Vlad,
As I believe I have stated before Professor I have found your ideas on the veracity of ancient historical documents unconvincing and as I recall inconsistent. I would even hazard that your approach to history is dominated by scientism.
No, by
historicism. They’re very different things.
Much accepted history is written by people who never encountered their subjects and I believe you accept histories which the earliest extant copies date from decades or even centuries after authorship.
Yes, but such claims are also subject to multiple verifications rather than just accepted as fact, especially so when claims of miracles are made. These tests include for example:
1. Relevance: is the evidence presented really relevant to the claim being made?
2. Validity: is the source what it appears to be or is it a fraud or forgery?
3. Identification: is the author identified? Historians do not rely on "anonymous".
4. Expertise: is the source qualified to provide this evidence?
5. Bias: does the source have an interest in the topic of the evidence that might distort the evidence?
6. Internal consistency: does the evidence contradict itself?
7. External Consistency: is the evidence consistent with outside qualified sources? For historians, the more sources the better.
8. Recency: has the situation described by the evidence or our understanding of the world changed? Just being old isn't enough to disqualify evidence but the epistemological context may have changed since the evidence was created.
How would the accounts in which you place your faith fare if these tests were applied would you say?
Now can you see why they're not taught as academic history?