|
http://michaelsheiser.com/PaleoBabble/
21May2008
Posted by MSH under:
Ancient Astronauts.
It just kills me how, when certain
people find an impressive work of craftsmanship or art that appears old they
conclude it must be alien. “I couldn’t have made anything like that, and no
one I know could have, either. They must have an extraterrestrial origin!”
Good grief.
Here’s a
recent article on the crystal skulls,
now immortalized in the title of the new Indiana Jones movie. Sorry, Indy,
they weren’t made by ETs.
And yes, I’m going to see the movie.

Technorati Tags:
aliens,
ancient astronauts,
archaeology,
art,
crystal skulls
19May2008
Posted by MSH under:
Ancient Astronauts.
Well, it isn’t the ancient world, but
it still fits the kind of thing I’m doing on PaleoBabble. I keep getting
links and emails related to the “compelling” evidence for UFOs in
Renaissance art, so my annoyance meter has passed the tolerable level.
The UFOs in Renaissance art nonsense
primarily extends from
Matthew Hurley’s website.
An informed rebuttal to this has been out on the web for some time, but it
apparently hasn’t been widely discussed or circulated — likely due to the
fact that most of it isn’t in English.
Art historian
Diego Cuoghi (yes, a
real art historian) has a website devoted to analyzing the paintings on
Hurley’s website. Sorry, they aren’t extraterrestrials and space ships. The
main site is here,
but it’s in Italian. But
Parts 1 and 5 have been translated into English.
I highly recommend them - very interesting and informative, but not for
those who are fundamentalist ETH’ers (ExtraTerrestrial Hypothesis).
You definitely need high speed for all
these images, too.

Technorati Tags:
art,
artwork,
Hurley,
Renaissance,
UFOs
15May2008
Posted by MSH under:
Jesus Tomb.
As I suggested in my first post on this
issue, there is a serious need for clear thinking with regard to the Jesus
tomb theory and the names in the tomb. The Jesus tomb theory is only
compelling if two items are true: (1) that the Jesus of the tomb’s Jesus
ossuary was in fact Jesus of Nazareth, and (2) the names of the people in
the tomb are related to the Jesus of this tomb in the same way
that people with those names were related to the Jesus of the New Testament.
Both these items are inextricably linked. We can only embrace
the Jesus tomb theory if its Jesus figure was Jesus of Nazareth, and that in
turn can really only be established if the other people in the tomb are the
people who knew Jesus of Nazareth. Hence the Jesus figure of the
tomb only takes on the identity of Jesus of Nazareth if it can be
established if the other people in the tomb were related to the Jesus figure
they way the New Testament describes. The inscriptions must match the New
Testament record to get Jesus in the tomb, so to speak. If they do not,
there is no case.
This means that from the outset the
reader must make a basic decision before embracing or rejecting the Jesus
tomb theory. You must decide if you are going to make your decision to
embrace or reject on the basis of data that
actually exist or data that are
speculated to have once existed. The former is real;
the latter is the domain of the imagination. This decision is fundamental to
processing the inscriptions in the Talpiot tomb in terms of what we can
really know and what we imagine might be knowable.
The actual
data provide us with six ossuaries with inscriptions:
-
Mariamenou [e] Mara (”Mary, who is Martha /
lord”); or, more likely, Mariame̅ kai Mara; “Mary and Martha”; (Pfann,
2007–Pfann’s
reconstructions have thus far gone unrefuted)
- Yhwdh br Yshw’
(”Judah/Jude, son of Jesus”)
- Mtyh (”Matiyahu”;
“Matthew”)
- Yshw’ br Yhwsp
(”Jesus, son of Joseph”)
- Ywsh
(”Joseph/Yose”)
- Mryh
(”Mary”)
Notice that only two of the names have
what is called a patronym-a descriptive phrase denoting family affiliation
or ancestry (e.g., “Jude, son of Jesus”; “Jesus, son of
Joseph”). What this means is that, in terms of data that actually exists,
the Talpiot tomb tells us only that we have a Jesus who was the son
of a Joseph, and a Jude who was the son of a Jesus. We know nothing about
the other relationships of the other people in the tomb.
Despite this paucity of information,
Jacobovici and his associates know how the mind works. Since millions around
the world are familiar with the names of Jesus, Mary, Joseph, and Mary
Magdalene–whether because of biblical literacy or The DaVinci Code–the
creators of the Jesus Family Tomb documentary assumed correctly that when a
person hears those names presented together, the mind will immediately
cluster them in a manner associated with the New Testament. The mind
therefore “defaults” to the supposition that these people are related in the
way the New Testament describes, and so the mind is predisposed to equate
them with the actual New Testament characters. But that isn’t what the
data from the tomb tells us since there are no patronyms that produce that
conclusion-it’s just where the mind goes subconsciously.
The actual
data of the inscriptions speak to two family relationships. Now here’s
what we don’t know, based on the lack of patronyms, not on where
our mind wanders:
- We do not
know if all or even most of the people in the Talpiot tomb are
related. It is assumed that the Talpiot tomb is a family tomb,
but we do not actually know that. It’s probably a fair guess, but it
doesn’t lend any clarity to the situation.
- We do not
know who among the named occupants of the tomb were immediate
or distant relatives. We have only two sonship patronyms on six ossuaries,
but that isn’t as helpful as it has been assumed.
- We do not
know if the people in the ossuaries were adults or children.
There is nothing inscribed on any of the ossuaries that tells us anything
about the age of the occupants.
- We do not
know if the two Jesus names on the ossuaries are one and the
same. That is, we don’t know if Joseph, Jesus, and Jude are grandfather,
father, and son. Those relationships are assumed by the defenders
of the Jesus Family tomb theory, but they are actually only speculation.
These three individuals could be unrelated in terms of immediate family,
but still belong in the family tomb because they are more distantly
related to the immediate family members in the tomb.
- Though it is
assumed, we do not know that Mary (not the
Mariamenou) in the tomb is the mother of Jesus. There is no patronym that
conveys this information. That Mary may have been the sister of the
tomb’s Jesus, or an aunt, or a grandmother.
- We do
not know if the Mary (Mariamenou) of the
tomb was married to the Jesus of the tomb. This marriage is only
speculated since it is assume that the Mary is Mary Magdalene. But even if
it was the Magdalene (quite unlikely;
Pfann, 2007),
such a marriage itself is only speculation–there is no text, in either the
canonical gospels or the Nag Hammadi Gnostic gospels (or any other ancient
source) that has Jesus and Mary married.
- We have no
way of knowing from the data that actually exists if either
Mary was married to the Joseph in the tomb who was the father of Jesus.
The general point to be made by these
observations is important. If we have no data with which to match the family
relationships that existed between the people who bore these names in the
New Testament and the named individuals in the Talpiot tomb, we
cannot make an evidenced-based claim
that this is the Jesus Family tomb. That conclusion cannot be drawn from the
existing data; it must be supplied by means of the imagination.
Tabor might possibly respond that the
mitochondrial DNA evidence lends support to his view of the names in the
tomb. We read from a different blog post:
There are two “Marys” in this tomb,
known by different forms of that name, namely Maria and Mariamene. The
mitDNA test indicates the Mariamene in this tomb is not related to Yeshua as
mother or sister on the maternal side. That leaves open the likelihood that
Maria could well be the mother, especially if we have two of her sons,
Yeshua and Yose, in this tomb. It would make sense that she would be buried
with her children in this intimate, small, family tomb and that her ossuary
would be inscribed Maria. (Tabor, “Imagining A Hypothetical Jesus Family
Tomb,” 2007)
Yes, this would make sense–if the data
actually told us that Yeshua and Yose were
the sons of Mary–but of course there are neither patronyms nor DNA evidence
for that. The absence of patronyms means that this Mary could be the wife,
sister, or cousin of Yeshua or Yose. The fact that the mitDNA test
indicates the Mariamene in this tomb is not related to Yeshua as mother or
sister on the maternal side does not rule out a host of other possibilities,
including sharing the same father. Yeshua and Mariamne could have
had the same father with different mothers or could be paternally related as
cousins, aunts-uncle, grandparents, or father-daughter. They could even be
close family friends.
The bottom line is that you the reader
must decide if you are going to draw conclusions based on evidence that
exists or evidence that might be fun or interesting to speculate once
existed. I don’t want to be construed as a stick in the mud, though. It’s
fun to speculate and develop hypotheses–but that’s what they should be
called, and if you’re a scholar, you shouldn’t use language that moves
non-scholars toward processing your hypothesis as a reality that’s just
lacking more evidence. Frankly, I can think of several adjectives that would
characterize that method, but compelling isn’t one of them.

Technorati Tags:
Jesus tomb,
Mary Magdalene
10May2008
Posted by MSH under:
Gospel of Judas;
Jesus Tomb.
As I and others have noted before, the
real weight of the Jesus tomb debate hinges on primarily two points of data:
(1) Whether a name that refers to Mary Magdalene is on one of the ossuaries,
and (2) Whether the inscribed name “Yoseh” corresponds to the Yose of the
New Testament. I’ve already posted the epigraphic work that undermines the
former (see the May 6 posting regarding Stephen Pfann’s work). It’s time to
simplify things, though, by applying some good old-fashioned logic to the
material.
Warning: If you are a
humanities scholar, especially in biblical studies, you may not want to read
on. Okay, that’s a bit sarcastic, but I’m jaded. I actually do believe that
every person who gets a graduate degree in biblical studies and archaeology
should be forced to take a course in logic before they get the degree. If
you think I’m kidding about the need for this, spend some time studying
logic and reading about how to form logical arguments (and even better,
dissect arguments for logical coherence) and then start reading journal
articles (on just about anything controversial) in biblical studies. It
won’t take long for you to come over to my side on this one. It’s pretty
disgraceful, actually.
Anyway, I have to pick an example from
James Tabor again–but it’s only because I can’t really find anyone else in
the biblical studies arena who defends the Talpiot tomb as being the tomb of
Jesus of Nazareth. Granted, some are non-committal, but who else is
defending it? If you know of anyone else, please let me know so I can take a
look.
Tabor argues strongly that the ossuary
bearing the name Yoseh (composed of the Hebrew letters, yod-waw-samech-heh;
Joseph) belongs to Jesus’ brother by that same name in the gospels. For
Tabor, this correlation would support his idea of a Jesus dynasty because it
would place Jesus’ oldest brother-the male in direct dynastic descent behind
Jesus-in a tomb with Jesus and other important members of his family.
Tabor’s main line of evidence for an
identification of the Yose in the tomb and the Yose of the gospels is that
the name is very rare. Tabor writes on his Jesus Dynasty blog:
In the time of Jesus, that is, in 2nd
Temple times, before the Destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE, this nickname
Yoseh is extremely rare in either Hebrew or Greek. As far as Hebrew goes, it
is found only here, in the Talpiot tomb, on an ossuary, and one other time
in a slightly different, but equivalent spelling (Yod, Samech, Hey), on an
ossuary from Mt. Scopus. It is also found once on a tomb inscription from
the period (Jason’s Tomb), and once in a papyrus from Wadi Muraba’at
(pre-135 CE). In Greek, its equivalent forms (Ιωσε/Ιωση/Ιωσης), which are
usually translated Yose/Jose or Joses/Joses in English, occur on only five
ossuaries. In contrast, the full name Joseph/Yehosef is found on 32
ossuaries and many dozens of literary references in the period. . . . This
nickname Jose/Joses in Greek is found in Mark 6:3 as the nickname for Jesus’
brother Joseph. (Tabor, 2007)
In the same blog post Tabor admits,
Of course this alone does not prove
that the Yoseh in the Talpiot tomb is the brother of Jesus. But the data
does indeed argue that as a rare nickname, known only on a handful of
ossuaries and from two inscriptions of the period, found in a tomb with a
“Jesus son of Joseph,” Yoseh is quite striking. And that Mark knows this as
the unique and rare nickname of Jesus’ brother Joseph, is surely significant
evidence. (Tabor, 2007)
One could rightly ask, “significant
evidence for what?” This is characteristic of Tabor’s
writing style. He produces data, is honest enough to admit the limitations
of the data, but then proceeds to give the reader the feeling that,
despite the fact that the evidence does not and cannot prove idea X, the
reader still ought to find idea X pretty compelling. This is little more
than assuming what one is trying to prove [logic point], and Tabor does this
with regularity, as many reviewers of the Jesus Dynasty have pointed out. (Peerbolte,
2007; Witherington, 2006; Evans, 2006).
Tabor’s argument that the rarity of the
name Yose actually proves nothing. That a name is rare doesn’t mean it’s
exclusive [logic point], and if not exclusive, there is no necessary
connection between it and the Yose of the gospels [logic point]. Tabor of
course admits there are other occurrences of the name besides the Talpiot
tomb, but that doesn’t stop him from steering the reader toward a more
positive assessment of Tabor’s idea than the evidence can sustain. Tabor’s
argument is further hampered-and I would say undone-by two considerations:
(1) We have no proof that the Yose of the tomb is actually related to any of
the other people named on the tomb’s ossuaries [logic point]; and (2) even
if Yose is related to the other people in the tomb, we have no idea HOW he
was related since Yose’s ossuary lacks any patronym, or statement of kinship
relation [logic point].
But there’s more . . .

Technorati Tags:
Jesus tomb
6May2008
Posted by MSH under:
Ancient Astronauts.
I thought I’d share a recent email I
received from someone with a question about a new book that claims that one
version (source) of the book of Genesis teaches readers that humankind was
created by a group of gods:
>>
Hello Michael,
I was talking with Kevin Smith (via
email) a few weeks ago, about his interpretation of creation according to
the book of Genesis.
As you may know, Kevin is the author of
the book ‘Gods in the Garden’ which puts forward the idea that there were
essentially two creation origins of “man”…. one by the Lord God, and another
(previous) by the “gods” (elohim).
I don’t claim to be a Hebrew scholar,
but having read much of your material, I respect your work in this area.
Therefore I was curious if you had read Kevin Smith’s book, and could give
me your impression of his work?
>>
Kevin Smith is an internet radio talk
show host. His show,
The Kevin Smith Show,
focuses on paranormal topics. His website notes that “He is a former
International Police commander, a native of Texas, and graduate of Dallas
Baptist College.”
I have been interviewed by Kevin (a
couple years ago as I recall) and found him more well read than most talk
show hosts I’ve interacted with. I could tell he had a nose for information
(former cop) and a ready mind. He was pretty well acquainted (for someone
who had no knowledge of the biblical languages) with critical approaches to
the Bible. He was also very engaging. All that said, his idea here doesn’t
have a prayer. His lack of knowledge with respect to biblical languages is
his undoing. Here’s my response:
** [Dear X] I haven’t read Kevin’s
book, but it’s easy to see what he’s doing. Since the late 19th century it
has been fashionable in critical biblical scholarship to see the Pentateuch
as a patchwork quilt of sources (not written by Moses). The sources are
called: J, E, D, and P. J and E are so named because (so the theory goes)
one source uses Jehovah (Yahweh; the LORD) as the
name for God and the E source uses Elohim. Kevin is
taking this common source-critical idea and using it to argue as you
describe.
** Other than the problems with the
traditional (since the late 1800s!) view of source criticism for the
Pentateuch, Kevin has one fundamental, “my view is D.O.A.” problem. Even if
the source divisions are correct, the “E” source (that uses elohim for the
name of God) NEVER has elohim as the subject of a plural verb (EVER) when
describing creation (of anything). If you have read my discussion of
Zecharia Sitchin’s nonsense
you know that elohim, though “shaped” as a plural noun, gets grammatically
paired with a SINGULAR verb form nearly 1500 times in the OT. That is
because “elohim” became a proper name for the singular God of Israel - and
Hebrew grammatical agreement reflects that. Therefore, when
elohim creates in the E source, it is a SINGLE elohim, not plural.
Kevin’s idea is doomed by the text. Don’t waste any time considering it.
Let’s hope Kevin sticks to things he
knows in the future. He’s good at what he does, but this is nonsense.

Technorati Tags:
ancient astronauts,
elohim,
Genesis,
Sitchin
5May2008
Posted by MSH under:
Jesus Tomb;
Uncategorized.
There’s one thing that practically
everyone who has discussed the Jesus Tomb can all agree on: If you don’t
have the name “Mariamne” (the alleged Mary Magdalene) in the tomb, the
statistical odds have no chance of supporting a Jesus family tomb. It seems
that many who are parading the statistical work of Dr. Feuerverger and
others (e.g., Kilty and Elliott) have somehow forgotten that that the only
close epigraphical examination of the “Mariamne” inscription–the one done by
Dr. Stephen Pfann of Jerusalem (a friend of mine)–has not been overturned.
In short, his analysis, which Dr. Mark Goodacre of Duke University called “a
model of clarity” dooms the statistical defense of a Jesus family tomb. Read
Dr. Pfann’s analysis
and see for yourself–Mary Magdalene has left the building (in fact, was
never there).

Technorati Tags:
epigraphy,
Jesus tomb,
Mary Magdalene
1May2008
Posted by MSH under:
Jesus Tomb.
Will someone please keep James Tabor
away from math?
Dr. Tabor is a New Testament scholar
and, judging by my exchanges with him, a very nice guy. He just happens to
be the only scholar out there who is still defending the idea that the
Talpiot tomb (”Jesus Tomb”) is the tomb of Jesus. One of the defenses for
this tomb being the Jesus tomb has been that the mathematical odds of the
tomb being that of Jesus and his family are quite favorable. That simply
isn’t true, and hasn’t been true from the beginning. The mathematician whose
work was part of the Discovery Channel’s Jesus Tomb TV documentary (dubbed a
piece of “archaeoporn” by other scholar-bloggers) was Dr. A. Feuerverger.
Feuerverger’s work was not submitted to peer review until this past month.
It has now been published in a scholarly journal for statistics research (Annals
of Applied Statistics). My friend Dr. Randy Ingermanson, a
computational physicist with a good grasp of statistics, was one of the
referees for Dr. Feuerverger’s article, and contributed an article of his
own in the same issue. Randy has been addressing the math issue since the
Jesus Tomb special aired, and makes it digestible for people like me who
don’t understand math … but apparently I do better than James Tabor.
If you understand professional
statistics work (James, if you’re reading this, please don’t follow the
links), you can read
the abstract of Feuerverger’s article
(it isn’t free) or read
Randy’s article (this
one is free). I’d also advise you to read
Randy’s lay-person analysis of Feuerverger’s work
(James, I recommend this one). Once you do, you’ll feel the same pain as I
did when I read the blog entry below by Dr. April DeConcick — note Tabor’s
interpretation of the math. Aarggh!! Feuerverger’s work did not conclude
that there was a 48% chance of the Talpiot tomb being the Jesus tomb. That
figure comes from earlier work, which Feuerverger’s new work now
invalidates. As Randy points out (and he refereed Feuerverger’s article!),
Feuerverger concludes that the chance is 1/655. Randy thinks the odds are
even worse. PLEASE, someone keep James from the math! In Randy’s own words
(at the link above), here is what Andrey Feuerverger’s calculations do:
- He first made a
list of the persons one should expect to find in a family tomb of Jesus
- For each of those
persons, he made a list of the “relevant” names that could apply to that
person (such as the formal version of the name and any abbreviated forms
of that name)
- He then estimated
how often each of the forms of these names were actually used in
first-century Jerusalem, using the frequency of names found in ancient
literature and inscriptions
- He made a random
simulation by populating the ossuaries in the tomb with randomly chosen
names from first-century Jerusalem
- He tracked how
often a randomly chosen tomb was as “relevant and rare” as the Talpiot
tomb
- He then used the
results to estimate a probability that the Talpiot tomb might belong to
some family other than the family of Jesus
- Finally, he
computed the probability that a family tomb as “surprising” as the Talpiot
tomb would be found in the vicinity of Jerusalem if the names are chosen
at random. This probability was 1/655
April Deconick’s post:
The Globe and Mail just released a story
following Andrey Feuerverger’s publication of his statistics article which
we learned about at the Talpiot Tomb conference in January.
Excerpts from this story:
In a peer-reviewed article published
last month in the prestigious Annals of Applied Statistics, Andrey
Feuerverger places the odds of the 2,000-year-old tomb not belonging to the
Jesus family at 1 in 1,600.This figure is even more bullish than the
1-in-600 figure that Dr. Feuerverger calculated a year ago, when interviewed
for The Lost Tomb of Jesus, a $4-million documentary produced by
James Cameron and directed by Toronto’s Simcha Jacobovici…
For years, archeologists attempted to
deflect speculation about the tomb, saying that the names inscribed on the
Talpiot ossuaries were common to the period. But Dr. Feuerverger’s analysis
rejects that argument, noting that while the individual names might have
been common, this specific cluster of names so resonant of the New Testament
is not. Indeed, in January, at a symposium with about 50 academics in
Jerusalem, no one made the case for commonality.Instead, opponents have
challenged Dr. Feuerverger’s historical assumptions, notably that the
unusual Greek name Mariamne found on one of the ossuaries is an appropriate
designation for Mary Magdalene.
But even discounting the Mariamne
assumptions, Dr. Feuerverger’s 51-page paper says that the tomb has a 0.48
chance of belonging to Jesus. That means, says James Tabor, head
of religious studies at the University of North Carolina, “that if we had
two tombs to examine, one of them would be the Jesus tomb. With
Feuerverger’s paper in print, a more responsible discussion of the Talpiot
tomb name frequencies and statistics can take place.”…
University of Detroit professor Jane
Schaberg, one of the world’s ranking experts on Mary Magdalene, says it is
“quite possible, even probable,” that the inscription on that ossuary
describes Magdalene and adds that the tomb “may very well belong to Jesus
and his followers, as opposed to Jesus and his family. My gut tells me it’s
a movement site.”

Technorati Tags:
Jesus tomb
1May2008
Posted by MSH under:
Gnosticism;
Gospel of Judas.
Let’s file this under the “too little,
too late” category.�
National Geographic has apologized for its television�
special on the Gospel of Judas.�
A new edition of the gospel with a “thoroughly updated translation” has now
been put forth which, to cite Gnostic scholar Birger Pearson, acknowledges
“the flawed scholarship of the original edition.” NG itself admits to
putting out a “sensationalized reading.��
Oops. Now if only we had done objective scholarship in the first place.�
Remind anyone of any other over-hyped claims about the ancient Christian
world?� Jesus Tomb?
DaVinci Code?� Why didn’t
Elaine Pagels and Bart Ehrman step forward and call for more careful
approaches?� You can ead
about the new Gospel of Judas edition and NG’s apology
here.
|