• cerement@slrpnk.net
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    8 months ago

    there’s enough pieces of the holy cross to assemble a few extra … you know, just in case …

  • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Take it one step further: outside of the New Testament, all the “evidence” that Jesus ever existed at all is circumstantial at best and from a handful of religious Jewish and Roman historians with enormous confirmation bias.

    Historians who specialize in that time and area are (for obvious reasons) amongst the most frequently religious academics outside of actual theologians, so most of them have enormous confirmation biases as well.

    • Hypx@fedia.io
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      8 months ago

      This is known as “mythicism.” The problem is that it basically requires you to believe in a vast conspiracy by historians and/or that nothing from history can be verified via textual sources. The basic argument against it is that it makes any sort of critical analysis of the past nearly impossible.

      • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        No, it’s known as source skepticism.

        It’s not exactly tinfoil hattery not to automatically trust the objectivity of people whose deeply held but completely unscientific beliefs rely on a specific conclusion.

        Especially not when those beliefs are inherently authoritarian and have been the enforced default for billions of people for over a millennium.

        • Hypx@fedia.io
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          8 months ago

          Mythicism takes “source skepticism” to conspiratorial levels. They effectively dismiss all experts and historical scholars views on the topic. It is not far off from being a tinfoil hat level of skepticism.

          • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            What I’m saying isn’t mysticism, though. Not even close.

            You’re just building a strawman mystic because you don’t have a counterargument to what I’m ACTUALLY saying.

            • Hypx@fedia.io
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              8 months ago

              It is exactly mythicism. Everything you said is a repeat of stuff said by mythicists a thousand times over.

              • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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                8 months ago

                Dude, you’re talking absolute nonsense.

                Speaking of repeating things, saying " it’s mysticism" again and again doesn’t make you any less wrong.

                • Hypx@fedia.io
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                  8 months ago

                  Again, your argument is just a copy of what other people have said a thousand times over. At least acknowledge that.

          • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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            8 months ago

            If those experts and scholars are looking at the same dearth of evidence, they don’t magically count as additional evidence, themselves.

            … also, Viking_Hippie keeps misreading the word you’re using and bickering about something else entirely.

      • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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        8 months ago

        It’s not a conspiracy because no one says they planned to do it. It’s just being skeptical. If they want to believe something then they’re more likely to think evidence confirms that belief. Also, since that was the default view, they’re more likely to accept it. Assuming that they must be right is not the only way we can trust historians. I’d argue the only way to really trust them is to assume they can be wrong and analyze what they say and what they’re basing it on.

        • Hypx@fedia.io
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          8 months ago

          No one is suggesting that historical scholars are always right. But the weight of evidence is on their side. The other point is that the mythicism position comes from people with very little or zero credibility. Since this topic has been around for decades, you think they would convince at least a few conventional scholars to just their side. This has instead been basically zero. The rational conclusion is that the mythicism side is either wrong or simply doesn’t have enough evidence to be a viable theory.

          • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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            8 months ago

            The rational conclusion is that the mythicism side is either wrong or simply doesn’t have enough evidence to be a viable theory.

            There is almost no secular evidence for it, and it is only on those who posit he exists to prove it. So yeah, there’s very little (zero) evidence that he didn’t exist, or at least the accounts from the Bible aren’t accurate. There can never be any evidence for that unless we lived in that time. That doesn’t mean we need to trust the alternative. I don’t believe in any god, and I don’t need evidence they aren’t real. Equally I don’t necessarily believe Jesus was real, because essentially all evidence for that has a motive to prove he was real.

            • Hypx@fedia.io
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              8 months ago

              Almost no evidence is not “no evidence.” That’s pretty much where the mythicism position falls apart, because they have to resort to dismissing what evidence we have to make their position valid. The other point is that if we use the level of standards demanded by mythicists, virtually all people from history can no longer be verified as real. It effectively deletes most of history.

      • VirtualOdour@sh.itjust.works
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        8 months ago

        The thing about that is we know the people you’re saying that would need to conspire and lie absolutely did because literally everything in their gospels is made up - beside those all you have is few later people vaguely saying Christians exist which no one doubts

        Then if he did exist and was in anyway significant we have to ask why did none of the contemporaries write about him or events when we have plenty of writing about less important things from the exact time and region.

        • Hypx@fedia.io
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          8 months ago

          You have an entirely invalid understanding of what people actually wrote in that time period and what would survive. This is before the printing press, and nearly everyone was illiterate. As a result, only a tiny fraction of events would be written down, and without the printing press nearly all of it would be lost to time. What we do have are things that were hand-copied by later scribes. This limits most surviving texts to either be about kings or major political events. Every else is a pure dice-roll for survival. So you wouldn’t actually expect anything written about the historical Jesus to survive to the modern day. But seeing text about him showing up a few decades later is consistent with a real person.

          Also, no historian is saying that we know all of this for certain. It is merely a reconstruction of what is most likely. On the other hand, the mythicism position produces no coherent alternative explanation. It just insists that a historical Jesus didn’t exist, and replaces it will a thousands different possible answers without ever converging into a single answer.

          • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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            8 months ago

            On the other hand, the mythicism position produces no coherent alternative explanation. It just insists that a historical Jesus didn’t exist, and replaces it will a thousands different possible answers without ever converging into a single answer.

            How is not having a singular answer evidence that he (as written in the Bible) was real? It’s only evidence that we don’t have enough evidence, and almost certainly never will.

            Not being able to explain how the planets moved isn’t evidence that the accepted model before Galileo was accurate, even though all agreement then was behind it. The issue is that people had a motive to promote geocentrism. This example could be proven with later observations though. The historicity of Jesus will not have this benefit.

            We could accept that there’s agreement on one side and trust it, or we can understand that our knowledge is flawed and biased and question it.

            • Hypx@fedia.io
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              8 months ago

              Historical scholars do not claim the story from the Bible is real. In fact, they have done a very good job of figuring where they came from and how it likely differs from the real person.

              You’re also making a lousy guilt by association fallacy by suggesting that since past scientific knowledge was wrong, it therefore must be wrong in this very specific context too.

              Very few people in the historical community cares whether a historical Jesus existed. This is a true ad hominem fallacy. They merely point out that the evidence suggests that he existed, regardless of what anyone thinks of that.

              • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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                8 months ago

                You’re also making a lousy guilt by association fallacy by suggesting that since past scientific knowledge was wrong, it therefore must be wrong in this very specific context too.

                Dude, you’re just trying to make me sound wrong. I did nothing of the sort. That example was there to say we can be wrong by concensus, not that we are. I don’t know how you can even pull that meaning from it if you try. Just stop. I’m not telling you not to believe anything. I’m saying why I don’t necessarily believe it and why. I don’t think they’re wrong. I just don’t think they’re right either. I don’t really have an opinion on it because him existing or not has no bearing on reality.

                Very few people in the historical community cares whether a historical Jesus existed. This is a true ad hominem fallacy.

                The people who they’re basing their knowledge on for sure had an opinion on it, whether they do or not. We have little to no first hand records. Almost everything is recorded by someone who cared. To ignore this would be a huge issue with the legitimacy of the argument.

                • Hypx@fedia.io
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                  8 months ago

                  Of course, anything can be wrong. But it cannot be the basis of any argument. For one thing, this can easily be applied to your position. You could be wrong too.

                  The people who they’re basing their knowledge on for sure had an opinion on it, whether they do or not. We have little to no first hand records. Almost everything is recorded by someone who cared. To ignore this would be a huge issue with the legitimacy of the argument.

                  Historical scholars will be the first to tell you that this is the problem with all of history. There are almost never first-hand records of any event before the modern era. Their job is to piece together a sequence of events that is most likely based on what evidence they do have. If this isn’t sufficient for you, then problem then becomes that nearly all of history before the modern era can no longer be verified.

  • Davel23@fedia.io
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    8 months ago

    The first poster goes by the name “Godless Engineer” on YouTube, it’s a great channel with a lot of insightful atheist content, and pretty funny too.

  • numberfour002@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    There’s only one thing I need to have that proves those crosses are the one real cross. The infallible St. George Michael said it best: “Yes I gotta have faith. Ooh, I gotta have faith. Because I gotta have faith, faith, faith. I gotta have faith, faith, faith.”

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    8 months ago

    One can read Josephus and Jewish literature that says he wasn’t the Messiah. The historical record is there.

    Was he the Messiah? That’s where the evidence is lacking.

    I’ll take another moment to again promote, The Passover Plot. It’s a remarkably good scholarly historical look at the life of the man as best we can understand it. I came away respecting Jesus as a very clever religious guy who deftly engineered himself to be on that cross because he was fucking brilliant and he believed he was the one. Great read!

  • K0W4L5K1@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    8 months ago

    The only religious artifact that I am genuinely curious about is the shroud of Turin even if it’s not from that time the imprint thing is still like wtf