Gordon
The Gospels are to be treated like any other document from that time otherwise one falls foul of the genetic fallacy and argument from personal incredulity.
I agree: with appropriate scepticism given the content. So, we have accounts of uncertain provenance that claim supernatural miracles so any comparison needs to involve similar content. We have attestations of flying horses in another religious account so do you accept that on the same basis you accept the resurrection?
The resurrection is considered true in the epistles and Gospel evidence. The accounts do have doubts expressed and remedy, 500 witnesses is offered.
In relation to this, your assessment of mistake or lies being involved is?
People lie yes but that is an assertion.
No - it is a fact.
It is not a default.
No, but it is a risk.
What methods have you used to establish lying.
I'm asking you that, remember!
There has been good research on conspiracies and this would fit. It would be a major conspiracy.
It would: so how have you assessed the risk that it is?
Conspiracies fall this one didn't.
Which is a claim, so show us your workings.
Subsequent history fits the resurrection.
Which doesn't mean the resurrection was true: just that it was portrayed as being true.
No alternative explanations are provided indeed the communities reported in the epistle are based on the resurrection
That it is lies is an alternative possibility: have you assessed this risk?
Finally no historical evidence for a historical conspiracy.
How do you know this?
The scriptures are the most riggourously investigated documents of ancient times.
That doesn't mean they are accurate in terms of supernatural claims: there are risks attached to anecdotal accounts .
Now to you. Do you believe any historical document?
Nope: I am sceptical of anecdotal accounts.
What then is your method of establishing lying or not lying in those contexts?
Not my problem: the supporters of these accounts (like you) have offered no risk assessment so I remain highly sceptical about the veracity of the NT in relation to its supernatural claims: I await reassurance.
I think rather your approach is the same as I describe. You look at the document, you look for clues to truth, you trust to Scholarship and you look to see if it fits the surrounding history.
I don't have an approach: neither, it seems, do you since it seems you accept these accounts at face value.
Any other expectation is special pleading and a singular expectation that I am the one that needs to be interrogated and you can make suggestions which you don't have to support is a deluded torquemadian fantasy.
I'm not pleading anything: I'm just asking a reasonable question. Any special pleading here is all yours.
Now then since I have said why it is highly probably true please state your historical evidence for historical conspiracy.
I don't: I'm asking NT supporters (like you) to explain how they've excluded the risks of human artifice, and in the absence of a reply I can only conclude you haven't (and would rather not).