Jagella wrote:I already explained that trusting only the words of "experts" is not sufficient to demonstrate anything's truth.
Its a valid way to support a premise especially when virtually every expert is saying the same thing.
Authorities can be wrong and often are.
But you need to show how they wrong. Not just simply say things like sometimes they are.
Would you accept the argument for evolution based on a "consensus" of scientists?
I consider that to be a valid argument in favour of evolution, yes. If I were to argue against evolution I would need some serious argumentation and evidence in my corner. I would bear the burden to prove it false since it so widely held among experts.
If so, then welcome to the naturalistic world of Darwinian evolution! Genesis is discarded as myth.
Im very happy to concede that given the assumption of naturalism, Darwinism is the best naturalistic explanation for the diversity of life.
There's literally solid evidence for evolution.
You mean theres evidence, such as say the fossil record, and that evidence is interpreted to support Evolutionary theory.
That's why nobody as far as I know makes the inane argument that we can rely on authority for the truth of Darwin's theory.
Its never an inane argument or stupid argument to rely on or appeal to qualified experts.
And Avatar is fiction because we know that people make up wild stories.
Yes we know people make up stories but how do you know Avatar was a made up story?
I cannot date fossils because I do not have the training to do so.
Exactly. So you need to appeal to experts.
However, I could get that training and see first-hand how old they are.
Sure, but you dont have that training now. Further, no one can be an expert in every field. At some point you need to rely on experts. Heck, even experts in one field often have to appeal to and rely on experts in other fields.
So at least in principal I'm not relying on authority as to how old fossils are.
Of course you are. You just said you dont have the training.
The ability to date fossils is available to anybody assuming they can get the training.
But you dont have the training. You rely on experts.
Besides, I'm not saying I know how old fossils are. So I'm not relying on authority regarding their age.
But you inevitably will have to rely on the authority of experts for fossil dating if you ever wish to argue for evolution.
Fortunately, though, I can see fossils or at least photos of them.
Yeah me too. But I have no way of establishing their age. Neither do you. We need experts for that.
That way I can see transitional fossils knowing they exist without relying on authority.
You cant establish transitional fossils without dating. Without a reliable way of dating you have no way of putting the transitional fossil in the time frame of being intermediate. To get the dating you need experts. See how that works?
It isn't? I thought we were debating what evidence convinces us what is or is not true. My mistake!
Yes thats your mistake. I answered your OP question. You asked in the OP why dismiss John Frum as superstition while accepting Christianity, remember? I provided a perfectly valid answer as to why reject the cult of John Frum " John Frum wasnt a real person. After that you switched the argument to how you dont find the evidence for Jesus compelling.
I don't believe that's correct. In the documentaries I've watched it was assumed that there was a "real John Frum" who inspired the cult although his real name is unknown.

That would mean there was no real John Frum.
LOL--not this critic. There are many "critics" who don't believe in a historical Jesus, but I wouldn't be so dumb as to count heads to determine whether or not he existed.
Those many critics are non-expert internet blogger types. Of course it would be dumb to count them to determine whether Jesus existed or not. That would be an
argumentum ad populum. And thats a fallacy.
If there was no John Frum, and it's very possible there was no such figure, then that fact counts as evidence that religious groups can grow up around people they think existed but never did.
I wont dispute that argument.
So the same goes for Christianity--Jesus may have never been a historical figure.
There you go with the may have never been rubbish again. If all you want to argue is that its
possible that Jesus may have never existed then fine, go ahead. While you are at it you may well concede its also possible that Jesus existed and did and said every single thing recorded in the New Testament.
If my argument doesn't amount to much, then argue against it.
I dont need to argue against a may have been argument because that kind of argument is an argument that does not seek to prove anything meaningful.
Why could there have not been a tradition of Jewish rebellion that laid the foundations for Christianity?
Its a possibility. Now go ahead and prove it.
If such a tradition existed, then it's a perfectly plausible explanation for Christianity that needs no historical Jesus.
So go ahead and prove it then. Stop asking me if it could have been.
Just read up on the Roman occupation of Israel and the Jewish rebellions. Many Jews were crucified by the Romans. If Jesus existed, then he was very much like the other Jews crucified by the Romans.
Okay. Many Jews were crucified by the Romans. So what does that prove? Btw, when were they crucified?
Oh sure--exactly like the John Frum cult got inspiration from an older religion, Christianity is based to some degree in Judaism.
Oh I absolutely agree Christianity drew upon Judaism. Now how do you get from there to Jesus wasnt historical?
So again, we see another similarity between the John Frum Cult and Christianity.
Not really. Christianity understood itself as the fulfilment and divinely orchestrated continuation of the Hebrew scriptures. The John Frum cult emerged in direct opposition to Christian influence borrowing ideas out of a sense of competition.
Carrier seems to have done a great job with his work demonstrating that Jesus was probably a myth. Have you read any of his books?
I have read a fair amount of Carriers material but not his book on the historical Jesus. And I probably wont. I have read reviews of it. Apparently the arguments arent new. And it hasnt garnished any real support among scholars so I dont see the point in reading it.
But you say Carrier has done a great job. Well what makes Carriers work so great compared to the work of the vast majority of scholars who you virtually swept under the carpet in a single stroke as not good historians? It wouldnt, by chance, be because Carrier holds a mythical view now would it?
He's very similar to pagan gods you don't think exist. I'd suggest that you apply the same reasons to Jesus you use to see that all other gods except your own are myth.
Thats not evidence Jesus didnt exist. That, if it were true, would be evidence that I am biased in my assessment of the evidence.
Of course some of the evidence is different. For example, we know the people who were eyewitnesses for the events that led to the Cult of John Frum,
Oh yeah? Name them. Show me their testimonies.
but the eyewitnesses for Jesus are unknown.
They are no more unknown than the witness we have for the eruption of Vesuvius. See
this thread.
So again, much of the evidence for John Frum is much better than the evidence for Jesus.
Nah. You dont have a hostile witness for Frum. I do for Jesus.
Actually, I wasn't looking for any scholars for John Frum. I suppose I've been too busy
looking at the evidence for him!
And after looking at the evidence have you concluded he wasnt real yet? Or would you like to make an argument that he really existed.
I don't really care how "good" Carrier is--I'm too busy assessing his arguments and evidence.
If you say so, but you appealed to him as an authority. You even just finished saying Carrier, ...seems to have done a great job with his work...
You're not engaging the issue I raised. If you dismiss John Frum as a lie, then why couldn't Jesus be a lie as well?
Everything about Jesus
could be a lie. Everything about Jesus could also be true. Now what?
And lets be clear. I dismiss John Frum as superstition because there was no historical John Frum. You havent shown how this is false and Ive provided evidence to support it. I dont need to argue anything beyond that.
If you wish to argue that I should likewise dismiss Christianity on the basis that it is superstition then
you bear the burden to prove Jesus wasnt historical. Dont you understand this?
The fact of the matter is that Jesus very easily could have been made up.
Yes he could have been made up. It could also be the case that every single thing recorded about him really happened.
I don't know what Bart Ehrman might be thinking,
Whatever Ehrman may have been thinking it certainly wasnt along the lines of supporting religion or Christianity.
but I'd recommend (Bible scholar) Hector Avalos' book The End of Biblical Studies. It's a scathing critique of Bible scholars and their sloppy and often misleading work.
You mean a self professed atheist and secular humanist who sees himself as being on the margins of the marginalized in the Society of Biblical Literature would write a scathing critique of the scholars who marginalize him? (see
here). Say it isnt so.
But hey, that was a nice appeal to the authority of a Bible scholar, Jagella.