I think your use of the word "accused" indicates unwarranted defensiveness on your part. What we're discussing is a potential mistake in argumentation, which anyone can do at any time.dastardly stem wrote: ↑Mon Dec 20, 2021 8:58 pmI'd like to understand your concern, Res Ipsa. You accused me earlier, I asked for clarification and didn't get it. When I offered you the definition, you dropped it. Not sure what the problem was. What is your concern with the use of the term myth.
Kiskumen is saying Mark, as in the gospel of Mark, is not myth, in a technical sense. That's not really the question here, though. It's a question of if the character that healed the sick, raised the dead, magical fed thousands and the like, is that myth? That'd be the question, of course.
My concern is based your use of the Linda problem as any kind of response to someone referring to the contents of Mark as evidence for a real-guy Jesus. It's a complete non-sequitur that could be due to any of a number of mistakes, including not understanding the principle that the Linda problem illustrates (which I described as irrelevance) or using inconsistent definitions for the word "myth" (which I described as equivocation). After I felt as if I got non-responsive reactions initially, I tried to figure it by providing similar examples that eliminated any potential issues with the meaning of "myth" by substituting "story." You seem unwilling to do that, which indicates to me there is some kind of equivocation going on in how you are using the word myth. But, I could be wrong.
You said we all agreed that the gospel of Mark was "myth." But, it's clear now we don't all agree. But the issue we are discussing is not, and never has been, whether Mark is "myth." The issue we've been discussing is whether Mark is based on a real, historical person. At this point, the term "myth" is actually getting in the way of what we're discussing because we don't all agree on what constitutes a "myth." Kish describes Mark as containing "mythical tropes." I would have said that Mark's story ascribe some mythical qualities to Jesus. I don't know how Honor or anyone else would describe it. But does any story that includes a single mythologized aspect of a character make the story a "myth." I don't know, and I don't see how that categorization helps us evaluate the evidence on the subject of whether the stories of Jesus are based on an actual historical person. That's my concern with your use of "myth" in your argument.
I'll try from one more angle: trying to condense the argument as I see it to illustrate the problem.
Kish, et al: The contents of Mark are more consistent with a story based on a historical person than a story not based on a historical person.
Stem: It is less probable that Mark is a story and is based on a historical person than it is that Mark is a story!
RI: How is that relevant to what Kish et al just said?
Stem: [fill in the blank]