Yes, there is a kind of equivocation over scientific evidence, legal evidence, and evidence as used in historical method. They seem to be quite different, so it's a bit odd to conflate them, as if they are the same thing. For example, I think that ancient historians do look at hearsay stuff, partly because there is so little material to utilize. It doesn't mean that they simply accept hearsay, but they take it into account.
Unfortunately, while I appreciate your stepping forward this way, you show that what I wrote previously was still not clear. I am saying that, in the real world, what appears in a chronicle like Tacitus's is mostly _not_ hearsay, even though Tacitus himself -- or any other respectable chronicler of the time -- may not necessarily be a witness to each and every data-point in the material. This is because in the real world -- read: the world of professional academic historical research -- hearsay is understood to be that which the historian has garnered from sources that were
in turn hearsay
themselves at the time.
So when Tacitus makes a point of specifying when something is hearsay, he is
not indicating which data-points he has not personally witnessed. Heck, those latter data-points might well cover 99.9% of the
whoooooole #%$#*%*$$*#$ chronicle!!! Instead, he is indicating which ##$%*^*$%^#^* data-points are derived from
source accounts that are
themselves from a hearsay perspective
in turn.
There are two different types of
source accounts that Tacitus bends over backwards to specify as forming the basis
for his own chronicle:
source accounts from a
first-hand perspective versus
source accounts from a
hearsay perspective. So in the bulk of his #&#^*#%$#%^# chronicle, whenever he is basing certain #^&#*^*%#$% data-points on
source accounts that are themselves
hearsay in turn, he invariably spells that out and
warns the reader specifically. But when other data-points are based
in turn on
first-hand accounts, he will sometimes specify as much and sometimes not --
as duly spelled out in the %^$%^&%$%^#$ introductory material.
No such flag for hearsay is raised by Tacitus in the source account used for the data-points
related to this particular execution of the instigator of Christianity under Tiberius. Consequently, since Tacitus raises such a flag a-plenty at
other times, the only logical conclusion is that the individual data-points
here, related to this
particular execution, are sourced from a
first-hand account.
One reason, among a number, why Tacitus is so important among his contemporaries is
precisely his $^*$%^$%^$%^$% strictness in
specifying hearsay. Few other chroniclers of his time are quite as strict in specifying the nature of
any source accounts up front. Consequently, most modern professional historians view those data-points that are presented in Tacitus
without comment as being effectively
first-hand, and only those data-points that are specified by Tacitus as sourced from
hearsay material
in turn are viewed by modern professional historians as
hearsay.
I think that I've made it all very $%^*$$^&$^$& clear here, and from now on, we can safely assume that anyone here who still continues to spout idiocies that flagrantly distort what I'm saying here anyway is only spouting those distortions in order to be $%^*$%^$$%$^*% cute, knowing *&$%^$%^$%^$ well just what I'm really saying here about the modern professional historian's approach to Tacitus, but choosing to ignore it all for purely dishonest rhetorical reasons -- to hell with the facts.
Stone