Re: Does anyone have On the Historicity of Jesus yet?
Posted: Thu Jul 10, 2014 5:28 pm
Micro-review:
Expected the definitive statement from this branch of Jesus mythicism and got it. But offered little that experienced readers on this subject haven't more or less read before.
Expected the definitive statement from this branch of Jesus mythicism and got it. But offered little that experienced readers on this subject haven't more or less read before.
- The strongest section of the book are the 200 or so pages on hypothesis and background knowledge, especially on the Greco-Roman side of things, Carrier's intellectual wheelhouse. That said, a careful reader will note that a heavy reliance on just three sources: Plutarch, Philo, and the Ascension of Isaiah. And keeping in mind Carrier's beatdown at the hands of Thom Stark a while back, I'm waiting to read what a reviewer competent in the Jewish background might have to say about this section.
- I'm not convinced in the slightest by Carrier's treatment of the Rank-Raglan hero class, by which he derives prior probabilities for his Bayesean scheme, and I don't thing very many other people are going to be convinced on this matter either. I haven't been able to pin down a solid argument against it yet, but I've a sense there's something too gimmicky, too artificial about the whole thing. I've a vague sense that I could probably "prove" lots of silly things in history by contriving some "reference class" that fits just so whatever I want to prove.
- Turning to the sections on textual evidence, I was struck by how often what many people might consider relevant evidence is pushed aside as irrelevant, even though what is being constructed is, after all, a probabilistic argument that ought to be able to accommodate evidence of different quality at different weights. Acts of the Apostles? Relevant. Epistle of Barnabas? Irrelevant. And so on.

