Vlad,
As I said the only way the crucifixion of Christ could be faked is with the full cooperation of the Roman and Jewish authorities
Just saying something doesn’t make it true though, especially when what you’re saying is also an argument from personal incredulity.
Or You could just be considering a resurrection without any context.
Therefore the person in Staffordshire I would imagine has no particularly religious context.
Oh dear. You’re lost in circular reasoning here: the resurrection story is used to justify claims of a supernatural god; now you’re arguing that the “context” of a supernatural god validates the resurrection story.
Can you see where you’ve gone wrong here?
The NT actually has three resurrections Lazarus, The boy who fell from the window who fell asleep during a meeting with Paul. So the NT, in your scheme gives us three potential religions. So either Jesus won because ''He survived because he survived'' Or he had a religious context in which it all makes sense.
Or the Jesus story “won” for reasons that could well have nothing to do with the resurrection story being
true – like Christianity being selected by Constantine I as the approved religion for example. That’s the point.
Something which does not fit a niche in religion is hardly going to fit a niche in religious thinking.
See above re circular reasoning: the resurrection story justifies the religious thinking; the religious thinking justifies the resurrection story; the resurrection story justifies the….” etc, and round and round you go.
There is the obscure phenomenon of survivor bias but that is completely put in the shade by the principle of survival of the fittest so unless you can come up with an actual example of something either surviving or dying out for no reason.........
Your ignorance of survivorship bias is showing here. The bias (which is common by the way) comes from looking at the survivors and drawing your conclusions from only that group. Once famous case for example concerned WWII bombers that needed extra armour, so the boffins looked at the bullet holes in them and decided that that’s where the armour should go – mainly in the wings and fuselage. What they forgot though was the silent evidence of the ‘planes that never made it back – ie, the ones that had been shot down because the bullets hit the engines and the cockpits, which is where the armour should really go.
Short version: evolution concerns
natural selection, not artificial selection.
Apart from all that though…