If the field is so hopeless that every other peer reviewed Scolar is wrong, what is so great about peer review when applied to Carrier?
A broken calendar clock eventually is right.
You still haven't commented on GDon's comprehensive demolition of Carrier's central argument about the Ascents of Isaiah. Are you happy to agree with Carrier, even after he has been shown to be lying?
If you go to the piece that inspired GDon's long trip through the rabbit hole, Response #3: Non Sequitur’s Tim O’Neill presentation, The Ascension of Isaiah,:
"There is nothing amiss with Carrier’s translation. It conveys the same meaning as that by Charles/Barton.
Carrier is quoting, or rather he is translating, a section from what is known as the “second Latin” or L2 manuscript that varies significantly from the main manuscripts that normally serve as the basis for English translations."
"So what is Carrier saying about that passage in L2? Carrier agrees with those specialist scholars of the Ascension of Isaiah who enumerate reasons for believing that a large portion in our most complete manuscript, a portion that describes Jesus being born to Mary and then being crucified on earth and sending out his twelve disciples after his resurrection (11:2-22), was not part of the original text. "
In the thread you cited there is this:
"GakuseiDon wrote: ↑Thu Oct 25, 2018 1:57 am
Carrier...explain
So GDon's main beef is not in there was meddling with Ascension of Isaiah but what Carrier thinks was there. Interpretation based on other is not "lying".
Heck, even Early Jewish Writings acknowledges that Ascension of Isaiah ranges from Second Century B.C. - Fourth Century A.D. or 200 BCE to 400 CE (because there is no year 0 those are the last years of the relevant centuries) among traditional scholars ie Pro Historical Jesus supporters!
Given that Irenaeus' Against Heresies sets the hard upper limit for the Gospels in a form we would recognize at ~180 CE (and likely far easier then that hence Carriers 120 CE cut off date) this means that about 220 of the some 600 year range is outside to in support range.
While we are on the subject of lying how about the Pro Historical Jesus which has more evidence of lying (via misrepresentation)? The conflation of the evidence for Jesus being on par with that of the Holocast case in point. If the evidence for Jesus was good why make such an irrationally emotional claim...unless those making this comparison know (even if only at an unconscious one) that the evidence is horribly inadequate. Such a comparison is not just disingenuous but downright deranged.
How about claiming passages mention Jesus when in reality the passages in question at best mention Christans or authors try to conflate "Chretus" (the good man) with "Christus" (the messiah)? How about lapses in basic logic?
For example, one of the main reasons Mark is generally viewed as being written after 70 CE is it talks about the destruction of the Temple but then you look at something like 1 Clement which gives the impression of the Temple is still intact but is generally dated 80-140 CE.
"Not in every place, brethren, are sacrifices offered continually, either in answer to prayer, or concerning sin and neglect, but in Jerusalem only; and even there the offering is not made in every place, but before the temple in the court of the altar, after that which is offered has been diligently examined by the high priest and the appointed ministers" - 1 Clement 41:2
In terms of constant use of methodology that is nonsensical and more over 1 Clement better supports a historical Jesus if, as Carrier does, you date it no later then 70 CE. And yet the Pro Historial Jesus side keeps plugging for the 80-140 CE date enough though the earlier date better supports their position - that is how out of touch with basic historical mythology they are.
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Why not cite the Bible as proof the Earth doesn't orbit the sun while you are at it?