I note your very significant use of "definitely" here. I do not at all approve of it. See your #398. Now, that would be interpreted by anyone as you saying 16.5 claimed Tacitus as an eyewitness. But you will say it's not. You employ tortuous language as I have noted before to make people think you have said things, but leave yourself a way out. That's why you put "iirc" in #382. See also from your #393 addressed to 16.5 You could say, "I didn't say 16.5 claimed Tacitus was an eyewitness of Jesus, merely that he talked about him as an eyewitness, while claiming him as evidence." Is that what you are going to say? I hope not, for it's an unpleasant mode of discourse, because it is grossly misleading, and all but the most charitable reader would say, designedly so.
The reason I began the sentence with the caution of saying
"iirc", was of course precisely because I was not sure if that recollection was correct. And I do that very frequently, because I want to avoid saying that I know anything for certain.
But since you are continuously implying peoples dishonesty here, you should in all honesty admit from my replies above summarising just some of the exchanges I had with 16.5, that he very clearly was trying to deny that Tacitus was merely a source of hearsay on what had happened to Jesus (and that is what this thread is about, and it's who I was specifically asking him about, i.e.
Jesus ...
not some fire) and trying to claim Tacitus as some sort of eye-witness.
You should note (if you are being honest with yourself), that I repeatedly asked him to clarify whether or not he was trying to claim Tacitus as an eye witness to the execution of Jesus. And his responses to that were repeatedly to say that Tacitus was an eye witness and not merely a reporter of hearsay, but that he then added that he was an eyewitness to a fire, even though he knew and was repeatedly told that I was not asking about any fire, but asking him specifically about Jesus.
I think it is clear that from the start 16.5 has indeed been trying to claim Tacitus as some sort of strong evidence of Jesus. But when it was pointed out to him that Tacitus was not an eye-witness and could only be reporting hearsay (as far we can tell), he kept talking instead about a fire whilst still claiming Tacitus as an eye witness to that fire, as if that could somehow count as also being eye-witness evidence of Jesus.
But as I say, the post which you are complaining about from me, came after 16.5 replied to someone else where he seems to say that Tacitus could be an eye witness to things without actually “eyeballing” them. It was that post that prompted me to say that iirc he had been claiming Tacitus was an eye witness to Jesus (since that is what we are actually talking about in this thread, and that is what I had repeatedly and very specifically asked him about, not some fire in Rome!), and where in the next sentence I asked him to clarify if that was what he was indeed claiming.
I think 16.5 was trying to claim Tacitus as an eye witness to Jesus, or else to claim that in effect he was an eye witness. And I think he has been trying to do that because he wants to deny that Tacitus was, as far as we can honestly tell, only able to report what was hearsay about the death of Jesus. But when first asked directly about that, he kept claiming that Tacitus was indeed an eye witness but he talked of him only as an eye witness to a fire!
Well, the point is that whatever 16.5 was trying to claim - as far as anyone honestly can tell, Tacitus could not have been an eye witness to the execution of Jesus, and he could only really have known hearsay stories about whatever happened to Jesus. And that does not amount to the clear and strong evidence that 16.5 seems to think Tacitus provides for the existence of Jesus. That is what I have been trying to say to him.