Vlad,
You can't seem to escape from a claim that we cannot trust copies of works which didn't survive while simultaneously promoting the assumption that the surviving versions were transposed accurately....... those seem to be two opposing ideas you are able to hold true in your head
Are you literally not reading what’s being said, or are you choosing to misrepresent it deliberately?
Try reading what I
actually said in plain words, and then respond that instead.
My Bad............... Ancient Egypt.
No, your “bad” was lying by claiming falsely that I’d said “and your amazing suggestion that Ancient Documents are usually extant from a rare case of papyral survival from Ancient Greece.” Ancient documents (from any civilisation) are not “usually extant” at all, and I've never said otherwise.
I have listed your howling errors and laughed at your pretentions to being a bit of an ancient Historian.
Seems unlikely that you’ve done any such thing, but let’s see shall we?
Never said they were'nt....so straw man
You’re off to a bad start. I was merely explaining the basic principles of historicity to you as your previous efforts had shown your ignorance of them.
Never said they weren't . What's your point?
See above. Writing down what people believed is not necessarily the same as writing down what happened.
Never said they couldn't be and never suggested that all are but especially christian accounts, That is a logically shite route but one you people seem addicted to
Again, see above. The documents on which you place great weight for your beliefs may have been erroneously reproduced or forged (as might any documents based on equally rickety epistemological foundations). Thus reliance on them for claims of certainty is ill-founded.
There are no disinterested observers here, they also have an interest .
Irrelevant. We were talking about the authors/transcribers of ancient records, not about commentators on them here.
Again there are no independent sources on some issues because of their political and religious significance. A merchants account is a merchants account and is paydirt for disinterested and dispassionate observation of the type you are trying to inject into Roman history.
Your use of language is so poor that I can’t work out what you’re trying to say here. I was merely explaining to you that corroborative evidence from independent sources tends to add to the credibility of those sources individually. It’s not a difficult concept.
This statement and it's explanation may very well reduce to philosophical empiricism.
Except it does no such thing. If you think extraordinary claims require merely the reliability of evidence that applies to ordinary claims, then you have to explain how you’d exclude
all extraordinary claim from the same evidential benchmark – you know, the point at which you always run away.
Exclaiming everything is nonsense because extant copies don't exist later then arguing from that document is charming in a child but upsetting when an adult tries it
And the straw man to finish. As you know full well that I have never said “everything is nonsense because extant copies don't exist” nor anything even close to that, why do you just resort to lying like this immediately you’re out of your depth?
So to re-cap – there were no “howlers”, the basic principles of historicity that I set out for you still seem to elude you, and you still seem either unable or unwilling to engage honestly rather than lie and misrepresent at every turn.
Why do you bother?