Why do you think they are not independent? You said earlier that the resurrection accounts are independent, yet you say the empty tomb accounts are not. Why do think that, please?
Educate yourself Alan. Read about the synoptic problem.
Yes, I have done that and have looked into it in depth. I find it fascinating in a geeky sort of way. I think Mark Goodacre, in particular, makes some very interesting claims about its resolution.
Now, please answer why you think the empty tomb accounts are
not independent when you think the resurection accounts
are independent.
You don't know who wrote the stories or who their sources were.
As before, you and I disagree on this.
That doesn't make you any less wrong.
I shall avoid getting into a "You're wrong", "No, you're wrong" argument.
But it is not claimed that "a dead man got up and walked away," but rather than God raised him from the dead and then that he walked away/around. We have accounts of him meeting up with people on about a dozen occasions.
I have an account of Harry Potter defeating Lord Voldemort.
So what?
By the way, you cannot both claim that Jesus was resurrected because God and God exists because Jesus was resurrected as you do. Your argument is circular.
It
would be circular if I argued for that. Agreed.
The basis of your whole defence of the resurrection accounts is goddidit. If you believe in God and God can do anything then, of course, your resurrection fairy tales are possible but so is everything else, except rational discourse.
More accurately, you assumption of philosophical naturalism leads you to the conclusion that Jesus could not have been raised from the dead.
Following on from your point above, if I am arguing for the truth of Christianity as opposed to any other form of deism or theism (i.e. where the existence of God is already granted) then I don't need to demonstrate that God exists. The question then becomes whether it is probable that God would raise Jesus from the dead.
If, however, I am looking at the alleged resurrection of Jesus from the dead to demonstrate God's existence then, yes, I cannot assume God's existence as part of my argument. What I can say though is that, as atheists here tend to recognise, it seems impossible to demonstrate that God does not exist and therefore you and I should leave the possibility that he
does exist open in our arguments.