Your missing the point, I'm the one that should be using your own resource against you not the other way around, i'm not attacking Bayesian reasoning. What I'm advocating and haven't seen Carrier or anyone else refute is for all intents and purposes Bayesian reasoning HAS been applied to history for a very long time.
I honestly haven't seen it as I have been apprised of Bayes Theorem and history through Carrier. I have been reading Historical Jesus scholarship now for a few years and I don't see it being used, and it *ought* to be. It's exactly why the criteria for historicity have failed so spectacularly. The historians are merely using their illogical and fatally flawed assumptions about Jesus and his existence.
Different language is used that's all. For example any historian who applies my arguments from no contrary and my above argument of no history of the mythical heresy can either plug in .97 into a Bayesian calculation or just say the arguments themselves refute the contrary argument through deductive historical reasoning to the best explanation. It is why I brought up Dan Vogel. If Carrier applied Bayesian reasoning to Dan Vogel's arguments respecting Joseph Smith he is gonna land right around where Vogel does.
This appears to me to be a dubious assumption on your part.
So, my argument is how on earth can Bayesian reasoning turn the issue of a historical Jesus from one of near expert unanimity 180 degrees to a mythicist position? That's ridiculous.
So because you can't conceive of it, it's not possible? Can you name for me the fallacy you are laboring mightily under here?
That is equivalent to saying that biologists in creating the history of human origins haven't used Bayesian reasoning (they don't for all intents and purposes) and if we do apply Bayesian reasoning we can get to a creationist position. It is absurd.
Yes it is, but not because of why you think.
Were going to get to the same evolutionary conclusions using either method because the weighing in Bayesian reasoning is based on the same logical rational arguments.
Now how am I supposed to accept that kind of assumption, really?
The probability of the traditional historical critical method reaching such a unanimous position in academia and bayesian reasoning turning that in the complete opposite direction is .01. This is because the critical reasoning and methods used in the traditional historical critical method are for all intents and purposes Bayesian to begin with. Carrier is playing a shell game.
Bayesian probability does not mean it turns a consensus into the exact opposite in any manner. Your assumptions about Bayesianism are honestly no good. I sincerely would suggest you get a handle on what it does and doesn't do first. You appear to not grasp what Bayesian probability is about.
Sincerely,
BYP