drumdude,drumdude wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 11:59 pmI remember several scholars pointing out that the modern conception of history is a very recent phenomenon. The idea that someone recounts a story exactly as it happened, to preserve a real historical record, is a modern thing. Many ancient people would have recounted stories with embellishment, or made up stories, regardless of if they were true or not.huckelberry wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 11:55 pmMarcus, But of course stories are evidence of God.By themselves weak but most believers look at the nature of the universe as reflecting God so there is a great deal of physical evidence. That does not escape the interpretive puzzles or uncertainties of course.
Paul and Stephen saw Jesus raised from the dead and in some way reflecting divine glory. Their story is about a real event, those individuals experience. Now that does not mean that there is only one way to interpret the story or event. It is possible to say their seeing was in the realm of imagination ,hope or enthusiasm . Just because evidence exists does not mean we have the truth safely in hand. I think Res Ipsa's observations about trials are relevant because they are about evaluating evidence.In trials evaluating evidence is taken seriously, and for me trials can also illustrate how knowing the truth can remain painfully out of reach.
As recently as the Joseph Smith story you can see Joseph’s account of the first vision morphing over time, and you see the witnesses stating that they saw things with “spiritual eyes.” They weren’t really trying to make a historical record like we might today.
I find myself remembering a bit of Mark Twain discussing the role of stretchers in good story telling. I would have to stretch to imagine the details of what I read decades ago. I understand that the discipline of writing history has expanded the demand, expectation, of accuracy. However I think the role of stretching a story and people deciding whether they want to enjoy the stretch or reject in in favor of accuracy existed in ancient times as now. People a couple of thousand years ago had plenty of circumstances where the difference between what really happened and a bad report could be very important. How is the wheat crop? what is my neighbors army doing? what happened to the shipment of copper? Did so and so join up with this other so and so? (armies? business? saturday night party plan?) people want the real story, at least sometimes.