal of the interdisciplinary documentation, which is usual in the procedures for radiocarbon dating; (7) Exclusion of acknowledged specialists in the Shroud, particularly American scientists who participated in previous works of STURP; (8) Communication to the laboratories, most unusual, of the dates of the control samples prior to testing; (9) Intercommunication of results among the three laboratories during the job; (10) Disclosure to the media of the first results before the delivering of the findings; (11) Refusal to publish raw results of the measurements (requested also with insistence in its official statement by the Scientific Committee which prepared the Symposium in Paris in 1989); (12) Non-explanation of the unique isolation of the confidence interval of the measures performed by the Oxford laboratory compared to those made by other laboratories; (13) Unacceptable value of 6.4 published in the journal Nature for the chi-squared statistical test on the results of the radiocarbon dosage on the Shroud; (14) Rejection of any cross-debate on the statistical measures performed; (15) Rejection, absolutely uncommon, of the publication of the statistical expertise of this operation, officially entrusted to professor Bray of “G. Colonnetti” Institute of Turin (requested also with insistence in its official statement by the Scientific Committee which prepared the Symposium in Paris in 1989).
- Klotz, John (2014-09-30). The Coming of the Quantum Christ: The Shroud of Turin and the Apocalypse of Selfishness (Kindle Locations 5350-5365). John C. Klotz. Kindle Edition.
- I'll be back.
1. (I’ve been busy on another project.)
In short, Jabba, and anybody else who cares to read this, I do not accept that any repair has been carried out on the radiocarbon corner of the sample, and believe that any contamination of the radiocarbon corner made the Shroud appear older, not younger, than it really is.
- I think that this is the current status of the repair argument. So far, I'm losing.- Sorry, Hugh. I misunderstood what you said.
- As stated before, I think there is plenty of reasonable doubt about the accuracy of the carbon dating. The following is one of my summaries.
- As stated before, I think there is plenty of reasonable doubt about the accuracy of the carbon dating. The following is one of my summaries.
- I think that this is the current status of the repair argument. So far, I'm losing.
You've LOST.Jabba said:I think that this is the current status of the repair argument. So far, I'm losing.
- As stated before, I think there is plenty of reasonable doubt about the accuracy of the carbon dating. The following is one of my summaries.
- I think that this is the current status of the repair argument. So far, I'm losing.
Knock this stuff off and just present your evidence that the shroud is 2000 years old.
Even if 14C dating were pure science fiction/fantasy, that doesn't help your authenticity claims one iota.
- As stated before, I think there is plenty of reasonable doubt about the accuracy of the carbon dating.
Steve Dutch said:In order to prove the Gospel accounts of Christ's resurrection, the Shroud would have to:
-Date authentically from about 30 A.D.
-Have been in Palestine in 30 A. D.
-Bear an image that authentically dates from 30 A. D. (it could have been created later)
-Bear the imprint of a real person (as opposed to an artificial image)
-Bear the imprint of a person who was actually crucified (as opposed to simulating the effects or having marks from some other cause)
-Bear the imprint of Christ as opposed to anyone else
-No longer contain a body because of a supernatural resurrection, as opposed to the body being removed
Break any link, and the Shroud no longer makes its case. So, even if the shroud is the actual burial shroud of Christ, all we have is a historical relic connected to a famous person.
Slowvehicle,Did you read my post? At all?
You are saying, in essence, that, since the tests H & A ran identified substances that are also found in blood, even though every one of those substances have other, common, sources, the tests "demonstrate" the presence of blood.
The reality is that the H & A tests did not rule out the presence of blood. That is the strongest inference that can be reached. The tests also did not rule out organic, porphyrin-bearing pigments in egg white binders (for instance)...
- So far, it appears to me that H&A, and most other scientists studying their tests, figure that so many different tests yielding 'positive' results indicates that the presence of blood is highly probable.
- Would you agree that H&A imply that to be the case?
Slowvehicle,
- I never said -- even in essence -- that H&A's tests "demonstrate" the presence of blood. I only said that they "support" the presence of blood. I accept that those tests did not "rule out" paint.
- As I understand it, that is what is meant by "positive for blood." Basically, H&A found only what they should have found if the stains are blood -- they didn't find anything that they shouldn't find if the stains are blood.
- So far, it appears to me that H&A, and most other scientists studying their tests, figure that so many different tests yielding 'positive' results indicates that the presence of blood is highly probable.
- Would you agree that H&A imply that to be the case?
Slowvehicle,
- I never said -- even in essence -- that H&A's tests "demonstrate" the presence of blood. I only said that they "support" the presence of blood. I accept that those tests did not "rule out" paint.
- So far, it appears to me that H&A, and most other scientists studying their tests, figure that so many different tests yielding 'positive' results indicates that the presence of blood is highly probable.
- Would you agree that H&A imply that to be the case?