sock puppet wrote:Mary wrote:But Analytics, again the inputs are arbitrary?
Ah, but you do not assail the methodology of his deductions derived from those arbitrary inputs.
. I am not a mathematician or a statistician. My interest is in the early christian movements from a historical critical perspective.
It seems to me that Carrier is asking the wrong question and stacking the deck in his favour by making a number of assumption which may or may not be true.
In the evidence we do have, a number of different Jesus' are presented. So a better question for me would be *Stand up the real Jesus*. Given that Jesus existed and bearing in mind that each New Testament document that made it into canon appears to have come from different communities with different views what was he really like?
Mark (70ce) presents a human Jesus with brothers and sisters, a Jesus who is generous with authority, who criticises someone for calling him good (only God is good), No virgin birth, no post resurrection narrative, and his family think he has lost his mind.
I get that Paul never met the human Jesus, but he never questions the validity of the experience of those who had met him. Peter for instance with whom he stays on his visit to Jerusalem and where he nearly gets himself killed by a group of more ardent Jesus followers more strongly attached to Judaic practices such as circumcision and who frankly didn't like his ways.
I think people differed on who Jesus was, right from the beginning and they differed fundamentally about his life and it's significance - but the earliest witnesses took the reality of his life on earth for granted and some kind of belief in resurrection was developed to explain why he was the Jewish Messiah despite being killed.
There are most certainly mythical elements in all the canonical narratives, but I see no reason to doubt that underneath the myth lays a real man, and I don't see how Bayes theorum can help me. It's like cutting a cake with a pick axe.