> Now you're just getting snarky. Do you want to have a reasonable discussion or don't you?
Sure, but you keep trying to smuggle in Josephus as a viable bit of evidence about Jesus. It simply isn't. There's no debate. Not even Christian historians give it any credibility.
> With evidence like this (a cold case), we don't deal in certainties but in plausibilities and probabilities.
So then you acknowledge its not sufficient evidence to justify belief in supernatural claims.
> The evidence at hand is sufficient but not proof.
I stand corrected. You acknowledge its not good evidence, then argue that its sufficient to justify claims of the supernatural, something that has never been demonstrated to exist. This is why this evidence doesn't stand up to good standards, such as those used by science. So while you may think unfalsifisble stories are good evidence for the supernatural, science doesn't, our legal system doesn't, and you probably don't if it's a claim that contradicts your religious beliefs.
> You didn't fix it, you took it out of the logic it belongs in.
No, I changed to words to make it so it puts the burden of proof where it belongs.
> The Gospel accounts have been proved to be true at hundreds of points.
Just because a story mentions ordinary events or locations that may be true, doesn't make the extraordinary parts somehow true, nor does it change the likelihood of them being true, nor does it justify belief that they're true.
None off the supernatural claims have ever been demonstrated to be true. The entire concept of supernatural has never been demonstrated to be true.
> you just denied the evidence at hand.
I denied the fact that a story in a book, is good evidence for extraordinary claims.
> What I have consistently claimed, and is proven, is that the Gospel accounts have been proved reliable at hundreds of points.
I mean, you might believe this, but you haven't demonstrated it. And if you're talking about ordinary claims, then so what. Nobody is disputing most ordinary claims.
Again, nothing extraordinary in the bible has ever been demonstrated to be true. You can change my mind if you link to a properly peer reviewed paper. Something falsifiable that can be fact checked.
> In a court of law, the burden of proof is on the affirmative, the prosecution.
Yes, and you are just trying to assert that the supernatural claims in the bible are true. You haven't shown your evidenced, and from my own time on this subject, I've yet to see any.
> You seem to misunderstand the milieu of oral communication. When the memory is trained from birth by culture to retain and communicate truth, the reliability factor is high—especially when dealing with a subject of royal or divine importance.
Can you demonstrate this accuracy? No. Can you demonstrate that these stories were considered important enough at the time to train people to remember them word for word? Can you demonstrate that three written stories are the same as those remembered by the specially trained remembered? Can you demonstrate that these stories were remembered by trained remembered?
No, no, and no. These stories were told by regular people to other regular people. At some point, some people got together to write them down.
> This is incorrect. It was written in koine Greek, which has evolved into modern Greek. It's like saying Shakespearean English is a dead language.
Not to belabor the point, but from wiki:
Biblical languages are any of the languages employed in the original writings of the Bible. Partially owing to the significance of the Bible in society, Biblical languages are studied more widely than many other dead languages.
The dead languages part there means that people don't speak those language... Here's the rest of that paragraph from wiki:
Furthermore, some debates exist as to which language is the original language of a particular passage, and about whether a term has been properly translated from an ancient language into modern editions of the Bible. Scholars generally recognize three languages as original biblical languages: Hebrew, Aramaic, and Koine Greek.
It really highlights all that we don't know about the originals.
> We have so many copies of copies, that we can reassemble the original with better than 99% accuracy. We have no reason to doubt the text we have.
Except we can't. This sounds like a post hoc rationalisation, or a defense of a belief, once again you've made a claim without providing anything to back it up.
> The evidence for the traditional authors is far stronger than the evidence against. I would say that we can quite plausibly and even probably know who wrote them: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.
Yeah, you can't even give me any last names. Those are pretty anonymous, aren't they?
> It has. We have 4 accounts of provable reliability, of known provenance, of external corroboration, and of historical accuracy.
Give me your one best single most convincing bit of evidence that demonstrates anything supernatural, or that Yahweh or Jesus is a god who can do supernatural stuff. Let's focus on your one best one.
> The stated point is that Jesus had this reputation.
I get that that is the stated point, but you can point to a hat made today that says Jesus is Lord. That doesn't count as extra biblical evidence. That just shows that the religion had a believer who could make a bowl and could write.
>>There is no extra biblical writings about Jesus that are contemporary.
> You mean aside from the one I just mentioned?
Was it contemporary? No. There's nothing about that that demonstrate someone outside of the bible stories also saw Jesus do any magic.
all lost
Then by definition, they aren't evidence.
> Why does it have to be extrabibilical to be believable?
If there were other accounts of Jesus and what he did, that weren't related to building a narrative about him, they would serve as corroboration of the stories. They would show that there were others, at the time, who may have witnessed and observed the accounts. This all adds to the narrative and makes anything more believable.
I didnt say in the absence of corroboration that it isn't believable, I'm saying that believing the extraordinary claims on the available evident, isn't justified. Corroboration would help, but for things such as a resurrection, it still wouldn't be enough. It would show that many people might have actually believed it, but doesn't mean that what they believe has the actual explanation that they accept.
> That's like saying we can't trust anything about COVID coming out of the hospitals
It's nothing like that at all. If the only evidence we have for covid are stories coming out of a single hospital, no other evidence, nobody missing, getting sick, or dying, but we had some people from a hospital telling stories, then yeah, I wouldn't believe it.
>> Even the bible writings, the earliest of which happened decades after his death.
> Decades is nothing. Let's see, 30 or 40 years ago is Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky
We have contemporary news footage of everything that happened there, and multiple sources corroborate it. There are countless books, magazine articles, video footage, radio programs, actual witnesses that can recount their stories, and we have books, magazine articles and video and audio of witnesses who have recounted their stories. All contemporary.
> Ronald Reagan, Madonna, Cindi Lauper, Nirvana, and the tearing down of the Berlin Wall. It's still SIMPLE to get truth about these things. Simple.
Yes, as explained above. We have tons of contemporary accounts of all of those things, including millions of copies of records for the musicians you listed.
For Jesus and his stories, we have a single source, the bible.
> Now you're just getting snarky. Do you want to have a reasonable discussion or don't you?
Sure, but you keep trying to smuggle in Josephus as a viable bit of evidence about Jesus. It simply isn't. There's no debate. Not even Christian historians give it any credibility.
> With evidence like this (a cold case), we don't deal in certainties but in plausibilities and probabilities.
So then you acknowledge its not sufficient evidence to justify belief in supernatural claims.
> The evidence at hand is sufficient but not proof.
I stand corrected. You acknowledge its not good evidence, then argue that its sufficient to justify claims of the supernatural, something that has never been demonstrated to exist. This is why this evidence doesn't stand up to good standards, such as those used by science. So while you may think unfalsifisble stories are good evidence for the supernatural, science doesn't, our legal system doesn't, and you probably don't if it's a claim that contradicts your religious beliefs.
> You didn't fix it, you took it out of the logic it belongs in.
No, I changed to words to make it so it puts the burden of proof where it belongs.
> The Gospel accounts have been proved to be true at hundreds of points.
Just because a story mentions ordinary events or locations that may be true, doesn't make the extraordinary parts somehow true, nor does it change the likelihood of them being true, nor does it justify belief that they're true.
None off the supernatural claims have ever been demonstrated to be true. The entire concept of supernatural has never been demonstrated to be true.
> you just denied the evidence at hand.
I denied the fact that a story in a book, is good evidence for extraordinary claims.
> What I have consistently claimed, and is proven, is that the Gospel accounts have been proved reliable at hundreds of points.
I mean, you might believe this, but you haven't demonstrated it. And if you're talking about ordinary claims, then so what. Nobody is disputing most ordinary claims.
Again, nothing extraordinary in the bible has ever been demonstrated to be true. You can change my mind if you link to a properly peer reviewed paper. Something falsifiable that can be fact checked.
> In a court of law, the burden of proof is on the affirmative, the prosecution.
Yes, and you are just trying to assert that the supernatural claims in the bible are true. You haven't shown your evidenced, and from my own time on this subject, I've yet to see any.
> You seem to misunderstand the milieu of oral communication. When the memory is trained from birth by culture to retain and communicate truth, the reliability factor is high—especially when dealing with a subject of royal or divine importance.
Can you demonstrate this accuracy? No. Can you demonstrate that these stories were considered important enough at the time to train people to remember them word for word? Can you demonstrate that three written stories are the same as those remembered by the specially trained remembered? Can you demonstrate that these stories were remembered by trained remembered?
No, no, and no. These stories were told by regular people to other regular people. At some point, some people got together to write them down.
> This is incorrect. It was written in koine Greek, which has evolved into modern Greek. It's like saying Shakespearean English is a dead language.
Not to belabor the point, but from wiki:
[quote]Biblical languages are any of the languages employed in the original writings of the Bible. Partially owing to the significance of the Bible in society, Biblical languages are studied more widely than many other dead languages.[/quote]
The dead languages part there means that people don't speak those language... Here's the rest of that paragraph from wiki:
[quote]Furthermore, some debates exist as to which language is the original language of a particular passage, and about whether a term has been properly translated from an ancient language into modern editions of the Bible. Scholars generally recognize three languages as original biblical languages: Hebrew, Aramaic, and Koine Greek.[/quote]
It really highlights all that we don't know about the originals.
> We have so many copies of copies, that we can reassemble the original with better than 99% accuracy. We have no reason to doubt the text we have.
Except we can't. This sounds like a post hoc rationalisation, or a defense of a belief, once again you've made a claim without providing anything to back it up.
> The evidence for the traditional authors is far stronger than the evidence against. I would say that we can quite plausibly and even probably know who wrote them: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.
Yeah, you can't even give me any last names. Those are pretty anonymous, aren't they?
> It has. We have 4 accounts of provable reliability, of known provenance, of external corroboration, and of historical accuracy.
Give me your one best single most convincing bit of evidence that demonstrates anything supernatural, or that Yahweh or Jesus is a god who can do supernatural stuff. Let's focus on your one best one.
> The stated point is that Jesus had this reputation.
I get that that is the stated point, but you can point to a hat made today that says Jesus is Lord. That doesn't count as extra biblical evidence. That just shows that the religion had a believer who could make a bowl and could write.
>>There is no extra biblical writings about Jesus that are contemporary.
> You mean aside from the one I just mentioned?
Was it contemporary? No. There's nothing about that that demonstrate someone outside of the bible stories also saw Jesus do any magic.
all lost
Then by definition, they aren't evidence.
> Why does it have to be extrabibilical to be believable?
If there were other accounts of Jesus and what he did, that weren't related to building a narrative about him, they would serve as corroboration of the stories. They would show that there were others, at the time, who may have witnessed and observed the accounts. This all adds to the narrative and makes anything more believable.
I didnt say in the absence of corroboration that it isn't believable, I'm saying that believing the extraordinary claims on the available evident, isn't justified. Corroboration would help, but for things such as a resurrection, it still wouldn't be enough. It would show that many people might have actually believed it, but doesn't mean that what they believe has the actual explanation that they accept.
> That's like saying we can't trust anything about COVID coming out of the hospitals
It's nothing like that at all. If the only evidence we have for covid are stories coming out of a single hospital, no other evidence, nobody missing, getting sick, or dying, but we had some people from a hospital telling stories, then yeah, I wouldn't believe it.
>> Even the bible writings, the earliest of which happened decades after his death.
> Decades is nothing. Let's see, 30 or 40 years ago is Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky
We have contemporary news footage of everything that happened there, and multiple sources corroborate it. There are countless books, magazine articles, video footage, radio programs, actual witnesses that can recount their stories, and we have books, magazine articles and video and audio of witnesses who have recounted their stories. All contemporary.
> Ronald Reagan, Madonna, Cindi Lauper, Nirvana, and the tearing down of the Berlin Wall. It's still SIMPLE to get truth about these things. Simple.
Yes, as explained above. We have tons of contemporary accounts of all of those things, including millions of copies of records for the musicians you listed.
For Jesus and his stories, we have a single source, the bible.