Vlad,
Evidence is there in the form of epistiolary evidence and the nature of the community.
“Epistolary evidence” just means that Paul wrote letters about what he’d been told, and “the nature of the community” – credulous, fearful, superstitious etc – is one of your problems.
The counter to human failing is there in the argument that Jewish and Roman authorities could, would and should have exploited it but didn't.
How would you suggest that they did that decades after the event, and why would they have bothered with this one miracle story vs all the rest?
Research into conspiracy theories give this one 25 years survival. We should have heard the last of this a few centuries ago.
While conspiracy is one real world possibility, it’s by no means the only one. The, what, half a dozen or so maximum who supposedly spoke to Paul would hardly constitute a conspiracy in any case – even if all of them had been present at the event, that says nothing about the risk of mistake a trick etc.
If you do not accept this you have to say why.
I just did: it’s another straw man.
You are also de facto suggesting an alternative history. Unlike philosophical questions i.e. could a universe exist without a God, there can be no gap in the history. History comes loaded with a burden to state what it was particularly if you cannot accept an account of the history.
I have no idea what you’re even to try to say here. If Archduke Franz Ferdinand hadn’t have been shot, there’d have been a different history too no doubt. So what?
I don't really need to ask for the reasons why you not only reject the account you keep denying it has even been given. You are never going to own them though.
More gibberish. I reject the truthfulness of “the” account because the evidence bar for it is set so desperately low.
But you do I feel need to be called out on what is poor methodology.
Such a shame you have no grasp of irony. That’s a doozy.