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RE: Historian explains why Jesus ''mythers'' aren't taken seriously by most Historians
June 5, 2015 at 4:35 pm
I don't get the big deal with trying to bash mythicists. A handful of facts barely makes any difference between the HJ position and the mythicist position. They couldn't really be much closer together. Why the animosity?
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RE: Historian explains why Jesus ''mythers'' aren't taken seriously by most Historians
June 5, 2015 at 4:37 pm
(June 5, 2015 at 4:35 pm)robvalue Wrote: I don't get the big deal with trying to bash mythicists. A handful of facts barely makes any difference between the HJ position and the mythicist position. They couldn't really be much closer together. Why the animosity?
I'm not ''bashing'' mythcists - I reserve ''bashing'' for religious people's arguments.
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RE: Historian explains why Jesus ''mythers'' aren't taken seriously by most Historians
June 5, 2015 at 4:43 pm
(This post was last modified: June 5, 2015 at 4:45 pm by robvalue.)
OK, well the title here says they're not taken seriously, when both positions overlap by about 99% in my reckoning. I mean really, even a mythicist will say you could find some guy back then and just base it on him. It wouldn't make a lot of difference. There were bound to be many "potentials" of which any could be built upon in the same way.
For a bigger difference in the cases requires believing a bit more in the gospels, when referring to the writings of people who were clearly either mentally ill or making stuff up.
Anyway, I've said my piece I'd love us all to get along. I don't feel the need to identify as either because I see them as essentially the same thing.
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RE: Historian explains why Jesus ''mythers'' aren't taken seriously by most Historians
June 5, 2015 at 4:45 pm
(This post was last modified: June 5, 2015 at 4:45 pm by Minimalist.)
Quote:Nobody is disputing that magical Jesus is bullshit; this is known. The line about Christ's exectuon was not added in the middle ages, (a) passage was altered to reflect the alterer's viewpoint. The middle ages alteration was done by a Christian, who tried to alter the text. However the original references still exist.
Hang around here long enough and you'll find out otherwise.
As far as Tacitus I repeat, we have one manuscript which notes that the group allegedly punished by "Nero" were Chrestians. Tacitus' compatriot Suetonius has already discussed Chrestians and we have archaeological evidence that Chrestians were in Rome long before the godboy.
So when you claim that the original references "still exist" you are indulging in wishful thinking (at best) because we do not have an earlier text but we still have Carrier's (among others) observation that no other writer, xtian or Greco-Roman, makes any reference to this act of Nero.
In fact, the closest we come is in Book II of Chronica by the 5th century writer, Sulpicius Severus....a xtian... who writes:
Quote:In the meantime, the number of the Christians being now very large, it happened that Rome was destroyed by fire, while Nero was stationed at Antium. But the opinion of all cast the odium of causing the fire upon the emperor, and he was believed in this way to have sought for the glory of building a new city. And in fact, Nero could not by any means he tried escape from the charge that the fire had been caused by his orders. He therefore turned the accusation against the Christians, and the most cruel tortures were accordingly inflicted upon the innocent. Nay, even new kinds of death were invented, so that, being covered in the skins of wild beasts, they perished by being devoured by dogs, while many were crucified or slain by fire, and not a few were set apart for this purpose, that, when the day came to a close, they should be consumed to serve for light during the night.
He does not credit "Tacitus" as the source but that could simply be poor form. More important is that the vital quote which you hang your hat on does not appear. At least this narrows down the time frame for when the forgery took place!
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RE: Historian explains why Jesus ''mythers'' aren't taken seriously by most Historians
June 5, 2015 at 4:45 pm
(This post was last modified: June 5, 2015 at 4:46 pm by TheMessiah.)
(June 5, 2015 at 4:43 pm)robvalue Wrote: OK, well the title here says they're not taken seriously, when both positions overlap by about 99% in my reckoning. I mean really, even a mythicist will say you could find some guy back then and just base it on him. It wouldn't make a lot of difference. There were bound to be many "potentials" of which any could be built upon in the same way.
For a bigger difference in the cases requires believing a bit more in the gospels, when referring to the writings of people who were clearly either mentally ill or making stuff up.
Anyway, I've said my piece I'd love us all to get along. I don't feel the need to identify as either because I see them as essentially the same thing.
OK then, agree to disagree.
I think this discussion has ran it's course for me.
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RE: Historian explains why Jesus ''mythers'' aren't taken seriously by most Historians
June 5, 2015 at 6:55 pm
(June 5, 2015 at 2:30 pm)TheMessiah Wrote: (June 5, 2015 at 2:22 pm)Parkers Tan Wrote: "Even without looking at the Gospel material"?
How can the Gospels be counted as evidence of Jesus? They are the claim.
The magic in the gospel is nonsense; but the historical time and characters are real, e.g. Pontius Pilate
Some may well be. But using one part of a book to support a claim in another part is still circular.
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RE: Historian explains why Jesus ''mythers'' aren't taken seriously by most Historians
June 5, 2015 at 6:56 pm
(June 5, 2015 at 2:33 pm)Dystopia Wrote: I have a question - Why are the gospels automatically dismissed as unreliable in its entirety? There's certainly a load of horsecrap (probably most of it) but shouldn't it be analysed like any other historical document to find which contexts are reliable and not? Why do I see people on this board instantly label all the bible as invalid? Don't all myths need some kind of real life event to serve as an inspiration?
See my answer above.
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RE: Historian explains why Jesus ''mythers'' aren't taken seriously by most Historians
June 5, 2015 at 7:05 pm
I didn't read the OP, nor do I intend to. Tim O'Neill is an 'historian' in roughly the same sense that Dr. Seuss is a surgeon.
Boru
‘I can’t be having with this.’ - Esmeralda Weatherwax
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RE: Historian explains why Jesus ''mythers'' aren't taken seriously by most Historians
June 5, 2015 at 7:11 pm
(June 5, 2015 at 7:05 pm)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote: I didn't read the OP, nor do I intend to. Tim O'Neill is an 'historian' in roughly the same sense that Dr. Seuss is a surgeon.
Boru
Assumed as much. So I didn't even look up that O'Neill character. With this OP, I'm always wondering if he isn't some kind of Poe. The discussions always move in very tight circles with this one.
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RE: Historian explains why Jesus ''mythers'' aren't taken seriously by most Historians
June 5, 2015 at 7:38 pm
(This post was last modified: June 5, 2015 at 7:39 pm by BrianSoddingBoru4.)
I think I see what may be the sticking point here.
When atheists make the claim, 'There is no evidence for an historical Jesus', they are manifestly not claiming that it is an utter impossibility that an itinerant preacher with a name very like 'Yeshua-bar-Yusef' got into some trouble with the authorities in 1st century Palestine. By and large, what atheists are claiming is that there is no evidence for an historic Jesus who corresponds in large part to the figure depicted in the Gospel narratives and the Pauline epistles.
My own opinion on this (unlike O'Neill, I'm an actual historian, by education and training, if not by profession) is that the situation is pretty closely mirrored by the 'Arthur of Britain' problem. In both cases, we have 'histories' of dubious reliability - and with a pretty clear bias -, penned long after the events they relate, in which the central figure is credited with remarkable/miraculous abilities. In both cases, we have a central figure who seems tied to actual, historic events (the reign of Tiberius, the Battle of Mount Badon), but not even a scintilla of undisputed physical evidence.
So, could there have been a Romanized Briton warlord who went about bashing Saxons for fun and profit? Maybe, but this person bears about as much resemblance to Arthur of the Round Table as an unwashed, illiterate rabbi bears to the Jesus of the Gospels.
Boru
‘I can’t be having with this.’ - Esmeralda Weatherwax
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