NoHolyCows
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Your notion is both unsupported and illogical.
No reason has been supplied explaining how it is that because someone makes a statement in public, that statement "needs public discriminators".
You have made a necessity claim.
But it is not necessary in any sense of necessary that a statement "needs public discriminators" for that statement having been made in public.
It’s neither. In public reasoning, an origin claim is warranted only if it yields observations that are more expected on that claim than on its rivals. That is the standard in science (hypotheses must have discriminating predictions) and in history and law (claims need corroborables). Calling that “unsupported” ignores the basic fact that without public discriminators, no origin claim can bind anyone who doesn’t already accept it.
Because a public claim seeks public assent. Assent in public inquiry is earned by publicly checkable differences in what the world would look like if the claim were true versus false. If a claim supplies no such differences, it is indistinguishable from its negation in evidence terms and cannot function as warrant over rivals.
I’m not asserting a metaphysical necessity; I’m stating a methodological requirement. If a claim is offered as a reason others should prefer it, then—by the norms of public argument—it must be testable against alternatives. If you don’t want that burden, don’t use the claim to obligate outsiders.
False.
I said: "The fact that the reasoning Paul presented was itself not dependent on Paul's inspiration is sufficient basis for concluding as fact that Paul's reference to his inspiration experience was not an appeal to authority at all." I could, of course, rephrase "sufficient basis for concluding as fact" as "sufficient basis for taking as fact" or as "sufficient basis for assuming as fact" with the emphasis in all versions remaining on Paul's reasoning being - and making itself ever more - independent of the inspiration.
Independence of some reasons does not erase the presence of a separate warrant. In Galatians, Paul both argues and explicitly states his message is “not from man … through Jesus Christ.” The existence of argumentation does not transmute an explicit origin-warrant into a nullity. If you want the origin claim to be irrelevant, stop deploying it. If you deploy it, it must carry public evidential load. It doesn’t.
Your statement means: "The existence of argumentation does not erase what necessarily cannot be anything other than non-human warrant." Your statement is a necessity claim.
No. It means exactly what it says: the presence of logos does not negate an appeal to ethos. A speaker can use both reasons and a claimed source. I’m not claiming the origin appeal is the only function—only that it is used as warrant and therefore must meet public standards if it is to trump rivals.
The fact that the argument Paul presented was itself not dependent on Paul's inspiration provides sufficient reason for denying that very necessity which you claim. The argument was presented because it was thought to be a good argument sufficient for its contextual purposes. The argument did not depend on "non-human warrant"; therefore, the supposed claim of non-human warrant would - at best - itself be regarded as a redundancy. But it is not even necessarily a redundancy, because, in light of the intent to present an argument, the reference to the inspiration can be intended as a way of contrasting viewpoints by highlighting distinctly different compatibilities. That is precisely how what you call a claim of non-human warrant was used - more about which is found below. So, the redundancy is not necessary, but for now it remains possible; consequently, a correct version of your statement could have been: "The existence of argumentation does not erase the possibility of there also being an additional claim of non-human warrant."
The point is that your use of "explicit" is false for being an erroneous claim of necessity rather than the more appropriate claim of possibility.
You also said: "A speaker can use both ethos (claimed authority) and logos (reasons)." That statement would be more correct in context if you had said: "A speaker can use both reasons and what might appear to be claimed authority." It is necessary that there be interpretation in order for there to be what appears to be "claimed authority". That necessity of interpretation imparts a burden upon any assertion of there necessarily being a "claimed authority" occurrence.
You said: "Paul’s narrative of independent revelation (Gal 1:11–17) is plainly introduced to trump 'man-taught' rivals." Your statement means: "Paul’s narrative of independent revelation (Gal 1:11–17) is necessarily introduced only to trump 'man-taught' rivals." That statement is false. It is false because it is a claim of exclusivity entailed by necessity, but that necessity is never established; therefore, the exclusivity claim is false.
If the revelation claim is redundant, it adds no warrant and should not be used to obligate anyone. If it is contrastive, it still functions as a source–superiority move and, once used against rivals, must be testable by public discriminators. In Galatians Paul doesn’t merely “contrast”; he asserts “not from man … through Jesus Christ” and attaches an anathema to contrary gospels. That is a public origin–warrant claim. Your concession that the reasoning stands without inspiration collapses the only possible probative use of the revelation appeal. Keep the reasons; the non-human warrant remains evidentially idle unless you can show observations more probable on “not of human origin” than on ordinary authorship. None have been shown.
“Explicit” here is descriptive, not modal. Paul states the origin claim in the text; that makes it explicit. The necessity I invoke is methodological: if you publicly deploy an origin claim as warrant over rivals, you necessarily incur the burden of providing public discriminators. That requirement does not vanish because the same letter also contains arguments.
All textual analysis is interpretive, but the classification is straightforward: a first-person revelation claim, set over against “from men” and paired with a curse on dissenters, functions as an ethos/authority move in ordinary rhetorical terms. Naming it “appears to be” does not change its role. And precisely because it is used as an authority move in public dispute, it must carry publicly checkable support to bind anyone beyond prior commitment. It doesn’t.
I never claimed “only.” I said “plainly to trump,” which is a statement about how it is used in the polemical context. He can both argue and assert superior origin. Once the latter is used as a warrant against rivals, it is subject to evidential adjudication. Since nothing in the letters or their transmission yields outcomes more probable on “not of human origin” than on human authorship, the origin claim does no probative work. Your attempt to recast my point as an exclusivity thesis misreads it; the conclusion stands: the origin appeal, as deployed, lacks public warrant and cannot obligate anyone outside private faith.
Paul's letter to the Galatians was certainly intended "to trump 'man-taught' rivals", but that trumping was by the reasoning which was independent of the report of inspiration. You interpret "man-taught" to necessarily mean "man-taught and therefore necessarily wrong". However, by the reasoning provided by Paul, "man-taught" is not a premise; it is, instead, a conclusion that validly follows from Paul's argument.
The position of the rivals is shown to be incompatible with the nature of righteousness. Paul's understanding, on the other hand, is compatible with the nature of righteousness. Since the rival understanding is inconsistent with the understanding about the nature of righteousness, the rival understanding necessarily deviates from what follows from divine inspiration in the absence of "man-made" or "man-taught" error, whereas Paul's expressed understanding does not (at least yet) so deviate from what follows from divine inspiration.
This means that reference by Paul to his own alleged experience of divine inspiration is not necessarily for the purpose of invoking "non-human warrant", and that means you are logically wrong to characterize Paul's reference to inspiration as nothing other than or not possibly other than a claim of non-human warrant.
Paul shows that the understanding expressed by the rivals is erroneous by the necessity of entailment. This means that there is no meaning lost by substituting "erroneous" for "man-taught" to get "to trump erroneous rivals."
This additionally highlights your own error. Your statement now means: "Paul’s narrative of independent revelation (Gal 1:11–17) is necessarily introduced only to trump erroneous rivals." However, it is not a revelation nor even an inspiration which trumps the rivals. Rather, it is Paul's reasoning which trumps the erroneous rivals, and your claim about the reference to the inspiration is made even more intensely wrong owing to your mis-taking of "man-taught" as if it is necessarily intended to mean "necessarily wrong".
Two things are simultaneously true in Galatians: Paul argues, and Paul asserts a non-human source to overmatch his rivals (“not from man … through Jesus Christ” with an anathema on contrary gospels). The presence of arguments does not erase the public origin claim; it adds to it. I have never said “man-taught” means “wrong” by definition. My point is methodological: once Paul deploys “not of human origin” as a warrant against rivals, that claim carries a burden of public discriminators—observations more probable if his origin claim is true than if ordinary authorship is true. None are available in the language, genre, rhetoric, or manuscript history of the letters. So keep the reasoning if you like; the origin appeal still contributes zero evidential weight.
“Incompatible with the nature of righteousness” is a theological judgment, not a public discriminator of origin. You are building the conclusion into your premise: define “what follows from divine inspiration” in a way that matches Paul, then declare rivals “man-taught.” That is circular from the standpoint of historical method. Even if Paul’s ethical conclusions were admirable, ethical appraisal does not convert into evidence that his message’s origin is non-human. Public adjudication of origin requires features the human-origin hypothesis does not already predict. Galatians supplies none.
I have not claimed “nothing other than.” I’ve said that in this polemical context Paul explicitly uses origin language as warrant against rivals. Whether he also reasons is immaterial to that fact. If the origin appeal is merely ornamental, it adds no warrant and should be dropped. If it is functional—offered to trump “man-taught” rivals—then it must be testable by public discriminators. Either way, the outcome is the same: the revelation claim provides no evidential gain.
There is no “necessity of entailment” here in the logical sense. Paul’s conclusions follow only if one grants his interpretive premises about Abraham, law, promise, and faith. Those are theologically loaded premises, not neutral axioms. Validity relative to those premises does not create evidence for a non-human origin; it only shows internal coherence within Paul’s framework. That keeps the dispute theological, not evidential.
You are attributing an “only” I did not write. My claim is conditional and consistent: Paul uses both reasons and a revelation claim. The reasons can be assessed on their merits; the revelation claim, once used to overtop rivals, must carry public discriminators to obligate anyone who does not already share Paul’s premises. The letters and their wholly human transmission provide none. Therefore the revelation appeal remains evidentially idle, and your recasting of my position does not touch that conclusion.
Even if errors are always produced by human thinking, human thinking does not always produce errors.
In essence, Paul's argument boils down to this conclusion: "neither circumcision nor uncircumcision has any value." That is to say that Paul's rivals are in error when they deny this point which follows from the reasoning - the argument - which Paul provided. Paul's reasoning is compatible with the possibility of Paul having been divinely inspired, but that reasoning is not at all dependent on Paul having been divinely inspired.
It has been indubitably and logically established that Paul did not necessarily make reference to inspiration for the purpose of trumping his rivals by referring to an experience of having been divinely inspired.
Trivially true and beside the issue. The fact that humans can reason correctly does nothing to convert a public origin claim—“not of human origin”—into evidence. Plenty of entirely human authors produce sound arguments; soundness does not license a non-human source. Your statement neither rebuts nor even touches the methodological point: origin claims acquire warrant only when they generate observations more probable on that claim than on ordinary human authorship. Correct reasoning, by itself, is perfectly consistent with purely human origin.
You’ve just conceded my position. If Paul’s reasoning and conclusions are independent of the inspiration claim, then the inspiration claim adds no evidential weight. Compatibility is not evidence; what matters are discriminators that favor “not of human origin” over ordinary composition. The letters give us none: they are written in ordinary Koine Greek, use standard epistolary forms, argue from shared scriptures, address concrete community disputes, and survive through a normal human manuscript tradition. All of that is exactly what we expect from human authorship; none of it is made likelier by a non-human source. So even if Paul’s argument about circumcision is internally coherent on his premises, that coherency does not move the origin question an inch
That hasn’t been established; it’s been asserted. The text itself shows Paul deploying origin language as a warrant in the Galatian dispute: he says his gospel is “not from man” but “through Jesus Christ,” recounts receiving it “through revelation,” and pronounces a curse on contrary “gospels.” Whether or not that is the only purpose is irrelevant; once the appeal is used in public argument, it invites public tests. On public criteria—language, genre, rhetoric, transmission—everything we can observe is fully human, and nothing observed is more probable on a non-human-origin hypothesis than on ordinary authorship. Therefore the revelation appeal carries no evidential force for anyone not already committed to it by faith, and repeating that it’s “indubitable” does not change the evidential calculus.
NHC