I would be interested in seeing that substantiated.
No probs Jay, although that would entail more work than I feel like doing on a friday night. I'll try to get to it sometime this weekend.
Would you be willing to share some of them?
Just off the top of my head (again, I'll try to go into more detail later on);
Josephus was meticulous about identifying the charactors he wrote about. Even if he was talking about someone he'd already went into detail about in a previoius book he would still give a recap for the sake of clarification.
Take Judas the Gallilean for example; Josephus meantions him at least 3 times in 3 different places and each time he gives at least a brief description of the man and his activities to bring the reader up to speed.
This was typical of Josephus. He never assumed that the reader had read anything he'd written previously or took it for granted that anyone would just automatically know anything about the person he was writting about (he even identifies the Roman emperors according to their order of succesion).
Something as obscure as "James, the brother of Jesus, called the Christ" wouldn't have meant anything to a Roman audience (his primary target audience) and he had no way of knowing it would mean anything at all to posterity.
Most Romans wouldn't even know what the word "Christ" was supposed to mean in this context.
Logically (IMO) if Josephus had bothered to mention Jesus at all, especially for the sake of identifying a charactor involved in the event he was recounting at that moment, he would have explained what the term "Christ" implied, and he would have specified who it was that was
calling him "the Christ" (as it stands it gives the impression that "Jesus=Christ" was a universally recognisable connection, sort of like "Elvis=The King", which of course it would have been to a later christian interpolater)