So long as you are applying this to all history Gordon then you avoid special pleading.
Which I do, and to current as well as historical stuff.
The extraordinary claims demand Schlick is I'm afraid a form of special pleading drawn from argument from disbelief.
No it isn't, unless you are prepared to accept highly unusual claims on the assurances of people you approve of.
In other words we are special pleading when only considering the usual. You see logically if you take this line you end up believing anything that fits the usual. You end up with several equally usual versions.
You're being silly again: scepticism in all things is quite reasonable.
The New Testament is out there Gordon. Any dispute over it is a suggestion of an alternative history.
Nope - it is the observation that it may contain mistakes or lies, and that its enthusiastic supporters seem reluctant to address these risks.
To insist on people stating why they accept the biblical version while claiming immunity for having to justify their preferred alternative is by turns humbug and special pleading. It is the Default delusion I'm afraid.
Which isn't my position, as you well know so why misrepresent what I've regularly explained, and I'm not offering an 'alternative' since, as I've said, I have as much evidence for an 'alternative' story for these characters (assuming for the sake of argument they existed) as you do for the NT narrative - which is none that would stand scrutiny.
You'd do better to explain how you've assessed the risks of mistake or lies in the NT instead of evading this point - or acknowledging that there is no basis to assess these risks so that accepting the NT details is a matter of personal belief and not historical fact.