honorentheos wrote: ↑Sat Jan 01, 2022 5:56 pm...You then argued it wasn't being presented purely as a fun little trivial logic problem, but that it was meant to support the higher probability of the statement "Jesus is a myth" when examining the Gospel of Mark. You introduced it in defense of the "Jesus is a myth only" position.
You just said, again, it was to, and I quote, " Marks story is like the preamble for Linda. Then we consider: Is it more likely the story of Jesus is myth or is it more likely the story of Jesus is myth and there is a real person behind the myth?"dastardly stem wrote: ↑Sat Jan 01, 2022 7:03 pmI'll disagree with your assumption about why I did what I did. I did it as explained to res ipsa in my initial response to him:I can appreciate there was a lack of clarity, but I assure you, as I suggested, this was not in consideration of the myth position held by Carrier. It was a simple thought on logic not intended to compare the two hypotheses Res Ipsa was after.The Linda problem isn't intended as applied here to compare the two hypotheses. The use of the Linda problem goes like this. Marks story is like the preamble for Linda. Then we consider: Is it more likely the story of Jesus is myth or is it more likely the story of Jesus is myth and there is a real person behind the myth? It's a conjunction fallacy to think the added proposition is more likely
That's you arguing for evidence and assumptions taken from a reading of the Gospel of Mark, not a pure logic problem. The use of the Gospel of Mark as preamble (evidence) doesn't give any statement one can form out of the Gospel of Mark any inherent comparative value in terms of probability under the Linda Problem. I could say the Gospel of Mark posits that Jesus is a real person and make that A. You could argue it clearly shows Jesus is a myth, and claim that is A. We could combine those two statements to argue that "Jesus is a historical person" is more probable than "Jesus is a historical person who was also mythologized" or "Jesus is mythological person who was contextualized into history" and there'd be no point to this. If that was you aim, it then goes back to Res' question as to why raise it at all?
It seems rather clear you favor placing the claim, "Jesus is a myth" as a primary aim. I assume it is because most participants in the thread are in favor of the Jesus in the gospels by mythologized in some way. So you then want to make the case anyone who posits that behind this myth is a historical person is falling prey to the Linda Problem because that is conjunctive.
As keeps being presented to you, the argument is we've left the Linda Problem behind by this point and are weighing the evidence. And part of that evidence is the geo-political context evidence in Mark as well as the limiting structure the better fits a person who rose to prominence in adulthood rather than a god-king fabricated whole cloth out of myth. This HAS to be included in the discussion as we are examining evidence not just casually debating logic problems as they may apply to the Gospel of Mark. But even in that case, dismissing the other statements that support the historical Jesus are additive, conjunctively asserting that any appearance of historical context in the text is the work of the later authors who fabricated the Jesus myth.