ReliStuPhD wrote:I'll leave it to you to due your due diligence and inform yourself regarding the wide panoply of work that has been done in the Gospels by historians, literary critics, scholars of religion, etc before dismissing it.
I'll say it again:
uwot wrote:...all the "reassuringly rigorous" experts have established is that some version they are happy with is something like the versions that were allegedly written by Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. They can only infer this, because there are no original documents that can be attributed directly to the four evangelists.
There is documentary evidence about documentary evidence about documentary evidence... The entire edifice is an argument from authority. It is not necessarily untrue, but it is fallacious.
ReliStuPhD wrote:I am wholly uninterested in taking how ever many days, weeks, or months to walk you through what is freely available at the library of your local university.
All that would prove is that a lot of effort has been put in to try and reassemble the original texts.
ReliStuPhD wrote:Then again, your next comment gives me reason to think you prefer ignorance to education.
uwot wrote:You do not prove anything about the world by looking at books.
Thanks to the work of scholars, I can read what is no doubt a very good translation of a very close approximation of some texts which are claimed to have been written by some early evangelists.
ReliStuPhD wrote:I am relieved to know that you have personally investigated all the scientific truths you hold to be true, rather than simply learning of them by looking at books.
Learning and proving are different things. If I read a book that claims to be scientific, I expect the content to relate to experimental data that has been recorded by reliable witnesses. In other words, someone somewhere could theoretically show me the actual phenomenon they are describing or extrapolating from. There are no equivalent phenomena that anyone claiming the truth of the gospels can demonstrate, only more documents.
uwot wrote:Anyone can deny the existence of quarks. All they have to do is account for the results of experiments, performed in a range of facilities, that show behaviours consistent with those predicted of different quarks, in a way that accounts for the same data. Simple enough: the data is caused by angel tears. What you cannot deny is that the predicted behaviour of quarks has been empirically confirmed. In other words, you can 'see' quarks, or whatever you choose to call them.
ReliStuPhD wrote:Don't you mean the predicted behavior of angel tears?
uwot wrote:...or whatever you choose to call them.
ReliStuPhD wrote:And, just to be sure, wouldn't denying something and then using data to support that denial actually be what we call "demonstration?" You know, the thing I said was necessary rather than mere denial?
You don't understand the issue. You can attribute the empirical evidence to anything that pleases you, what you cannot deny, as Descartes pointed out, is the empirical evidence.
uwot wrote:There is nothing to see, no empirical data, other than the assertions of people who insist that a book is proof of the existence of Jesus. All you have to do to deny that is say: No it isn't.
ReliStuPhD wrote:Oh, don't get me wrong. You can deny anything. I deny the fact that you're anything other than a lucky monkey banging on a typewriter. But, of course, the burden of proof then rests on me to show this if I wish to be taken seriously.
That is another issue, but yes it does.
uwot wrote:I have never encountered a theist with either the intellectual capacity or integrity to acknowledge that point; it's not always clear which is missing.
ReliStuPhD wrote:To acknowledge what point? That the things they hold to be true are based on evidence of which you're apparently unaware and certainly have neither evaluated nor demonstrated to be faulty? Why, it's positively insane that they don't see things your way!
I suppose insanity could be a factor. The point is the things 'they' hold to be true are
not based on evidence. They are based only on testimony. You either cannot, or will not see that.
uwot wrote:There is no objective standard of historical reliability. However, the type of 'evidence' you can cite in support of your hypothesis would not be taken seriously outside religious studies. In all other fields, your evidence is not historically reliable. That you choose to accept it as historically reliable is no reason for anyone else to take it, or you, seriously.
ReliStuPhD wrote:I'll be sure to tell that to the next historian I meet (probably Monday). I'm sure a historian of Ancient Roman history will be surprised to find that his work is only taken seriously in the field of Religious Studies. Then again, he's an atheist, so I'm sure he'll see right to the truth of your assertion and promptly abandon his life's work.
Given that your claim is that the gospels are historically reliable, you might ask your historian why they don't accept them.
ReliStuPhD wrote:Those who hold to the historical reliability of the Gospels have done this, many times over.
uwot wrote:
Again, all they have done is create a version of some stories that they think are a bit like the originals. They can't even prove that.
ReliStuPhD wrote:It's increasingly clear to me that you've done little, if any, reading on the topic. It doesn't even appear that you understand basic theory on the subject.
It was a while ago, but one of the courses I took as part of my first degree was philosophy of religion. The basic theory you are promoting is that Jesus was an historical figure, because the gospels say so. I understand that, I just don't subscribe to it.
uwot wrote:The atheists you have to deal, if it bothers you, are the ones who assert only that the evidence for the existence of Jesus the man is slight, the evidence for divinity somewhere between non-existent and negligible.
ReliStuPhD wrote:Kindly quote where I've made any argument to the effect that the Gospels are historical evidence of Jesus' divinity. Take as much time as your need. I want you to get it right.
Fair enough.
The atheists you have to deal, if it bothers you, are the ones who assert only that the evidence for the existence of Jesus the man is slight.
ReliStuPhD wrote:...the evidence is squarely on the side of historical reliability, therefore the burden is on the atheist to prove the counter-claim (if he or she chooses to make it. Blaggard has, you have not.)
uwot wrote:Yes I have. You are confusing 'The gospels are unreliable.' with 'The gospels are untrue.'
ReliStuPhD wrote:Hardly, but it is certainly clear that you've confused my statement with something else. Perhaps someone else's argument?
Your issue with Blaggard was:
ReliStuPhD wrote:Blaggard is the one advancing a hypothesis, namely that "that old tome has never been honest about anything even The Gospel truth."
Pretty much my entire argument is that the gospels are unreliable.
ReliStuPhD wrote:Edited to add: In all of this, I assume you're aware that it's almost universally accepted that testimony constitutes evidence, right? You know, in those decidedly non-Religious Studies fields like Law, History... Science. (I'll let you tease out that last one. It's a worthwhile thought experiment. And it's not "in a courtroom.")
In law it is difficult to get a conviction on testimony alone in mature democracies; forensics are generally held to be more reliable.
There is no forensic evidence in support of the gospels.
In history, testimony that is supported by archaeological evidence is taken as more reliable.
There is no archaeological evidence to support the gospels.
In science, I have to rely on the testimony of people better qualified than me, but I expect that any factual claims made by scientists can be supported with empirical evidence.
There is no empirical evidence to support the gospels.
You are becoming petulant.