Copernicus
Industrial Grade Linguist
Oh, it started silly, and still is. My point is that the textual evidence is more or less equivalent for these two individuals. That is, for the emperor of the known world, and for an obscure Palestinian miracle worker.Look, this is getting very silly. The case for a claim that Julius Caesar did not exist would run into a host of problems, not the least of which would be the question of how Gaul got added to the Roman Empire. It's not really about textual references. That case for a claim that Jesus did not exist is a helluva lot easier. That really is about just textual references. You are truly creating a false analogy and making straw man by trying to discredit mythicism with it. I'm not saying that you can't make some kind of analogy along those lines to question the mythicist position. I'm saying that you should use an analogy that is less simplistic and more appropriate.
Not...
for the third time, since you seem to be having inexplicable trouble understanding this point....
that I think Julius Caesar didn't exist.
Julius Caesar existed.
You keep saying this, but I have never claimed you thought Julius Caesar didn't exist. I don't know how I could make it any clearer, but I'll try again. My point is that you are making a false equivalence between Caesar and Jesus by trying to make it seem like the textual evidence for both is roughly the same. It is not, and the problem is that the ONLY evidence for Jesus is textual. Others have also tried to make the same point, but you seem intent on defending your equivalence no matter how many times it is addressed and refuted.
He just didn't actually leave a long papyrus trail while he was alive. And if one man whose life utterly and permanently changed the face of European history for two millennia didn't leave much of a papyrus trail, we shouldn't be surprised that the same can be said of most individuals in antiquity, Jesus included.
What are you talking about? A lot was written about and by Julius Caesar while he was alive. Have you never even heard of De Bello Gallico? I even read the original in Latin. You do know that Cicero, the greatest Roman orator of his time, had things to say about him, don't you? Again, you seem to be making a false equivalence here between Julius Caesar and Jesus. Are you just going into argumentum ad nauseam mode?
Is Julius Caesar a funny example?
Show me the strong textual evidence that any particular 1st century Judean existed. Find me a single one for whom the textual evidence is stronger than that which is presented for Jesus, or that meets any of the supposed criteria of historicity that have been advanced in this thread. If you do not like my analogy, I happily invite you to find another that is more appropriate.
I'll wait.
There seems to be some kind of communication malfunction here, because you seem to be making truly absurd claims. You need to explain how it is that the posthumous references to Jesus are equivalent to the contemporary records of Caesar, not to mention the existence of works that he authored.
Aha, I'm starting to see a trend here. You claimed that there were all kinds of non-Roman texts supporting the existence of Julius Caesar, to the point of asserting with seeming confidence that the lack of such evidence would be "suspicious". When asked to name a single one, you changed the subject, perhaps having since realized that no such documents existed. And the same thing is about to happen to the archaeological evidence. I will ask you to name a single artifact that supports Caesar's existence, but that isn't explicitly tied to his status as a political leader: a status that Jesus never had, nor is claimed to have had, and thus would not be expected to produce. And you will once again, perhaps after a bit of frantic googling, change the subject and introduce a new goalpost to reach, having no doubt realized with some embarassment that it is vanishingly rare to find an artifact associated with certainty to any named individual.Archaeological evidence is more than just the discovery of a minted coin. There are a lot of different kinds of archaeological relics that corroborate the claim that Julius Caesar existed. There are none pointing to the existence of Jesus. Lack of evidence does not prove that Jesus never existed. Nor does the lack of evidence for a china teapot orbiting the sun prove that there isn't one. However, it is consistent with the claim that there isn't one. The burden of proof is on the historicist position, and it has to be better than "Jesus must have existed because mythicism is equivalent to denying that Julius Caesar existed." It isn't.
Actually, all I said was others besides Romans wrote about him without having any specifics to back that up. I'm not exactly sure what you meant by "Romans", so I'm not exactly sure what I would need to do to name specific people in a way that would satisfy your demand. Obviously, most of the literary references were by people living in the Roman Empire, but not all of them were Roman citizens. And it has been pointed out to you that it is wrong to equate the Roman Empire with a group devoted to a singular religious ideology. So here again you are into equating very different communities of people. You can't seem to get it through your head that you picked the wrong kind of historical person to equate with Jesus. Julius Caesar actually did leave an extensive papyrus trail, but the papyrus trail isn't the only thing that informs us of his existence. It is the only thing that informs us of Jesus' existence, and his trail contains nothing authored by anyone while he was alive.