Um, dude, this is not talking about McGrath's critique of the useage of the RR scale. And like I pointed out in the posts you replied to, this is FALSE. McGrath doesn't say this at all. And I quoted what McGrath *actually* said. But it's not in the article about the RRscale. McGrath says all three criteria IN TOTAL don't support the argument. So it's not that he didn't read Carrier's book, or understand. It's that Caririe's claim that "all three combined" are not significant. Thats what McGrath said.
Carrier said: - "No one of these criteria is sufficient to identify a narrative as mythical. But the presence of all three is conclusive. And the presence of one or two can also be sufficient, when sufficiently telling."
Godfrey continues with -
"(McGrath) Ignoring Carrier’s point that “no one of these criteria is sufficient to identify a narrative as mythical but the presence of all three is conclusive” McGrath proceeds to “protest” that “no one of these criteria is sufficient to identify a narrative as mythical”. Not only that, but he completely fails to grasp the difference between “
emulation” and “
similarity“.
Since similarity between real events and other real events is not at all unlikely, and on the contrary well documented, the first alleged characteristic of myth simply doesn’t work.
Now the article in question is missing. It's from McGrath's review on Carrier's OHJ.
But here you are mismatching what's being quoted and the topic, and losing track of the debate. You're frustrated, I understand. Your sources are failing you.
I know where I am in the debate. Winning. Frustrated, sure because it takes you like 17 posts to lose after trying all tricks in the book.
My sources are fine, I have many more.
But that doesn't mean Gospel Jesus is true. All it means is that your PHD club can't be trusted for accuracy.
A claim you cannot seem to produce evidence. Everyone makes mistakes so eventually ....
But thats not what McGrath *actually* said. It's the opposite of what he said.
Are you talking about the article with th eedit???
[
Edit: Possibly McGrath didn’t realize the logic of his argument entailed this. See comment. Some mistook Godfrey’s description as a direct quote, despite the fact that it is literally verbatim, which should have clued them in. Godfrey and I are describing the logic of McGrath’s argument, and pointing out the fact that it ignores the actual argument is disrespectful and insulting. Not a lie. Only in subsequent sections do I catalog McGrath’s lies.]
Which is ironic, because Carrier is claiming McGrath said something McGrath didn't actually say.
The article where Carrier admits he took a quote from Godfrey incorrectly? That is your big point?
And somehow now everything else is "unreadable"??
But since you still aren't checking your sources for accuracy, you'd never know what McGrath actually said. Instead, You heard McGrath criticised someone in your club, and immediately you lashed out with the name-calling ( it's basically bigotry ). And you still haven't been able to find the fault in what McGrath said. Your quote from McGrath's critic of Carrier's RRscale is 100% true. It isn't appropriate for contributing to the probability of Jesus as a myth. Certianly not if the tally is exaggerated.
I have explained what Mcgrath got wrong. For anyone who CAn get past th eedit up front it's here:
The title of this article is a joke. Sort of. But maybe not as much as you think. As I’ll show. Because James McGrath has added another entry to his bizarrely uninformed critique of On the Historicity of Jesus, and this time is the most dishonest of the bunch. For to get the result he wants, he...
www.richardcarrier.info
Carrier uses the RR scale correctly:
“I don’t use Raglan’s definitions precisely because they don’t match how he employs them. I adjust the definitions to the actual trope, per the advice of Dundes.”
and his use of the scale as a small part of prior-probability:
" I use it to establish a prior probability. Which is
not sufficient to demonstrate non-historicity.
As I explicitly explain on pp. 238-39 and 252-53. So McGrath is actually just repeating what I already explained in the book, as if I didn’t know this, and didn’t take it into account. And somehow he thinks this is a valid criticism. That bespeaks a befuddling failure to pay attention to the very book he claims to be reading."
And then you brought a misquote of McGrath talking about a totally different issue, not the RRscale. And here' Carrier complaining about misquoting, while at the same time misquoting. That's the perfect example of what's happening in this thread.
Show me, I can make mistakes. I don't see a mistake? But its' possible. Has nothing to do with Carrier's use of RR.
You have FAITH in Carrier, you don't check to see if it's true, and complain that I don't care about what's true. But I'm the one checking sources and you're not. Whatever you were taught to earn the PHD doesn't seem to be very useful for turth-seeking.
Yeah right, that's hilarious. Mr FACTS. Or should I say Mr "I didn't read anything else because trust issues....."
No it doesn't entail that!
McGrath's claim:
Criteria 1 ---> myth is false, because of a valid counter example
Criteria 2 ---> myth is false, because of a valid counter example
Criteria 3 ---> myth is false, because of a valid counter example
Then, these three can be re-written as true statements.
Criteria 1 ---> NOT myth is true
Criteria 2 ---> NOT myth is true
Criteria 3 ---> NOT myth is true
Now the three can be joined in a true logical conjunction
(Criterian 1 ---> NOT myth) AND (Criteria 2 ---> NOT myth) AND ( Criteria 3 ---> NOT myth ) is true.
Then using the truth tables for logical implication/entailment ( the arrows ) and for conjunctions ( the ands ), this simplifies to:
( Criteria 1 AND Criteria 2 AND Criteria 3 ) ---> NOT myth.
McGrath is saying even if all three criteria are met, it still doesn't entail a myth.
Carrier isn't giving a syllogism, with these 3 myth markers.
"
We see this again in his treatment of my mythic marker criteria, which I did not invent (as McGrath dishonestly implies)
but adopted from mainstream scholarship. As Godfrey also pointed out, McGrath does not address what I mean by mythical emulation as one of the three criteria. He says instead that mere similarities are inevitable; thereby implying I neither looked for nor found anything more than that. He doesn’t mention the example I give (Virgil’s emulation of Homer), which refutes him, or the mainstream peer reviewed scholarship I cite arguing my very point (I didn’t make this criterion up).
Nor does McGrath reveal that I actually
address the importance of distinguishing inevitable similarities from actual emulations in my methodological primer for
OHJ,
Proving History (pp. 192-203), which he also reviewed and thus claims to have read. Nor does he offer any rebuttal to my solution. So again, McGrath is lying to you about what I said, and trying to make it look like I said something else.
McGrath also confuses my third criterion (the presence of uncorroborated persons and events as key to the story) as meaning lack of corroboration entails their non-historicity. I never say any such thing. All I said was, when that happens, that
ups the probability, but does not guarantee, that we are looking at a myth. I said
nothing about having determined anything as non-historical from such a criterion alone, and in fact elsewhere in the book I explain in detail
that that can’t be done (e.g., chs. 2.1 and 8.3-4). McGrath effectively lies to you, by not telling you that, and telling you instead that I said the opposite of what in fact I actually said.
"
Well, I'd have to fact check each one of these. And since he over-reacts, and seems to fail at logic, I don't see why I should.
something about finding out what is actually tr.... never mind.
No. It is inaccurate. If the items on the scale are subjective the scale is meaningless. Therefore they MUST have intended for the items to be literal. Literal royalty. Literal king. Literal kingdom. Literal battle. Literally defeating the beast.
Otherwise I'm a myth cause I'm the king of our convo, and I defeated Carrier's beastly exaggerations.
Carrier studies experts and actual 15 examples.
"
You can’t define genres and tropes out of existence with semantic legerdemain. Clearly these genres and tropes exist. It would be more appropriate to just admit that and work from it being a fact, rather than try to make it go away because you are uncomfortable with the result.
Serious literary analysis requires honestly engaging with the actual semantic range of meaningful tropes and plot-points in replicated genres and mythotypes. In other words, you should not be stumping for either of the above fallacies. If you are, you have some soul-searching to do. You need to ask yourself why you are doing that. Because there is no valid
literary reason to be doing it.
That’s the point of my John Wick and Ten Ways analogies: they make the impertinence of these tactics quite clear. Genres clearly exist. They also clearly have wide semantic ranges. But they also just as clearly don’t have infinite semantic ranges.
How you structurally understand a replicated trope defines its actual semantic range. These are not just random arbitrary boxes to check, that someone just made up. The tropes constituting a genre or mythotype have a structural role, one that curiously repeatedly appears in different ways; hence how you define and locate instantiations of them thus requires focusing on that structural function, rather than disregarding it.
What actually
is it that we see continually repeated in curious conjunctions over and over again for hero after hero? You need to look at that, and not try to hyper-define entire genres out of existence. Yes, there will be edge cases, and
a fortiori, we might choose not to count them (e.g. Osiris is fostered, but not in a foreign place); but not every variation of a theme is “therefore” an edge case (e.g. Hercules is indeed hailed a king at one point; and he does rule a few times even apart from actually earning an exact title)."
No, you clearly don't even know what that word means.
It often means using confirmation bias, cognitive bias, or historical rewrites to prove something true that may not actually have good evidence.
He's caught exaggerating, and you called the critic an apologist without knowing a single thing about him. And even in the link you brought above, he's called a fundementalist, but that has nothing to do with anything.
Because I don't have "trust issues" with Carrier and I read his blogs where he demonstrates an apologist-y method McGrath uses.
When are you going to start checking the accuracy of your sources?
I have been saying the same thing all along. The irony is had you read why McGrath is wrong you would not need defend a losing battle.