Yep, they are right there for anyone to see. Just like your repeated quote-mining of only part of my sentence:
If you grant the person could have existed then you have refuted your own claim that he was mythical (existing only in the imagination), hence the story becomes only mythic (legendary, larger than life).
You're right, adding the extra bit only makes my case stronger for me. You draw a hard line between mythical and mythic, and posit that mythic is not at all what he was trying to say. This despite him already having clarified the fact that he believes Jesus was a historical figure.
I have already told you that he needs to clarify his own post, rather than have some troll drag it through the mud for him.
He already has. And when he did, you accused him of flip-flopping. Jesus Christ, troll, did you already forget?
SkinWalker said:
There's little doubt that there probably existed a person that the new testament narrative was based on.
This is clarification. Clarification that you called a reversal. Remember?
you said:
If you grant the person could have existed then you have refuted your own claim that he was mythical (existing only in the imagination)
Again? Really? Oh, you mean every time you repeat the exact same truncated quote? You fail to see where his position is not clear, and how that can only be resolved by him, not your self-appointed troll defense.
His position is entirely clear. He clarified it in the post you responded to and accused him of flip-flopping. You're just lying now that you've been caught in this attempt to play the semantics game. He said mythical, which is a perfectly acceptable word for the point he was trying to convey, and when he saw your confusion at it he clarified. When he clarified, you, troll that you are, jumped on it and pretend that he was actually
contradicting himself. You call that an integrity move? No, that's typical Syne troll BS.
Really? You mean you have repeated that truncated quote this much and have yet to notice the qualifier at the very beginning?
If you grant the person could have existed then...
And you apparently think no one can see what followed:
then you have refuted your own claim that he was mythical (existing only in the imagination)
Obviously, "if" denotes some doubt on the degree to which he believes such a person may have existed. Again, something only he can clarify.
Okay, so then you didn't even bother to read his post. This was in the passage you quoted before accusing him of flip-flopping:
Syne said:
There's little doubt that there probably existed a person that the new testament narrative was based on. But there is no good reason to accept that this narrative was accurate enough to refer to it as anything more than a myth or legend. Even Melville probably based Ahab on one or more of the many ships captains he encountered as he sailed the seas from 1841-1845. Perhaps one was even named Ahab. The writers of the gospels weren't even writing at the time of the alleged Christ. These anonymous writers based their works on perspectives they thought were accurate or interesting.
You really expect us to believe this is unclear to you? I mean, granted, I don't think you're the sharpest knife in the drawer, but I refuse to believe that you are confused as to his meaning. It's quite obvious that you simply did not know that "mythical" does not necessarily mean "existing in one's imagination." You even defined the word as such in the passage I've quoted here multiple times, so you're not fooling anyone.
He admitted no more than that some guy named Jesus existed.
Ah, see, again, you're full of crap. He admitted this:
SkinWalker said:
There's little doubt that there probably existed a person that the new testament narrative was based on.
You really can't see the difference? Again, I think you can, and you're just trying to obfuscate the matter.
He gave every qualification imaginable for that person to have little or nothing to do with the Biblical story. He said:
That's different. He's saying that the narrative is largely myth, which is quite obvious to anyone who isn't a brainwashed zealot. Unless you really believe that a guy performed miracles and rose from the dead. Oh wait, you do! The matter at hand here was his position whether or not there was an historical Jesus, which he agrees there probably was. Your point about Tesla speaks precisely to that, not to the dismissal of those larger-than-life myths created around him.
1. "a person named "Jesus" could have existed"
- "the name was common"
He's admitting that the figure this myth is based upon might have even been named Jesus. Sometimes mythic figures are amalgams of several people. Consider the myths of William Wallace. While there really was such a person, many of his "deeds" are just myth, while others are actual deeds done by others and credited to him, creating a sort of umbrella figure under the name of William Wallace. In other words, if there was an historical figure the NT was based on, it doesn't necessitate that this person's name was Jesus, or that many of his attributes are accurately depicted in the texts.
- "painfully obvious that a "Jesus Christ" was invented"
Yes, the NT character of Jesus Christ was invented. That doesn't mean that the character wasn't based on someone. There is a very invented Nikola Tesla, as well: the one who invented free energy and practiced dark arts, etc..
- "a character that is larger-than-life (much the same as Paul Bunyon or Ahab)" [both fictional]
He also allows for the potential that Ahab is based on an actual ship captain, perhaps even named Ahab. The point he's making is that many of the events written of him are fictional, not that he is himself fictional. But this is clear to anyone with a brain, so I seriously doubt that you're confused by this.
- "the very name is one that reveals the invention"
Talk about quote-mining, you hypocritical troll:
SkinWalker said:
but the very name is one that reveals the invention: "Christ" is of the Greek christos, which translates to "anointed" and is the Greek translation of the Hebrew "messiah." So Christ isn't really part of his name, it's a designation made afterwards for the "Jesus" who was "of Nazzarath" -undoubtedly a moniker needed to differentiate him from all the other Jesus's in the region.
Now what's confusing or obscure about that?
2. "there probably existed a person that the new testament narrative was based on"
Seriously? You're taking his admission that there probably was an historical Jesus to mean that there
wasn't? I mean...
- "there is no good reason to accept that this narrative was accurate [i.e. not factual, you know, fiction] enough to refer to it as anything more than a myth or legend"
- "Even Melville probably based Ahab on one or more of the many ships captains he encountered" [again, fictional]
- "These anonymous writers based their works on perspectives they thought were accurate or interesting" [at best, an equal likelihood of being fictional or substantially real]
Again, he's talking about the narrative being fictitious, not the person. Are you really this dense, or am I simply witnessing an all-time low in human integrity?
3. "The inclusion of feats of magical powers is another reason to discount these narratives as anything more than myth, legend, or perhaps historical fiction."
4. "Christian narratives are largely (if not entirely) myth"
Yes, the narratives, the story. You know the difference between people and events, no? He's saying that Jesus probably existed, but his story is probably a myth. Obviously.
Now if you really think you can make an argument for each of these necessarily precluding being fictitious then by all means let us hear your prodigious ( I mean specious) reasoning for each.
Are you being serious? One of the items you list is ""there probably existed a person that the new testament narrative was based on." I would say that necessarily precludes being fictitious.
To think, all of this instead of just admitting that you got the meaning of "mythical" wrong. All it would have taken is you saying "Oops, I guess he didn't necessarily mean imaginary or fictional." But that would require some level of humility, and more than zero integrity. And besides, without that little semantic BS to hold on to, you'd literally have
nothing to say. None of your points to follow have been about anything other than you taking umbrage with his claim that there was no historical basis for Jesus, and if you were to admit he never actually claimed that (and moreover, that he actually claimed
the opposite) then where would you be? Impotently defending your ridiculous faith to a person who is intellectually and educationally out of your league.
This is about the time you usually proclaim you are ignoring me again.
I ignore you because you're a troll who never has anything of value to add to a discussion. In fact, you're on my ignore list right now. There is a neat little feature which lets me select which ignored posts I wish to view at any given time, and it's only by pure curiosity that I picked up your latest run. And I'm glad I did, because I got to call you out on an exceedingly childish and unethical tactic you attempted to employ with SkinWalker. Your subsequent humiliation has been a pleasure to witness. But, if I feel like I'm getting near the end of my patience with your persistent lies or insults, I can simply choose not to open any more of your posts. It's a very nice system, actually.
You misunderstand. I was talking about you, not him. As in PM you in an attempt to keep your trolling out of this thread.
Right, because that makes sense. You complained about me being here, so i told you to take it to PM if you didn't want outsiders. You took that to mean PM
me? Maybe I was too kind in assuming that this semantics business was intellectually beneath you.
I have never discouraged public discussion, only trolls like you, who do not know any better than to shit all over the floor.
Keep flailing, liar. I'm really enjoying it.