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Posted by: Human ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 01:21PM

Micheal Grant v. Richard Carrier

To my mind, the above *idea* exemplifies, at the least, how far we can stretch the difference between a classical scholar to trust and a scholar to question, prima facie.


Both are scholars, in that both are formally so; which usually means from a particular set of professors at a particular University or College (or several).

As much as that matters, it’s not everything. There’s the work, which some might say is the only thing that really matters. Judge a man’s work, not the man or where he came from. It’s the work that matters.

So, what works do we have from Michael Grant and Richard Carrier?

Michael Grant: his list of works is too long to post (look it up, it’s extensive), and the experience of reading from his list requires poetry to describe. That aside, one thing Michael Grant did, over and over, is demonstrate his literacy in the languages he professed to know. How? He translated those languages into English.

Why is this important? If someone wants to profess they know what latin and greek texts mean, they have to demonstrate they know how to read the languages, Latin and Greek at the least. How do you make that demonstration? One way is to list the teachers who taught the scholar how to read ancient texts and the Universities and Colleges where the teaching took place. Another way, and perhaps a proof positive way, is by translating the texts into English yourself.

Micheal Grant translated Tacitus, for example. He also translated scattered classical poems and fragments. We begin to trust that Michael Grant understands ancient languages well when we compare his translations with the translations of other scholars. If we know the languages ourselves, all the better. Then we can compare what *we* see in the ancient text with what the scholar sees in the text. For example, we might be reading along and suddenly say to ourself, “well, that was cleverly put,” or “wait a minute, that isn’t *quite* what the text means, given (a.b.c.d…),” or “that was a clumsy bunch of words,” or “my God, that is it perfectly, what a grace note…a goddamn poet…”, or etc.

Question: what has Richard Carrier translated, and what does he plan to translate next?


One more thing:

Some claim that history is all about the facts and nothing but the facts. This is true only in a very limited sense. There is a whole discussion in this which I will skip to simply state the unavoidable conclusion: History is at bottom a narrative endeavour.

Out of the facts, text and archeology being the primary driver of historical fact, narrative is written. The narrative is called history. History writing, like all writing, betrays the author. When we look at the work we cannot help but see the man. That’s unavoidable. It’s this fact about history writing that contributes to history being an emotional experience, and why it feels personal.

History is more than the facts. For example, M. Grant came out of Harrow and Cambridge with training in the classics specializing in numismatics. There’s more to a bronze Roman coin than the fact of the coin’s existence. It requires interpretation. If M. Grant specialized in terra sigillata then he would know how to interpret the pottery of ancient Italy and Gaul. The pottery is the fact, what the historian writes about the pottery is the narrative. History is not a string of facts, it is a tapestry of interpretation. Again, this in unavoidable.

Question: what is Richard Carrier’s specialty?

When a classical scholar specializes in something it means he has been recognized by a University or College to be competent to profess on the speciality. M. Grant’s first book, for example, was extended from his thesis on the subject of Roman bronze coins. While at school he studied with and learned from other scholars and professors who chose different kinds of factual minutia as specialties. So, later on in academic life, while writing the history of Nero for example or while translating Tacitus and Cicero, M. Grant could consult with other specialists to further the accuracy of his own work. Also, other scholars doing their own narrative would consult with M. Grant when they had particular questions about ancient coins and money in general. This is important. Historical narrative is not written alone, it requires much consultation. Now, some may say that using books alone is sufficient in this process, but the ‘old school’ would profoundly disagree. It is only while meeting another specialist in person, sipping cognac in the faculty lounge for example, that one can learn what kind of “weight” to give to their opinions. Why is that? Again:

The work is first, yes, but the work betrays the man.

I’d rather not go on. I’m shocked at how profoundly history writing is misunderstood by many on this board. I trust that I’ve written nothing to clarify what I find so shocking, but there you have it. A lot that needs to be said on this topic to create clarity use to be things understood without having to say them. How history gets talked about these days (and written alas) indicates just how far our larger culture has slipped into a scientistic mind-set and away from an old-fashioned literary/humanities mind-set. Obviously I think this is to our detriment. For one, a too-literal mind makes for dogma, false either/ors and therefore, ultimately, totalitarianism.

Facts alone have never signified. To believe so is to pretend their isn’t an unstated, hidden premise in the signifier. That is dishonest. Facts require interpretation, and therefore betrays the interpreter. I learned to trust the M. Grant I find in his works in the same way I learned to mistrust the Doris Kearns Goodwin I found in “Team of Rivals”. Etc.

Question (my last): what in Richard Carrier’s work prompts his readers to trust him?

Human

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Posted by: bona dea ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 01:51PM

Good summary and the answer to your question about Carrier is "Not a lot." And he is the cream of the the mythicist crop.

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Posted by: bona dea ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 01:54PM

BTW, Grant is one of my favorite authors.

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Posted by: Human ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 03:29PM

bona dea Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> BTW, Grant is one of my favorite authors.

Mine too.

The subtext to my post is that sensibility is just as important to history writing as sense.


I'm hoping those that are relying on Richard Carrier to form (in part only, I hope) their ideas about the Ancient Near and Middle East can elaborate on why they find him trustworthy.

Also, I chose Carrier rather than the likes of F & Gandy because he seems to be what you say about him, the "cream of the the mythicist crop." He at least is honest enough to post a CV, for what it's worth.

Thanks for input, bona dea.

Human

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Posted by: bona dea ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 02:42PM

Other ways of evaluating a scholar. These are not necessarily foolproof,but meant as a guideline.1. Does he have an advanced degree in the field he is writing about? 2. Has he published and been peer reviewed?. 3. Who published his work? A book published by an Ivy League school is usually better than a book published by a publisher who specialized in new age theories or a self published book.4. Does he have the respect of his peers or is he a lone wolf out to prove that he is the only one with the truth? 5. Does he behave in a professional manner? Disagreeing is normal. Attacking other scholars is unprofessional. 6. Is he associated with a respected university? 7.Does his theory make sense or does it require convoluted, apologystic arguments? 8. Is he objective and does he have an agenda? When dealing with historic Jesus, I prefer to deal with those who do not believe in a divine Jesus and those who dont get their paychecks from mythicist organizations.Those people have probably already made up their minds. Not to say they are automatically wrong but they should be greeted with some.skepticism.

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Posted by: quinlansolo ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 02:51PM


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Posted by: Human ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 03:24PM

I think I've written enough. If you fail to see a point, that's fine.


Perhaps you could add to discussion by answering my questions:

1. What has Richard Carrier translated, and what does he plan to translate next?

2. What is Richard Carrier’s specialty?

3. What in Richard Carrier’s work prompts his readers to trust him?

If you find these questions to be irrelevant, please let us know why. Thank you.

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Posted by: bona dea ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 02:53PM

Look at my list. Carrier does not make the cut on most of the issues.I'll let Human list his problems with the man.

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Posted by: Craig C ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 03:28PM

The use of Bayesian analysis to assess historical evidence

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Posted by: Craig C ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 03:33PM

.

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Posted by: Human ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 03:36PM

Craig C Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> The use of Bayesian analysis to assess historical
> evidence

Thank you. I prefer sensibility to statistical anaylsis when assessing the abilities of an historian. But we can disagree with that.


A few questions:

Do you find historians who do not use Bayesian analysis to be less trustworthy?

Can you give us an example of Carrier's use of Bayesian analysis where you believe it yielded something more accurate than otherwise?

(I trust that Carrier is competent with Bayesian analysis. Last time I checked his CV, he was going around to atheist groups and teaching it.)

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Posted by: Human ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 03:44PM

By the way, I'm glad you weighed in (Craig Criddle, right?) You could help me understand if this criticism of Carrier's *math* is valid or not. If you have the time, I'd be grateful:


http://irrco.wordpress.com/2012/09/08/a-mathematical-review-of-proving-history-by-richard-carrier/

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Posted by: bona dea ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 03:40PM

Bayesian statistics does not really work with history nor wasnt intended to. That is why other scholars are not jumping on the Carrier bandwagon

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Posted by: Poof Meister ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 03:44PM

Who is Richard Carrier? Answer: A hack with an agenda.

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Posted by: bona dea ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 03:48PM

He is a scholar and has published, but he has failed the rest of my list on evaluating scholars. He definitely has an agenda and gets his paycheck from a mythicist group.He attacks others in a very unprofessional manner. He has almost no support from other scholars and is not associated with a university

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Posted by: RPackham ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 03:53PM

What is a "scholar"? The definition used to discredit the statements of anyone reputed to be a "scholar" is very narrow: one who is a leading researcher in his field, an author of many books and articles, the latter appearing in peer-reviewed journals, read usually only by other scholars. It helps if he also is a tenured professor at a leading university. Anyone who does not fit this narrow definition is sometimes dismissed by opponents as a "pseudo-scholar," a "hack," not much better than an imposter.

A more useful definition would be closer to the legal definition of "expert witness," that is, someone who has acquired a special knowledge about a field, even if only through self-study or long experience.

To dismiss evidence or arguments because of the person presenting them is a common form of the ad hominem fallacy with overtones of the "no true Scotsman" fallacy.

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Posted by: Human ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 04:02PM

Let's go with what you say for the sake of discussion.

What in Carrier, (or the Freke & Gandy, who you've defended) has you believing that they are trustworthy as "expert witnesses"? For example, translating latin and greek demonstrates some expertise in the languages and to a some extent the cultures wherein the languages were spoken/written. What do Carrier and Freke & Gandy do to demonstrate their expertise in the language and culture of the ancient world?

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Posted by: William Law ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 04:03PM

Richard's right.

Besides, most of us have already said that we don't give shit if Jesus is real or not. Sorry, but it just doesn't matter. Everyone is going to be more likely to accept scholars who have the same bias.

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Posted by: bona dea ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 04:07PM

That might be right if there was a real debate among scholars. In this case there is little debate.If you dont.give a.shit, why.are you here..I also doubt that someone who doesnt give a shit has done much research. Correct me if I am wrong



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 12/19/2014 04:09PM by bona dea.

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Posted by: William Law ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 04:23PM

I don't give a shit about whether Jesus is real or not, but I do give a shit about being contantly preached at--which is what these many threads feel like.

Also, I do believe that i've done enough study to make a sensible conclusion (I am PhD and full-time professor so I do understand research). Even if it is a different conclusion than some have come to, and a different conclusion from what I orginally wanted or expected, it was not done willy-nilly.

This conversation is little more helpful than arguing about the size of Thor's hammer.

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Posted by: bona dea ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 04:45PM

Then dont read them. Some of us do give a shit and I.dont see anyone forcing you to be here.

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Posted by: bona dea ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 03:54PM

Look at my list.It sums it up pretty well.Of course there are self educated people out there, but they are not the norm.Education.counts and so do.facts. Scholars do not pull so called facts out of their butts like Freke and Gandy and Achyra S.Read some mythology books and see how their savior god thesis and the parallels to Jesus stands up to the actual myths. It is called research.Dont take their word. Look it up.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 12/19/2014 03:59PM by bona dea.

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Posted by: Happy_Heretic ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 04:09PM

The scholar who is correct is the one with FACTS on their side. But... how would you know? You have a God-preconceived conclusion. Any exmo on this board can simply just review your posts. NONE of them question religious historians, and ALL of them support them. Any bias there HUMAN? Your "stupid" is showing. Perhaps you should cross your legs.

You and Bona Dea are becoming "apologetically" OLD. perhaps a little intellectual plastic surgery would help? Call is "rationality" (I know I do).

You are sad and subjective, rather than indifferent and objective. The OPPOSITE of any decent historians.

HH =)

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Posted by: bona dea ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 04:15PM

And you keep throwing out the idiotic bs that everyone who believes Jesus lived is a Christian. It simply isnt true and . believing it makes you look like an idiot. I.am.not a believer and as far as I know neither is Human and I am sick of you saying otherwise.

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Posted by: Human ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 04:19PM

Heh.

Don't mind her, bona dea. She's no more than a female version of "Dave the Atheist". Nothing is offered, so there's nothing to respond to.

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Posted by: Happy_Heretic ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 04:21PM

Check-mate.

HH =)

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Posted by: Happy_Heretic ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 04:20PM

I have many documented statements on this board. Prove your statement! Come on Bona DEA. Put your historical credentials to the test. PROVE IT. I leave the other exmos here to be judges and jury.

HH =)

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Posted by: Henry Bemis ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 04:24PM

Very interesting post, Human. Allow me to push back a little.

Generally, as one moves from the hard sciences, like physics, through the soft sciences, and finally to history, arguably one correspondingly moves from objectivity to subjectivity, meaning that individual human biases play a greater role in theory formation and acceptance.

History, being on the far extreme of what might still be called science in some sense, is more subject to such biases of subjectivity than most any other legitimate intellectual endeavor. After all, there is no opportunity for verification or replication by experiment. Notwithstanding, the fact that the enterprise of history is largely subjective, does not mean that historical events are themselves ultimately subjective, or that there can be no right or wrong historical claims.

The historian can only turn to the data of the historical documents and apply interpretation to arrive at a theory of some sort. If two "scholars" by their expressed theories, have read and considered the same documents, and by their expressed theories are not arguing over errors in verifiable facts, you start to split hairs when you then move to degrees of competence in order to find "the best" or most correct interpretation.

True, in dealing with ancient history, and ancient language texts, language competence in the context of a given culture, can be extremely important to achieve the proper nuance of interpretation. But these interpretative elements should appear naturally within the theoretical argument, and therefore also be subject to factual debate, without setting aside the real issue and pursuing a peripheral discussion about the general competence of the scholars taking a position.

If, at the end of the day, we are arguing (rather passionately it seems) about "competence" and making belief decisions by weighing credentials, rather than talking about the texts themselves, and their underlying cultural context, haven't we shifted the discussion from scholarship to rhetoric?

The validity of any theory is in the theory itself, as presented--not in the credentials of the scholar proposing the theory. Language translations, and cultural factors, are part of this argument, and can be attacked independently of one's credentials. If disagreements center around errors of verifiable fact, either directly or indirectly, the discussion can continue. However, if the facts are fully known and understood, such that further discussion is merely interpretative, there is really nothing more to say.

If at the end of the day we have to "trust" one scholar over another we should look to the presentation of their theories, and the presentation of objections to such theories. If factual disputes are apparent, then, of course, check the facts. Resort to credentials usually only means that the theories themselves fail in definitiveness. It seems to me that we should just accept that, and not thereafter move the discussion to an ad hominem, microscopic examination of credentials in a desperate attempt to achieve closure.

_______________________________

HUMAN: So, what works do we have from Michael Grant and Richard Carrier?
. . . .
Why is this important? If someone wants to profess they know what latin and greek texts mean, they have to demonstrate they know how to read the languages, Latin and Greek at the least. How do you make that demonstration? One way is to list the teachers who taught the scholar how to read ancient texts and the Universities and Colleges where the teaching took place. Another way, and perhaps a proof positive way, is by translating the texts into English yourself.

COMMENT: If competing theories differ as to the meaning of the words in an ancient text, or the cultural background that informs such a meaning, then that should be addressed in the arguments for or against such theories, without resort to making a comparative list or analysis of credentials. These arguments will typically include alternative interpretations or translations, along with why one translation is favored over another.

____________________________________

Question: what has Richard Carrier translated, and what does he plan to translate next?

COMMENT: It doesn't matter. Again, the theoretical discussion should include substantive objections to translations and interpretations, with reasoned arguments as to why one is preferred over another. Resorting to credentials is ad hominem, and not appropriate, in my view.

If you don't take this view, any scholar could just play the "credentials card" and end the discussion.

______________________________________

HUMAN: Some claim that history is all about the facts and nothing but the facts. This is true only in a very limited sense. There is a whole discussion in this which I will skip to simply state the unavoidable conclusion: History is at bottom a narrative endeavour.

COMMENT: True, but narratives are based upon presumed facts that are true or false, whether we can get at the "truth" of such facts or not; or whether they provide a complete or distorted explanation of an historical event. Events happened or they didn't. Another event was a contributing cause or it wasn't. People were motivated in certain prescribed ways or they were not.

______________________________________

HUMAN: Out of the facts, text and archeology being the primary driver of historical fact, narrative is written. The narrative is called history. History writing, like all writing, betrays the author. When we look at the work we cannot help but see the man. That’s unavoidable. It’s this fact about history writing that contributes to history being an emotional experience, and why it feels personal.

COMMENT: Yes. Fully agree. But this is the nature of history. It is when we treat it as a science that we get in trouble. Moreover, the problem is not that historical facts are neither true of false (no post-modernism), or that there is no legitimate level of explanation, it is because of the extreme difficulty of getting at the whole truth, or providing a complete explanation.

____________________________________

HUMAN: History is more than the facts. For example, M. Grant came out of Harrow and Cambridge with training in the classics specializing in numismatics. There’s more to a bronze Roman coin than the fact of the coin’s existence. It requires interpretation. If M. Grant specialized in terra sigillata then he would know how to interpret the pottery of ancient Italy and Gaul. The pottery is the fact, what the historian writes about the pottery is the narrative. History is not a string of facts, it is a tapestry of interpretation. Again, this in unavoidable.

COMMENT: Again, yes. You can describe it in poetic language if you want to. Just do not go on to suggest that there are no facts of the matter in history. Some interpretations are correct, or more correct, and some are not, or less correct. But underlying it all are real events, real people, with real mental states and motivations.

______________________________________

HUMAN: Facts alone have never signified. To believe so is to pretend their isn’t an unstated, hidden premise in the signifier. That is dishonest. Facts require interpretation, and therefore betrays the interpreter. I learned to trust the M. Grant I find in his works in the same way I learned to mistrust the Doris Kearns Goodwin I found in “Team of Rivals”. Etc.

COMMENT: This really requires a separate post because it is metaphysical in the sense it suggests that there is no reality (facts) separate and apart from the "signifier," or that the signifier somehow interjects him or herself into facts. Of course, this is a legitimate view, and explains much of your post, although I disagree with it. (If I understand your point.) The bottom line is whether there is a reality out there that is separate and apart from our view of it; or whether if there is, whether we can have access to it without somehow infering with it. We can have that discussion. But it seems to me if we are talking seriously about science, or even history, we have to start with the premise that there is something objective to be discovered about the world. Otherwise, why bother. Now, maybe history in particular cannot be meaningful without human interpretations. May the historian necessarily interfers with "the facts of the matter," such that there are no objective facts to be discovered independent of the historian. But again, as with all academic disciplines, don't we have to assume a metaphysical theory that makes our efforts to understand reality meaningful in some objective sense?

If so, then I would suggest not to confuse the subjectivity of interpretations, with the objectivity of historical facts. You are telling us something about human beings, and their motives. This influences all of science, but there are still facts to be learned independent of that subjectivity, and meaningful interpretations to be considered.

________________________________________

Question (my last): what in Richard Carrier’s work prompts his readers to trust him?

COMMENT: I am uncomfortable with all this talk about trust. I do not trust any author independent of the written word, and have learned to assess the merits and objectivity of authors by their presentations alone, even if they have better credentials than I do on the subject they are writing about. I find that in scientific writing, the "truth" subtly emerges, if only in part, as one delves into issues, and understands them, without having to consider whether the author graduated from Harvard or BYU; was a tenured professor, or a postdoc; or is a scientist or a lawyer.

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Posted by: Happy_Heretic ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 04:29PM

I am as surprised as anyone. Maybe I do need to reconsider my worldview.


HH =~l

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Posted by: Human ( )
Date: December 19, 2014 04:42PM

There's a lot here, Henry.

From the top I reject your emphasis on "theory". I reject the reliance on "theory" in history the way I do in literature. There is methodology etc, yes.

You say, "However, if the facts are fully known and understood, such that further discussion is merely interpretative, there is really nothing more to say."

Funny, where you think history ends with "nothing more to say" is exactly where I think history begins. I also think that most historians would say the same. This is less true the more recent the history that is being written, of course, because the body of facts available increases the more recent the period. But when we are talking about the ancient world the body of facts are small enough to handle (almost) and so, really, what's left to say is what the facts *mean*.


My post isn't about "credentials" per se, despite RPackman's strawman. I'm simply asking how it is we determine the competence of a writer professing expertise on the classical world. Knowing the language of the relevant texts extremely well is the first test, I would think. This would have to precede any sort of "theory", would it not?


When you invoke "theory" vis-a-vis history you are invoking tendentiousness, an idea that history is determined (Hegel, Marx, Toynbee to a degree, the spectacular Oswald Spengler...)

More later... for example why I used the word "trust".

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