Your undue infatuation with Gibbon is nothing more than hero worship. It is infantile and it needs to stop.
I am only reacting to your reflexive aversion to Gibbon. The second I mentioned this authoritative historian, a cacophony of dismissive abuse kicked in. When I asked what justifies this abuse, silence. At most, I get wikipedia articles, which I then pour over in vain, looking for good, solid criticism. The attitude seems to be nothing more than, "That? Oh, that. We don't concern ourselves with that. After all, it's over two hundred years old."
I'm more than willing to listen to criticism. I will frankly admit that Gibbon is one of my literary "heroes," as you put it, and I will further admit that I like him for purely subjective reasons: he
seems to be authoritative, a sweeping and accurate synthesis of all the facts.
When I first read your attacks on Gibbon, I thought, "Well, these guys sound pretty smart. Perhaps they know something I don't, something concrete, objective. The devil's in the details, and I am only an amateur without access to the source material." I asked for these details: Why is Gibbon so confidently dismissed? Where are his errors? What extra material is now available, and how does the absence of this new evidence invalidate his conclusions?
What conclusions are you talking about?... to demonstrate how modern historians or modern historical evidence do not support Gibbon's conclusions, I'll need you to be more specific about what you mean by conclusions.... to reduce so many volumes to a sentence is too problematic.
Why are you guys so confident that his conclusions are wrong, when you seem to be so unsure of what they are? Why are you asking me to elucidate them for you? Do you have anything to make your case besides the fact that his book is really old?
I have found support for my own idea, that Gibbon's mastery of the facts is superlative, from your own wiki source: even later historians like J. B. Bury do attack Gibbon on this level. I am expected to dismiss The Decline And Fall because it comes from 1776, and because Gibbon has no knowledge of modern developments of historiography. And yet, if he assembled a work like this, without a single significant error of a factual nature, way back in the benighted age of the 18th century, without the benefit of modern historiography, archaeology, and so on, then surely he has a very great thinker.
Instead of solid criticism, I get lectures on the academic discipline of history:
It's not our responsibility to catch you up on more than two centuries of historical methodology, archaeology, textual criticism, and the many other disciplines that have been discovered since Gibbon. A lot happens in just ten years in any given discipline of Roman scholarship, or even a season of archaeological work.
In other words, I get yet another variation of "it comes from 1776, therefore can safely be ignored." In this variation, the study of history is portrayed as as an arcane and esoteric discipline that is well beyond the capabilities of an ordinary citizen, especially if they have not kept up with the breathtaking developments of the last ten years, let alone the last two hundred years.
I am somewhat disturbed by your attempt to mystify the subject, as well as the reflexive dismissal of a sound authority like Gibbon. It shows me there is some ideological motive at work, and this ideology is opposed to the plain facts. There is nothing mystical about the study of history. The great Adam Smith (who I suppose must also be flatly rejected, because his works are so old) defined the historian's job in very simple terms: all you've got to do is put the events in the right order. Did this happen first, or did that? Easier said than done, especially for more archaic periods of history, in which the events are so confused. But, nothing mystical.
This is what I'm looking for: at some point in the first volume, Gibbon asserts that the climate in Europe was colder than today. His evidence is an account of a military campaign in which it is asserted that Roman legions crossed a certain river on foot (I forget which river) which has never been observed to be frozen like that in the modern day (meaning, 1776).
Did Gibbon misread this source? Did he rate the account as factual, even though it wasn't? If the source is wrong, what evidence disproves it? Is there another source which asserts that the river was not frozen at this time; even another source that has come to light since Gibbon's day? Is there some kind of archaeological evidence that contradicts his assertion? Ice core samples, tree rings, anything?
It might be instructive to reconsider the conditions under which this argument originated: I was arguing that if Paul wasn't a citizen, he was at least an agent of the emperor. I was countered by the fact that all acknowledged agents of Rome, like Pliny the Younger, were opponents of Christianity. I argued then that the opposition to Christianity by the Roman power-establishment was half-hearted at best, and that the persecution of early Christianity by Rome was greatly exaggerated, and I cited Gibbon as my authority. Here was my response:
1) I agree that the persecutions of Christians in the past was myth, but Christian on Christian violence didn't start until...
Blah, blah, blah. Here is my interpretation of your statement:
"I agree with your fact. You got this fact from Gibbon, which I admit is a very important source of accurate facts."
And yet you go on to fog my mind with a lot of unnecessary nonsense about how Gibbon is too literary and outdated.