> I have pointed out, many times, that for an extraordinary claim like this one, we require more than we do for a mundane claim. Its a question you can't even bring yourself to answer, you just dodge it all day.
I haven't dodged it at all, but answered it several times. For the 3rd time, evidence is grounded in the reliability of the source, not in the mundanity or extraordinariness of the claim. Extraordinary claims don't need extraordinary evidence, they just need a reliable source like mundane claims.
> Because he wrote it first. But also, the issues you're bringing up are not strong enough to hold up a resurrection claim. But that's a subject you simply do not want to talk about.
The main issue with this part of the conversation was not to uphold a resurrection claim but to uphold that that Gospel authors are reliable sources.
> It makes more sense that they picked this author for some reason that we don't understand, than that a resurrection actually happened.
You're jumping too far. There are many steps between reliable authors and the evidences for the resurrection. I don't assume, "Oh, it was Mark, therefore the resurrection must be true!" That's nonsense. But you keep asserting that we can't trust the Gospel authors, and I am repeatedly showing you step #1: The Gospel authors were most likely Mt, Mk, Lk, and Jn. The discussion has to go from there, then, through numerous steps before we get to the credibility of the resurrection accounts.
> then do you see why saying "well the evidence is really good compared to evidence for other claims that we believe" makes no sense?
Then thank God I didn't say that! That comment was about identifying the Gospel authors and the very beginning of examining their credibility. I didn't even begin to jump from "Mark wrote Mark, and the Gospels stand up well compared to other ancient documents, therefore the resurrection happened." I didn't even get close to that. There are many steps between "Mark wrote Mark" to "the Gospels stand up well" to "evidences for the resurrection."
But it certainly makes sense to compare the Gospel accounts with each other and with other ancient documents. That's how we determine accuracy, reliability, and eventually credibility. Is this clear to you?
> All you have is the evidence I presented.
"Given what you presented" is skewing the case. That's why you're pushing so hard for me to answer your set-up question, but I won't fall into your trap. I won't answer it as is.
> The problem is, its still more likely that they assigned it to this guy for some reason that we don't know, than that a guy was resurrected from the dead. That's the problem. You don't weigh your explanations against the claim we're talking about.
See above. There are many steps between "Mark wrote Mark" and "Jesus rose from the dead.
> And yet science would reject the claim in the scenario I proposed.
As I've said several times, there are many truths outside of science's field. Because science rejects a claim doesn't necessarily say anything about its untruth. Now, if it's a claim of natural phenomena, then possibility science rejecting the claim has weight (though through the centuries science has rejected many claims that turned out later to be true). But if it's a supernatural phenomenon, the best science can say is "No comment."
> Most scholars disagree with you, we do not have that. No.
"Most" is pretty tricky. How many? What percentage? You don't know. There is a large contingent of scholars who agree with me. We have to weigh the evidence, not the number of scholars. Most scholars used to think the Earth was flat, the Earth was the center of the universe, and that washing hands from patient to patient was unnecessary. Your appeal to the alleged majority may be a fallacy of authority.
> Did Tacitus say a resurrection occurred? Was he an eye witness? What is the value of what he said?
Tacitus was not an eyewitness of anything he wrote about, yet the value of what he said is rated very highly. And, no, he didn't say a resurrection occurred. He mentioned Jesus's death. It's just one piece of many. I'm not trying to jump from "Tacitus mentioned Jesus's crucifixion" to "Therefore Jesus rose from the dead." There are many steps of evidence and logic along this road.
> it makes no sense to compare the resurrection claim to the claim of a thing we know happens. You keep making this error.
I'm not making this error. We have barely begun this discussion. You seem to think that because I mentioned the first step that I'm claiming it verifies the last step. It doesn't. There are many steps, many evidences, much history, and logical considerations to get from Point 1 to the conclusion of resurrection.
> I don't know how you know that.
The records of history.
> So false religions grow.
Yes, agreed: False religions grow, sometimes to very large populations. That doesn't mean they're true. We have to use appropriate measures, not just growth, to determine truth. My explanation about the growth of the church was one step of many that speak to us of the truth of the resurrection. Its growth was sudden, unexpected, in an unexpected and hostile environment, without military force or cultural acceptance. It warrants looking at.
> I don't think most people who heard the stories were even literate, they weren't able to read the text themselves.
1st-century Palestine was more a non-literate culture than an illiterate one. Actually Palestine was probably one of the most literate environments on the planet at the time because of the emphasis of Jews to teach their sons how to read the Torah. They learned to read, to memorize, to think critically, and to teach. Now, that doesn't mean they could read Greek, but they could most likely read. There are many evidences to support this perspective:
- The letter from Babatha, and many common documents of normal business
- Minted coins with messages on them
- Many personal inscriptions on various and sundry articles
- Ossuary inscriptions
- Potsherds with school exercises on them
- Luke sought out reliable sources for his Gospel, so they must have existed.
- Letters of Paul prove writing was current in the early decades of the church
- Zechariah wrote on a wax tablet (Lk. 1)
- The Pharisees, chief priests, and scribes were literate (Mt. 12.3, 5)
- Recent studies of graffiti in locations like Pompeii, Herculaneum, and Smyrna establish the literacy of the poorly-educated lower classes.
- Brian J. Wright’s historical research (Communal Reading in the Time of Jesus) shows that communal reading was widely practiced in the first century. Communal reading events were widespread socially and geographically. They happened in both formal and informal venues. All sorts of people were reading and reciting literary works. Public reading was a trend of the day as smartphones are now. There are accounts of teachers in the 1st century complaining about students trying to fast track their schooling so they could participate in the reading culture. People were even quick to correct a speaker who was making a mistake (Jn. 12.32-34). There are other 1st-c. accounts where someone in the audience would stand up and object to some detail being shared in a communal reading event because it differed from what they had been hearing elsewhere. There are countless examples after the 1st century of somebody standing up to read, and there’s an uproar in the congregation over one word that had changed because of a new translation. But this is also true in the 2nd and 1st centuries.
- Martial, 1st-c. writer, speaks of how annoying it was when people were reading everywhere to everyone, even while he was in a public bathroom.
> I'm saying we don't have enough to conclude this is true. I am NOT, I repeat, again, NOT, saying that this shows its false.
OK, thanks for the clarification.
> I have pointed out, many times, that for an extraordinary claim like this one, we require more than we do for a mundane claim. Its a question you can't even bring yourself to answer, you just dodge it all day.
I haven't dodged it at all, but answered it several times. For the 3rd time, evidence is grounded in the reliability of the source, not in the mundanity or extraordinariness of the claim. Extraordinary claims don't need extraordinary evidence, they just need a reliable source like mundane claims.
> Because he wrote it first. But also, the issues you're bringing up are not strong enough to hold up a resurrection claim. But that's a subject you simply do not want to talk about.
The main issue with this part of the conversation was not to uphold a resurrection claim but to uphold that that Gospel authors are reliable sources.
> It makes more sense that they picked this author for some reason that we don't understand, than that a resurrection actually happened.
You're jumping too far. There are many steps between reliable authors and the evidences for the resurrection. I don't assume, "Oh, it was Mark, therefore the resurrection must be true!" That's nonsense. But you keep asserting that we can't trust the Gospel authors, and I am repeatedly showing you step #1: The Gospel authors were most likely Mt, Mk, Lk, and Jn. The discussion has to go from there, then, through numerous steps before we get to the credibility of the resurrection accounts.
> then do you see why saying "well the evidence is really good compared to evidence for other claims that we believe" makes no sense?
Then thank God I didn't say that! That comment was about identifying the Gospel authors and the very beginning of examining their credibility. I didn't even begin to jump from "Mark wrote Mark, and the Gospels stand up well compared to other ancient documents, therefore the resurrection happened." I didn't even get close to that. There are many steps between "Mark wrote Mark" to "the Gospels stand up well" to "evidences for the resurrection."
But it certainly makes sense to compare the Gospel accounts with each other and with other ancient documents. That's how we determine accuracy, reliability, and eventually credibility. Is this clear to you?
> All you have is the evidence I presented.
"Given what you presented" is skewing the case. That's why you're pushing so hard for me to answer your set-up question, but I won't fall into your trap. I won't answer it as is.
> The problem is, its still more likely that they assigned it to this guy for some reason that we don't know, than that a guy was resurrected from the dead. That's the problem. You don't weigh your explanations against the claim we're talking about.
See above. There are many steps between "Mark wrote Mark" and "Jesus rose from the dead.
> And yet science would reject the claim in the scenario I proposed.
As I've said several times, there are many truths outside of science's field. Because science rejects a claim doesn't necessarily say anything about its untruth. Now, if it's a claim of natural phenomena, then possibility science rejecting the claim has weight (though through the centuries science has rejected many claims that turned out later to be true). But if it's a supernatural phenomenon, the best science can say is "No comment."
> Most scholars disagree with you, we do not have that. No.
"Most" is pretty tricky. How many? What percentage? You don't know. There is a large contingent of scholars who agree with me. We have to weigh the evidence, not the number of scholars. Most scholars used to think the Earth was flat, the Earth was the center of the universe, and that washing hands from patient to patient was unnecessary. Your appeal to the alleged majority may be a fallacy of authority.
> Did Tacitus say a resurrection occurred? Was he an eye witness? What is the value of what he said?
Tacitus was not an eyewitness of anything he wrote about, yet the value of what he said is rated very highly. And, no, he didn't say a resurrection occurred. He mentioned Jesus's death. It's just one piece of many. I'm not trying to jump from "Tacitus mentioned Jesus's crucifixion" to "Therefore Jesus rose from the dead." There are many steps of evidence and logic along this road.
> it makes no sense to compare the resurrection claim to the claim of a thing we know happens. You keep making this error.
I'm not making this error. We have barely begun this discussion. You seem to think that because I mentioned the first step that I'm claiming it verifies the last step. It doesn't. There are many steps, many evidences, much history, and logical considerations to get from Point 1 to the conclusion of resurrection.
> I don't know how you know that.
The records of history.
> So false religions grow.
Yes, agreed: False religions grow, sometimes to very large populations. That doesn't mean they're true. We have to use appropriate measures, not just growth, to determine truth. My explanation about the growth of the church was one step of many that speak to us of the truth of the resurrection. Its growth was sudden, unexpected, in an unexpected and hostile environment, without military force or cultural acceptance. It warrants looking at.
> I don't think most people who heard the stories were even literate, they weren't able to read the text themselves.
1st-century Palestine was more a non-literate culture than an illiterate one. Actually Palestine was probably one of the most literate environments on the planet at the time because of the emphasis of Jews to teach their sons how to read the Torah. They learned to read, to memorize, to think critically, and to teach. Now, that doesn't mean they could read Greek, but they could most likely read. There are many evidences to support this perspective:
[list][*] The letter from Babatha, and many common documents of normal business
[*] Minted coins with messages on them
[*] Many personal inscriptions on various and sundry articles
[*] Ossuary inscriptions
[*] Potsherds with school exercises on them
[*] Luke sought out reliable sources for his Gospel, so they must have existed.
[*] Letters of Paul prove writing was current in the early decades of the church
[*] Zechariah wrote on a wax tablet (Lk. 1)
[*] The Pharisees, chief priests, and scribes were literate (Mt. 12.3, 5)
[*] Recent studies of graffiti in locations like Pompeii, Herculaneum, and Smyrna establish the literacy of the poorly-educated lower classes.
[*] Brian J. Wright’s historical research (Communal Reading in the Time of Jesus) shows that communal reading was widely practiced in the first century. Communal reading events were widespread socially and geographically. They happened in both formal and informal venues. All sorts of people were reading and reciting literary works. Public reading was a trend of the day as smartphones are now. There are accounts of teachers in the 1st century complaining about students trying to fast track their schooling so they could participate in the reading culture. People were even quick to correct a speaker who was making a mistake (Jn. 12.32-34). There are other 1st-c. accounts where someone in the audience would stand up and object to some detail being shared in a communal reading event because it differed from what they had been hearing elsewhere. There are countless examples after the 1st century of somebody standing up to read, and there’s an uproar in the congregation over one word that had changed because of a new translation. But this is also true in the 2nd and 1st centuries.
[*] Martial, 1st-c. writer, speaks of how annoying it was when people were reading everywhere to everyone, even while he was in a public bathroom.[/list]
> I'm saying we don't have enough to conclude this is true. I am NOT, I repeat, again, NOT, saying that this shows its false.
OK, thanks for the clarification.