Vlad,
Folk memory is not at all relevant in a time period which includes living memory.
It is something quite different.
Nope. Lots of these stories were told and re-told and re-told again. Just say though that a genuine eye witness decided to travel some 800 miles to Corinth, that he had perfect memory of an event a generation earlier and no biases to cloud it, that he was brave enough to front up the church’s founder, and that Paul was scrupulously honest. Just suppose all that was true, however unlikely –
still you’d have no means to determine whether this witness was correct in his explanation, or rather was mistaken, duped etc.
It’s an awful thin basis for a religious faith ain’t it.
Secondly is your story, loaded as it is with muddying the waters etc relevant to the epistoliary evidence?
Pointing out the problems with your confidence in the account of the event isn’t muddying the waters – it’s just pointing out the problems with your confidence in the account of the event.
Answer not really because you have loaded it with flourishes vis 'my uncle talking to someones granddad, who knew some one'that seek to steer the tale.
Yeah that’s the thing with hearsay – stories that are re-told tend to change in the re-telling, especially when each person in the chain wants to impress his listener. It’s actually worse than that though: when the first small change occurs it becomes embedded, then the next small change is only small compared with the already embedded version and so on until, in a very few steps, the story becomes unrecognisable from the original.
Thirdly a resurrected human is perfectly measurable by science…
None of which was available to the people who thought they’d seen a resurrection though remember?
…totally possible in a material universe where life equals a particular order of matter energy…
But not possible according to our current understanding of human biology remember?
…and a highly improbable event for which impossibility and I grant you supernaturality is er, impossible to establish.
So you have witness accounts which in their very nature are highly unreliable for an event that would be highly improbable.
And you want to rest a religious faith on
that?
Really?
That aside…
“That aside” has just collapsed completely, but OK…
I am saying that it is you people who are claiming either mass mistake or a conspiracy and that puts you in the same position of any conspiracy theorist.
Then you’re lying again. What “we people” are actually saying is that you have no means to distinguish your claim
from these (and various other possible) explanations.
If you are suggesting multiple eyewitness is useless as a tool I would try to apply that to where it is constantly applied and see where you get with it.
What “multiple eyewitness” accounts? All you have is a tiny number of witnesses (at best) who
said there were 500 witnesses – a very different matter.
So, are you saying there is no risk that people today might incorrectly recall what happened to them last week, or even tell lies about what they did last week?
Er, no – I’m saying the opposite of that. Personal memory – especially long after the claimed event – is notoriously unreliable. That’s your problem, and even if you had a way to eliminate it you’d still have no means to eliminate the possibility of a perfect memory of an inaccurate explanation.
Apart from all that though…
Oh, and given your total radio silence on the matter can I take it that you have now finally given up on your
argumentum ad consequentiam fallacy?