Jabba,
One of the things you could do to help your credibility is to actually read the responses in total and tailor your own comments to what people have said, acknowledging when they present strong counterarguments.
Jabba:
1) The blood was not painted on.
2) A real, tortured and crucified human being was involved.
3) Then, if the Shroud is somehow a forgery, and was forged within the time frame indicated by the carbon dating, someone had to be deliberately crucified for a piece of art and by an artist that knew how to produce the imprint.
4) In other words -- surely, the carbon dating is wrong.Dinwar,
- It also seems to prove that the carbon dating is wrong.
It most certainly and strenuously does not, for exactly the reasons that have been repeatedly put forth. "Prove" means that the alternatives have been ruled out. "Prove" within a non-mathematical sense means that the proven scenario is the most likely. Have you ever tried Occam's Razor?
Scenario 1: The C14 dating is correct:
Assumptions Required: Experts acted expertly.
Scenario 2: The C14 dating is incorrect:
Assumptions Required:
1. A patch that has exactly zero evidence of existing exists.
2. Every relevant expert examining the shroud overlooked said patch.
3. The approved, documented work of three independent labs was done not only incorrectly, but
identically incorrectly.
4. Undocumented, unprovenanced kitchen experiments conflicting with the experimenter's own previous conclusions trump the documented work of three independent labs.
5. The non-matching stereoscopic image on the shroud doesn't matter.
6. The similarity of the image with 14th century artistic style is coincidental.
7. The contemporary evidence admitting the hoax is fraudulent.
8. The documented scientific work of McCrone is incorrect, though no one can show how.
9. The conclusions regarding blood serum are correct though derived solely from photographs and microscopic views and not from actual chemical analysis trump the documented work of McCrone.
10. The bible itself is wrong in its description of the burial cloth
S (the headpiece is definitively mentioned as being separate).
11. Things known to have happened repeatedly even to the present day (voluntary crucifixion, forgery, fraud, misrepresentation) are less likely than that which has never been shown (resurrection, spontaneous transfer of bodily image to a covering cloth).
I'm sure there are more, but that's a start.
Jabba said:
- Certainly, it's possible that someone would be deliberately crucified, in the 14th century, in the manner that Jesus was crucified, so as to produce a monetarily valuable artifact. But to me, as you might expect, that seems highly unlikely...
See above comments.
Jabba said:
- For one thing -- as far as I know -- such an explanation has never been suggested by any publication about the Shroud...
That's because on the hoax side the argument ends with the C14 dating. On the authenticity side no one
wants to mention it because it would add another in the pouch full of nails in the shroud's coffin.
Jabba said:
- For another thing, the "artist" would have had to know how to produce the imprint
He did. The imprint is there. Your own linked pdf (pro-authenticity by the way) gave an example that it claimed was similar to the shroud, and it did it simply by washing the wounds repeatedly and applying the cloth. Do you assert that this is beyond a 14th century artist?
Jabba said:
-- which modern science still can't do
Lies.
Jabba said:
(we will need to talk about why the various claims of duplication don't work),
Only if you show the C14 dating to be wrong, and even then you would lose the argument. Go back and read what has been repeatedly said about no one knowing what the shroud actually looked like in the 14th century. It's a significant point.
Jabba said:
and be able to produce such an imprint in the 14th century using a dead body.
Try reading your own links. As I mentioned, the pdf you yourself linked to describes how to do it to their satisfaction using nothing but water and cloth.
Jabba said:
- For another, the detail seems spot on faithful to how the body of the Biblical Jesus would look.
1. You have exactly zero idea how the body would look.
2. Whatever idea you have comes from exactly the same source material that would be readily availble to the hoaxer.
Jabba said:
- For another, the artist would have to figure out how to reap such detailed stains...
You think expert art was beyond an expert artist?
Jabba said:
- I'll leave it at that for now.
You leave it exactly where it was: with the evidence entirely in favor of 14th century hoax and not at all in favor of authenticity.
I ask two things of you, please, Jabba:
1. Respond to my comments specifically.
2. Respond to earlier assertions about your intended audience. I think I know that we are not your audience--that you present your comments here only to gain credibility on pro-shroud forums, but it would be refreshing to hear you admit it.