Thanks, Davefoc.
I need to see arguments an reasoning written out so I can mull over them at my own pace, rather than being 'herded' via a video.
....At around 16:00 minutes he claims that all reputable scholars believe Jesus existed. He mentions some nineteenth century guys that posited that Jesus might not have existed but today he says only internet cranks think that an HJ might not have existed.
That is the most hilarious reasoning I have ever seen. Wonderful. Let us suppose you manage to convince the general public of the truth of your weird theories, then you will have created this situation:Isn't it amusing--an internet crank who believes there was an HJ CLAIMS only internet cranks think HJ might not have existed.
That HJ internet crank just contradicted himself as soon as he went on the internet.
1. If there are far more people who believe there was an HJ than MJ.
2. If there are internet cranks.
3. It is far more likely that an internet crank believes there was an HJ than MJ.
Unfortunately, this idea is functionally impossible.You mean this is not a subject area which has research journals where research papers of theories, findings and data are examined by independent peer review, and either published or rejected? This is field of study which operates instead by publishing it’s own books for fellow academic bible scholars to read?
That seems extremely poor to say the least.
However, if I understand Norseman’s suggestion correctly, and given that Jayson says these “historians” publish academic books rather than papers, what Norseman is asking for boils down to either a new thread, or else a new approach here where we stop all the extraneous debate about who said what or about what variously interpreted highly ambiguous sentences might mean in 1st to 5th century Christian writing, and just have the HJ side post whatever they claim is the "expert historians" evidence of a human Jesus … and then we can see just how valid that claimed "expert" evidence is.
Isn't it amusing--an internet crank who believes there was an HJ CLAIMS only internet cranks think HJ might not have existed.
That HJ internet crank just contradicted himself as soon as he went on the internet.
1. If there are far more people who believe there was an HJ than MJ.
2. If there are internet cranks.
3. It is far more likely that an internet crank believes there was an HJ than MJ.
Why do you assume that gMark's Jesus is a figure of history when everything about Jesus is either total fiction or implausible from baptism to resurrection?
I'm with you there, David Mo.
However, the criteria used for sifting the NT for data
1. Criterion of Multiple attestation
2. Criterion of embarrassment
3.Criterion of dissimilarity
seem more likely to come up with plausible (even unto very plausible) conjectures rather than data.
I agree with this, both points. However I have a slight reservation about your view that the principle of multiple attestation loses "all" effectiveness because the sources are "believers". Different members of, or sources within, the spectrum of Jesus belief, tended to believe different things. So if, nonetheless, they agree on a particular thing, then we may cautiously propose that this agreement may not arise from a general tendency to agree, but may be from a common source, or be multiple attestation of a real event. They may not be copying it one from another. Of course they may be copying a now lost source, like Q, which means it's not multiple attestation at all. But something in Mark, Q, and John ought to be looked at, because these sources by no means always exhibit common beliefs.... Personally, I just see something clear the criterion of difficulty (or "embarrassment") that at least serves to rule later additions to a text or to track a plurality of voices. The criterion of multiple attestation would make sense if we had external evidence, but having to limit ourselves to texts that have been produced by a sect of believers, the criterion loses all effectiveness.
There is a transcript of the first video on the Youtube link.
Underneath the video where it says "About" there is a row of options like "Share" and "Add To", one of those will give you a transcript of the whole thing with a time mark.
He starts getting into the evidence around the 27 minute mark, if you don't want to hear the set-up.
Isn't it amusing--an internet crank who believes there was an HJ CLAIMS only internet cranks think HJ might not have existed.
That HJ internet crank just contradicted himself as soon as he went on the internet.
Of course, Pakeha. These and other criteria are used by the religious experts (theologians or historians) with a manifest lack of objectivity. First, they are defined rather vaguely and so result contradictory to each other. Then, they can choose the one that best fits with their personal beliefs. Second, because they are criteria for discerning different levels of text or authorship. But they use them with a dogmatic clause: if contradictory accounts appear in the Gospels that refer to different traditions or writings, then one of them is coming from Christ himself and is "historical". This clause has no basis. In a text may appear different traditions that need not be chronologically diverse or refer to a specific date, and much less be "true".
Frequently, this manipulated "scientificism" results very ingenuous for the extern viewer.
Personally, I just see something clear the criterion of difficulty (or "embarrassment") that at least serves to rule out later additions to a text or to track a plurality of voices. The criterion of multiple attestation would make sense if we had external evidence, but having to limit ourselves to texts that have been produced by a sect of believers, the criterion loses all effectiveness.
I agree with this, both points. However I have a slight reservation about your view that the principle of multiple attestation loses "all" effectiveness because the sources are "believers". Different members of, or sources within, the spectrum of Jesus belief, tended to believe different things. So if, nonetheless, they agree on a particular thing, then we may cautiously propose that this agreement may not arise from a general tendency to agree, but may be from a common source, or be multiple attestation of a real event. They may not be copying it one from another. Of course they may be copying a now lost source, like Q, which means it's not multiple attestation at all. But something in Mark, Q, and John ought to be looked at, because these sources by no means always exhibit common beliefs.
Or be multiple adaptations of the first written account, which a variety of authors find convenient for their purposes. Both the crucifixion and a period of close association with John the Baptist serve to grind many axes. What is useful for many storytellers gets incorporated into many stories. That includes audience expectation - we would not recognize as Jesus a man who died of cholera, or somebody who had never had any friendly relations with John the Baptist. There's no point writing a Jesus story unless the reader recognizes the focal figure as "the Jesus."then we may cautiously propose that this agreement may not arise from a general tendency to agree, but may be from a common source, or be multiple attestation of a real event.
Yes, I know. When I wrote Q it was shorthand for nothing else except "the things common to Matthew and Luke". I referred to Mark and John separately. Because we were discussing these common elements, Q was a useful concept to invoke in that context.Craig B ... Nobody proposes not looking at what appears in several places among the four Gospels, Paul and maybe "core" Thomas (there is nothing in you beloeved Q that is not already in those).
I am not quite sure what people mean by this. I certainly have read articles that have been published in professional journals about this period. Several of the people involved in researching the James ossuary wrote articles for scientific journals. There are tons of articles about specific aspects of Christian history that seem to have been published in peer reviewed journals. Richard Carrier talks about submitting his work for peer review.
OK, not you, but others sometimes point to Q as a supposed "independent source" in its own right. It can easily get confusing, then, where the attestations actually are in a multiple attestation argument.I referred to Mark and John separately. Because we were discussing these common elements, Q was a useful concept to invoke in that context.
Not true (yet again!). What I have said all through, is that anything presented as evidence of a human Jesus, must be credible and genuinely evidence of what is being claimed (not evidence of something else, such as merely evidence of 1st century religious beliefs). It also has to be independent of the biblical writing, because that writing is completely discredited since we discovered that almost every significant story it tells of Jesus is in fact impossible.
Nonsense. The "biblical writing" is not a uniform mass of conscious lies and fabrications composed for the purpose of deception.
Reject whatever evidence you like. Fine. But it's still evidence, it is generally regarded as plausible, and your contemptuous quotation marks round expert scholars simply makes you look foolish.... You have failed ever to produce any genuine credible evidence of a human Jesus whatsoever. And nor (apparently) can you cite any such evidence from any of these “expert scholars” that you keep saying we must rely on.
I'm game, and I do agree.
Reject whatever evidence you like. Fine. But it's still evidence, it is generally regarded as plausible, and your contemptuous quotation marks round expert scholars simply makes you look foolish.