richardMdBorn wrote:What do you think about the theory of a written document Q that the synoptic gospels used as a source (I know, you'll pounce on the word theory). And of course a the theory you're affirming depends on the gospels being late. If Mark and Luke both predate the destruction of Jerusalem, your argument has much less force.
I understand the basic argument: that the relationship between the contents of Mathew, Mark, and Luke indicate that Mathew and Luke were both derived from two sources: Mark and a no-longer-existing “Q”. I’m way out of my depth here, but it seems clear to me that there must be some truth to that. The question that remains is where did the differences come from? Were they just made up? I would think your best case is that the authors of Luke and Mathew really had first or second-hand knowledge of Jesus, but didn’t know where to begin writing their stories, so they (and probably their scribes) sat down with Mark and Q, started copying and compiling, but then made insertions or corrections whenever they had any disagreements or new information.
mikwut wrote:HI Analytics welcome back,
Thanks, great to be back!
On Richard Carrier, the Prick
mikwut wrote:Oh yes, I quite agree. I flippantly wrote too generally and should have specified. As I pointed out with a book reference to Philo above I just don't buy Carrier's bias toward the academy that includes atheist, agnostic, jewish and Christian scholars that conclude very unflattering pictures of Jesus to a believer but a mythical Jesus, that could in fact comport better to a believing paradigm, is not taken seriously and the traditional method is somehow abandoned in that narrow undertaking. It is just absurd.
The majority has been wrong before. It might be unlikely that they are wrong, but I wouldn’t call it absurd.
I suppose I’ll also say for the record that I really don’t like Carrier’s views on this being dismissed as a simple “bias” or “strong personal desire for there not to be a historical Jesus” or whatever. He claims that he doesn’t care about the issue one way or the other, and only started down this road because it was a funded project he was asked to do. But regardless, it would be a lot more productive to demonstrate why he’s wrong rather than to just presume that he’s wrong and speculate about what emotional or cognitive shortcomings cause him to be wrong.
"All the Evidence"
mikwut wrote:More specifically, he's simply claiming that all of the evidence and background information needs to be considered. Then, two questions need to be asked: 1- if the historicity hypothesis is true, what's the probability it would have produced the sum total of all of this evidence? 2- if the mysticism hypothesis is true, what's the probability it would have produced the sum total of all of this evidence? In principle, this doesn't contradict the "traditional historical method", does it?
No not at all, and what you just stated is the traditional historical method. He just doesn't apply all the evidence, which isn't surprising given his lone wolf status.
He endeavors to apply all of the evidence. That’s what he claims in his 700+ page book that painstakingly catalogs the evidence he is considering, at least. He also claims that he would welcome specific additions to the evidence or corrections to how he interprets it or weighs the probabilities.
It does make me wonder, though. Does, say, Bart Ehrman really apply “the traditional historical method” when he sets out to prove Jesus exists. From all of the reviews of Did Jesus Exist that I’ve read, all Ehrman does is make appeals to authority and appeals to the majority, and then list several bits of evidence that allegedly prove Jesus exists. That’s a very different approach than systematically looking at all of the evidence and considering whether it is more consistent with the historical or mystic hypothesis.
Addressing an Actual Issue (THANK YOU!!!)
mikwut wrote:Symmachus makes an excellent point in regards to this:Well, it's hardly that simple. That "evidence" doesn't speak for itself and one has to make judgements of some kind about what it is doing and saying in its own context before you can start deciding whether some hypothesis conforms to it or not. There is an interpretive rehearsal that goes on before the show can even begin (see Kish's examples above). We know that the same processes of thinking were at play in thinking about Augustus and about Hercules. How do you account for that in selecting what constitutes "evidence" without already making a judgement that one is historical and one is not?
a good example of what Symmachus eloquently points out in Carrier, and respecting what you found appealing from Doherty is in regards to the silence in Paul. Carrier finds this silence 'bizarre' and since it is bizarre Carrier concludes that it is unexpected, infrequent and therefore historically improbable. (page 515 On The Historical Jesus)
But the wider literature doesn't bear this out. What Carrier finds improbable, and infrequent isn't so, it appears in a large number of other letters, going well into the Second Century, by what are historicist writers. Graham Stanton further points out that this is not just something unique to Christian writings, but that also '[p]recise historical and chronological references are few and far between in the numerous Jewish writings discovered in the caves around the Dead Sea near Qumran'. (Stanton, Graham. The Gospels and Jesus, Second Edition, Oxford Bible Series, 2002, page 144)
The silence of the second century writers is nearly identical to the silence found in Paul….
This is precisely the type of productive criticism that is needed. Thank you. If the universe of evidence that Carrier examines were approached this way and expanded as needed, one could use the Bayesian formula against him; e.g. “So, when the evidence is analyzed correctly and all points are taken into consideration, we see that the probability of Jesus existing is in the 99% to 99.9999% range (rather than the .025% to 33% range that Carrier calculates).
Did Paul Exist?
mikwut wrote:o here is the question: how do we know Paul wasn't a mystic? It's easy to assume he was talking about the Jesus described in the gospels if you read four gospels before you read his epistles. But if you were familiar with mysticism rather than the gospels, would you just as easily assume he was talking about mysticism? That being the case, what was Paul really talking about?
Well how do I unpack this in a post or a few? How about this, why just ask that question? Plenty of mythicist's outside of Carrier believe Paul himself never existed and give plenty of historical reasoning for doing so. But Carrier has to rely on traditional historians and method for his assertion that Paul was historical. Why wouldn't the traditional method fail here?
The evidence in favor of the existence of Paul is much more clear and direct than the evidence that Jesus existed. We should all be able to agree on that, so that isn’t a very good example to illustrate anything. In any case, Carrier’s point isn’t that the “traditional method” itself fails. His point is that “the traditional method” hasn’t been fully and correctly applied to the specific question of Jesus’s existence.
I’m just not impressed by angry responses to Carrier of the form, “How DARE Carrier question whether Jesus exited! EVERYBODY who is ANYBODY already knows He existed. Carrier’s argument is so heretical I’m not even going to do it the honor of engaging his actual arguments. After all, that’s exactly what Carrier wants!”
mikwut wrote:That's basically the way Carrier phrases the question. It's conceivable that a historical Jesus was embellished with supernatural abilities and accomplishments. Likewise, it's conceivable that a mystic Jesus was embellished with an earthly history. In light of all of the evidence, which of those two conceivable hypotheses is more likely?
Currently the former. The reasons are manifold.
I’m happy to take your word on it, but it would be helpful if somebody laid out the evidence and demonstrated specifically how Carrier is wrong.
mikwut wrote:The novelty of a mystic Jesus is intriguing to me. Carrier is a bit of an arrogant prick and I don't particularly like aligning myself with him. But I find his arguments worthy of consideration.
I'm not adverse to using Baye's theorem in the manner you outline for specific and appropriate historical issues and if it helps historical research all the better. I do think your falling for Carrier's smuggling of Baye's to appear more credible but I have deep concerns there as well. My criticism is that Baye's cannot be used properly if its results are so radical from decades and decades of Jesus scholarship from all over the world.
I am yet to read a mathematician or statistician speak highly of Carrier's application and use of Baye's either. If you find one I love to read it….
I happened to shave one’s face this morning, lol.
Carrier Should Stick with History
mikwut wrote: Respecting Carrier's use of Baye's Luke Barnes who criticised Christian William Lane Craig's historical use of the theorem pretty harshly also blasts Carrier's use of the theorem:
https://letterstonature.wordpress.com/2 ... er-part-1/
Atheist Jeffery Jay Lowder, the co-founder of Internet Infidels reviewed the exchange between Barnes and Carrier he sometimes agrees with Carrier in some points but concludes Barnes' criticisms of Carrier's use of Bayes is a "a prima facie devastating critique". http://www.patheos.com/blogs/secularout ... ne-tuning/
….
I read the Luke Barnes essay you linked to, but I haven’t read, “Neither the Life nor the Universe Appear Intelligently Designed.” From the quotes Barnes provided, it’s clear that in that essay Carrier was being quite sloppy and perhaps inconsistent with his descriptions of different elements of probability and Bayesian analysis. I can’t comment more on what they say without reading Carrier’s actual essay. However, at this point I’d be quite surprised if I found the essay to be very good.
But I fail to see how any of that shows that his general approach in Proving History is invalid.
Qualified Advocacy of Bayesian Historical Analysis
If you are looking for a fully qualified reference that speaks highly of Carrier’s use of Bayes, have you considered Dr. Aviezer Tucker of Harvard University? While not a mathematician or statistician per se, he has written a book published in 2004 by Cambridge University Press called, Our Knowledge of the Past: A Philosophy of Histiography that presents a Bayesian philosophy of histiography.
As Philo noted above, in 2016 Tucker reviewed Carrier’s Proving History in the journal History and Theory. In the review, he confirms that he is still “committed to a Bayesian framework.” He also observes that Carrier “seems to believe” one of my own points I’ve been arguing in this thread: “historians generally practice methods that are derived from Bayesian logic, or at least they should.”
Just think how many one time events happen in history - how is that translated into probability sufficiently? I just see no way out of the subjectivity nightmare with Bayes used in the manner Carrier advocates.
If it’s all too subjective to describe with any real likelihood anyway, how could the “traditional method” make any statement about the likelihood that Jesus existed in history?