Materialists

Discussion in 'Politics' started by ShoeshineBoy, May 5, 2004.

  1. damir00

    damir00 Guest

    not a "someone" - someones, plural. the story was part of the tribe's oral history for centuries before being written down (and revised and rewritten and...). the reason it is so finely honed - with so many exquisite details - the basket on the river, the stones in the mouth, "i will harden pharaoh's heart", the vivid plagues - is that it was "market tested" tens of thousands of times on tens of thousands of evenings across tens of thousands of campfires before achieving the form we are now familiar with.

    i ask the question again: if Jews don't have a problem with the allegorical nature of their own texts, why should you?
     
    #751     May 18, 2004
  2. damir00

    damir00 Guest

    i wouldn't have thought to put it that way - but it's exactly true and the primary reason Judaism dispenses with dogma on such things. mandating a belief in something that cannot be demonstrated to be true is essentially a form of mind control and unacceptable to the traditional Jewish notion of our place and role in the universe.

    we are here to think and decide, not quote and recite.
     
    #752     May 18, 2004
  3. LOL! Its terrible worthless research.

    JEM is now showing his utter desperation by falling
    back on Tacitus,Pliny the Younger,Suetonius , and friends. :p


    The reason the biblical scholars focus on Josephus so much
    is because Tacitus and friends have already been rejected
    and are embarrassing , unreliable sources, compared to
    Josephus. Josephus is the BEST THEY HAVE, and Josephus
    is nothing but 3 decade old hearsay from a NON-contemporary
    historian! LOL! :p


    Tacitus wrote 117 years after the fact, wrote nothing but hearsay,
    and got many historical facts WRONG, and is also highly
    suspect of forgery/modification.

    Sigh.... Do I really have to address all this garbage?
    Read for yourself here: http://freethought.mbdojo.com/josephus.html

    I know... ill dismiss this with one fell swoop and make the
    very SAME point again, which JEM cant seem to address.

    NONE OF THESE GUYS ARE CONTEMPORARY HISTORIANS

    This is nothing but hearsay mythology written down decades
    or hundreds of years AFTER THE FACT.


    Sorry.... but there STILL isnt a rational reason to believe
    in a historical jesus.


    Come on JEM, give us ONE contemporary historian!
    Not bullshit worthless mythology hearsay.
    Just ONE...one itty bitty little contemporary historian! ONE Jem!
    OOOOONE! LOL! :p :p


    Case closed.


    peace

    axeman


     
    #753     May 18, 2004
  4. Several important reasons but I'll stick to just two for now:

    1. First of all: intent and deception. Let's stick to the New Testament cuzz I don't really want to argue with a Jewish person about his own scripture. I believe that an examination of the writings and the historical events surrounding the New Testament show that the authors truly believed what they wrote was true.

    2. Supernatural backing. I'll come across as poseltyzing if I say much about this, but I ask the question: how much of your world view is dictated by the fact (I am assuming) that you have had no events in your life that you consider supernatural? Imagine if you're in my shoes and the opposite has occurred? Why would I ignore this aspect of the picture?
     
    #754     May 18, 2004
  5. damir00

    damir00 Guest

    you can't stick to the new testament because all the prophetic underpinnings of c'ianity are taken from Jewish texts. Jews have always know the texts are NOT innerrant - so on what basis can you claim inerrancy?

    from the preface to a standard Jewish Tanakh translation...

    The Unbroken Chain of Uncertainty...ironically, the result is a Bible whose text continually evolves - the changes being justified to preserve the accuracy of tradition."
     
    #755     May 18, 2004
  6. damir00

    damir00 Guest

    none. to quote another cultural artificat..."i've seen things you people wouldn't believe."

    but you're conflating again. i have no issue with what you choose to believe about the supernatural - honestly, i don't.
     
    #756     May 18, 2004
  7. Shoe,

    Even if we agree that "the authors truly believed what they wrote was true", you must agree that that does not
    make it TRUE.

    I can produce 1000 people who BELIEVE all kinds of weird
    shit is true, that ISNT. And I can PROVE that it isnt.


    This is why this historical jesus debate exists.
    You are having numerous debates on the bible and jesus, etc,
    without first even verifying if the person the bible speaks of
    even existed. Seems like a huge waste of time to me.

    For a rational person to believe in jesus, he must first collect
    hard evidence for the existence of jesus.

    Why should you believe in a historical figure?
    1) Recorded in history by contemporary historian, preferably
    multiple ones you can cross reference
    2) They left writings behind
    3) They left other artifacts behind

    In case you didnt know, although we have these for historical
    figures like hitler, and even much older ones like aristotle, we
    have NONE of these for Jesus. So why even debate a book
    of fiction like the bible, until you can prove ITS NOT FICTION???

    The authors are even completely unknown! sheesh!


    And for the record, you quoted me as ASSERTING jesus
    did not exist.

    This is not true, and if I made such an assertion, it was out
    of frustration, trust me.

    My position is that, just like unicorns and elves, there is no
    RATIONAL reason to believe that a historical jesus existed.

    Simple as that.


    Im still waiting to see the evidence. Show us some
    contemporary historians or artifacts please. Until then,
    the "son of god" is a myth.


    peace

    axeman



     
    #757     May 18, 2004
  8. Shoe,

    Even if we agree that "the authors truly believed what they wrote was true", you must agree that that does not
    make it TRUE.

    I can produce 1000 people who BELIEVE all kinds of weird
    shit is true, that ISNT. And I can PROVE that it isnt.


    This is why this historical jesus debate exists.
    You are having numerous debates on the bible and jesus, etc,
    without first even verifying if the person the bible speaks of
    even existed. Seems like a huge waste of time to me.

    For a rational person to believe in jesus, he must first collect
    hard evidence for the existence of jesus.

    Why should you believe in a historical figure?
    1) Recorded in history by contemporary historian, preferably
    multiple ones you can cross reference
    2) They left writings behind
    3) They left other artifacts behind

    In case you didnt know, although we have these for historical
    figures like hitler, and even much older ones like aristotle, we
    have NONE of these for Jesus. So why even debate a book
    of fiction like the bible, until you can prove ITS NOT FICTION???

    The authors are even completely unknown! sheesh!


    And for the record, you quoted me as ASSERTING jesus
    did not exist.

    This is not true, and if I made such an assertion, it was out
    of frustration, trust me.

    My position is that, just like unicorns and elves, there is no
    RATIONAL reason to believe that a historical jesus existed.

    Simple as that.


    Im still waiting to see the evidence. Show us some
    contemporary historians or artifacts please. Until then,
    the "son of god" is a myth.


    peace

    axeman



     
    #758     May 18, 2004
  9. Remember, Axe, there was no Reuters or AP wires. It's remarkable that a smalltown teacher from a backwater nation in the middle of the desert was documented by anyone. Again, you're only looking at it from one side of the argument...
     
    #759     May 18, 2004
  10. As I've said many times, in the absence of faith and the supernatural, you logic is correct. But the only thing I would add is that you do NOT know that it is a fable. You clearly come across not as an agnostic, but as a "you believe in Santa Claus" position.

    I don't believe that if you experienced what I did that you would state things as you do, but you don't want to see things through someone else's eyes, so there's no point in going there...
     
    #760     May 18, 2004