Kishkumen wrote:Analytics wrote:I'm tired of you assuming I have some weird personal preference for Jesus not existing historically.
If you don't want to engage Carrier's actual arguments or refer me to somebody that does, that's fine. But I'm not the kind of guy that is going to be persuaded by a bishop telling me he's personally disappointed in me for not wanting to believe the evidence in favor of the restoration that "objective" people know is convincing.
I guess what it takes for you or Philo Sofee to acknowledge a response to Carrier is such is that the respondent adopt Carrier's methodology and use it to show how he is wrong. Far be it from you guys to acknowledge that historians who do not use Bayesian analysis might have sound reasons for being skeptical of Carrier's use of the same, and to respond to those reasons in a substantive way. And so, you are not the only person who is getting tired of the other side of the discussion.
LOL. It's been a good thread. Just as I don't need to see the words
modus ponens and
modus tollens to evaluate whether an argument is logically valid, I don't need somebody dressing up their arguments with
a priori and
conditional probability to see that it is following basic Bayesian reasoning. Quoting Tucker, "historians generally practice methods that are derived from Bayesian logic." Or as I said above, "The Bayes approach is to look at all of the evidence, and then evaluate how consistent it is with competing hypotheses. That's what a competent analysis would do anyway--expressing it in Bayesian terms just formalizes the reasoning."
Contrary to repeated assertions to the contrary, I don't really care whether Jesus was historical or not. I do find it to be an interesting question though. Did he exist? I'm agnostic about that. On the one hand, I find Carrier's arguments to be compelling. On the other hand, I recognize the fact that most experts hold other opinions, and also recognize the fact that while I feel confident in evaluating whether his arguments are
valid, I don't begin to have the background or expertise to know if they are
sound.
So, I'm agnostic. If it somehow mattered and wasn't a mere intellectual exercise, I'd put my money with somebody in the mainstream. I have a ton of respect for you guys. I'd absolutely love to hear somebody knowledgeable make a compelling case that Jesus existed historically. But until such an argument is made and brought to my attention, I'm stuck in a position like Professor Anthon's:
I cannot evaluate an argument that has not been made.