It's funny but eye witness testimony is still used today and it forms part of empirical observation funnily enough.
It's not funny, it's alarming.
There is no rule to say second and third hand bits need be unreliable that's why people are writing histories today.
No, but it adds layers of potential misattribution, misdirection and other mistakes; and the more preposterous the claims, the more that's significant. When you are dealing with claims about who a particular Roman emperor was married to that's a matter of academic interest, when you're trying to establish grounds for imprisoning gay people you really need a more solid justification than 'Bob's grandmother's friend's neice reportedly said her ex-boyfriend saw him cast a demon into a herd of pigs'...
Vested interest is a bit of a ludicruous handle to give to the early christians who knew they were risking looking a bit of a tit relating the Good news.
Is it? Would Roman records not lend more credibility specifically because they could be said to be less-likely to suffer from those vested interests?
Plus the point that becoming a christian depended on a first hand experience of God in Jesus.
So there have been no Christians since about 100AD, when those people who could remember Jesus died out? Or can you in fact become a Christian if you believe in Jesus, regardless of whether you ever met him (and regardless of whether he was ever divine)?
So your puzzlement at perfection was disingenuous then?
No, I've explained why I don't think as a concept it makes sense - you can take or leave that at your leisure, but I don't see grounds for alleging any sort of mendacity.
don't agree with your premise. It seems to me that is your perfect God and your perception of perfection.
That's your prerogative, but the evidence of the evolution of man is relatively solid. As to 'my perfect god'... I don't have any gods.
I can put the case that a universe given a measure of independence, to do things for it's own sake and for those within it to appreciate it is a far more perfect universe than a clockwork one.
You could, but I'm not sure the idea of 'perfection' works for universes any better than it works for people; even if it did, you'd need to find evidence for your 'measure of independence' (from what?) and overarching consciousness to have a 'sake' to own in order to make the idea anything more than just another chapter in the postulated but unevidenced narrative.
O.