I'm still not sure what this has to do with our talk about Origen. I mean, literally previously the only connection between what I said and what you replied was the name "Origen", but now even that seems to have disappeared and you're back to repeating your old postulates.
But ok, sure, let's move on then. Feel free to explain how you know that with such certainty then.
Far as I can piece together your logic, it seems to go something like: they're in the same anthology of 27 different stories by different authors, and 4 of them are about some miraculous superpowered guy, and some guys who aren't even in that anthology made outlandish claims too, therefore nobody from any of them is based on any real person.
But that would be fallacious in more than one way. To wit:
1. You're doing an association fallacy. Each document must be judged on its own merits. Just quoting some miraculous stuff from Mark doesn't mean that the same applies to 1 Timothy or 1 Cor.
2.
Argument from fallacy, which is itself a fallacy. Just because an argument for a conclusion C is broken, it doesn't mean you can therefore conclude that absolutely, positively it's !C. And it's a fallacy because basically it's a subcase of your old nemesis, the
denying the antecedent fallacy. I.e., it relies on confusing "A=>C" to also mean "!A=>!C". (Where A is the argument, and C is the conclusion.) But that's not how negating an implication works.
More to the point here, a document being unreliable or outright fiction in the case of Acts or the gospels, does mean it can't be trusted as a source. But it does NOT mean that you can proclaim with any degree of certainty that therefore positively, absolutely none of the people mentioned in there ever existed, and none of them were ever based on any real people.
In fact, you don't even need to understand the argument from fallacy to see that that kind of logic is trivially false. Just because it really is trivial to find counter-examples.
E.g., the old film The Mummy (not the new remake) features Imhotep as a thoroughly supernatural undead monster. Is the movie a good source for Imhotep? No. HELL NO. Was there nevertheless a real person named Imhotep? Yes.
But anyway, there's a difference between saying that something is unsupported, and claiming to know for sure that the opposite is true. If you want to go all the way for the latter, you can help yourself to the burden of proof.
3. Quite frankly, most of your reasoning so far has been just an unrelenting
gish gallop. You never seem to stop to properly support any of the claims, nor address any objections, you just dump a ton of claims that aren't even related to anything anyone was saying.