. . . that has regularly been addressed and debated here, with Admin's permission.
This thread, in fact, is simply an extension of a debate that has recently been going on in this forum. So, speaking of "sticky," I think you ought to pull your head out of the sand in which it seems to be stuck, and more closely follow the moderator-sanctioned discussion of this topic, which has often been heated, repeated and prolonged (Proof of that is demonstrated by your own post. Just look at you: You come here screaming--all over a non-existent Jesus).
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More fundamentally, I also suspect you're complaining because you don't agree with Carrier's conclusions. I also suspect you don't know much about Carrier:
Richard Carrier on Naturalism:
--"On Defining Naturalism as a Worldview "(2010)
Carrier's formal definition of the natural-supernatural distinction in Free Inquiry magazine.
--"Why I Am Not a Christian" (2006)
Discusses evidence that naturalism makes more sense of than Christianity.
--"On the Deceptions of David Wood" (2005)
Answers David Wood's polemical and dishonest critique of Sense and Goodness without God.
--"The Commitments of Naturalism" (2005)
David Macarthur and Richard Carrier (and others) discuss what naturalism entails.
--"The Big Debate" (2004)
Responds to some attempts to criticize Carrier's defense of Naturalism in a Michigan debate.
--"Reppert's Argument from Reason" (2004)
Comprehensive discussion of [Carrier's] naturalist theory of mind vs. the criticisms of Victor Reppert.
--"Defending Naturalism as a Worldview" (2003)
Refutes Michael Rea's arguments against recommending belief in naturalism.
--"Steiner's Challenge to Naturalism" (2003)
Refutes claim that naturalism cannot explain the success of mathematics in physics.
--"Hannam on the Fine Tuning Argument" (2001)
Explains why the Fine Tuning argument for intelligent design of the cosmos does not succeed.
-"Odds Against the Origin of Life?" (2000)
Refutes claims that natural biogenesis is too improbable to have happened.
--"The Problem with Miracles" (1999)
On why we lack sufficient evidence to believe there are
miracles even if they exist.
--"What's with the Cover?"
On why that weird painting was chosen for the cover of "Sense and Goodness without God."
("Naturalism as a Worldview," under "Articles Defending Naturalism," Richard Carrier's official website, includes his recommended reading list of other authors on related subjects, at:
http://www.richardcarrier.info/naturalism.html_____
Ricchard Carrier on Atheism:
--"The End of Pascal's Wager: Only Nontheists Go to Heaven" (2002)
A rebuttal to any form of Pascal's Wager, a rebuttal which requires theists to abandon several of their cherished beliefs about god and/or heaven if they are to escape its logic, demonstrating in the process that unbelief may be the safest bet after all.
--"The End of Pascal's Wager?" (2006) by Richard C. Carrier
In her critique of Richard Carrier's 'The End of Pascal's Wager: Only Nontheists Go to Heaven,' Amy Sayers offers several objections to Carrier's conclusion that belief in God is not the best bet on any form of Pascal's wager. However, as Richard Carrier proceeds to show in this rebuttal, Sayers only demonstrates that she does not understand either the logic of Pascal's Wager or Carrier's actual argument.
--"From Taoist to Infidel" (2001)
Richard Carrier describes his own spiritual journey, how he came from a background as a Taoist in a Christian country to become a fighter for secular humanism and metaphysical naturalism.
"Naturalism vs. Theism: The Carrier-Wanchick Debate" (2006)
In this online debate between Richard Carrier and Tom Wanchick, Carrier opens with a discussion of method followed by 5 arguments for naturalism and 2 arguments against theism, while Wanchick opens with 9 arguments for theism. In the first rebuttals, each debater criticizes the arguments offered by the other in the opening statements. In the second rebuttals, each debater defends their opening arguments against the criticisms of the other in the first rebuttals. Both closing statements focus on the purported deficiencies of the other debater's overall case.
--"Our Meaning in Life" (2001)
Isn't life pointless? Why should the atheist bother? It's all just going to end anyway, right? How does the atheist's life have meaning? My answers lie here.
--"Tai Solarin: His Life, Ideas, and Accomplishments" (1995)
The most famous and controversial atheist and secular humanist in African history (if not the only one of any real renown) was the Nigerian nationalist Tai Solarin, who sadly passed away at the age of 72 in 1994. This is a story of his life, ideas, and accomplishments, which are a lesson to us all.
--"What is Atheism Really All About? (1996)
Quick and simple answers to common questions about atheism.
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Richard Carrier on Ancient History
--"Comprehensive Bibliography on Skeptical Thought in the Ancient World" (1998) [ Index ]
A huge bibliography of material pertaining to skeptical thought in the ancient Greek and Roman world. Also included are sections on modern scientific studies of belief and doubt, as well as some medieval and renaissance references, but the bulk of material relates to the ancient period.
--"The Date of the Nativity in Luke, 6th edition (2011)
It is indisputable that Luke dates "the birth of Jesus to 6 A.D. It is also indisputable that Matthew dates the birth of Jesus before 4 B.C., perhaps around 6 B.C. This is an irreconcilable contradiction, thoroughly demonstrated here."
--"Did Jesus Exist? Earl Doherty and the Argument to Ahistoricity (2002)
This is a critical review of 'The Jesus Puzzle: Did Christianity Begin with a Mythical Christ?--Challenging the Existence of an Historical Jesus,' by Earl Doherty. (Canadian Humanist Publications: Ottawa, Canada; revised edition, 2000).
A Comment on Richard Carrier's "Review of The Jesus Puzzle: Did Christianity Begin With a Mythical Christ?" by Earl Doherty (Off Site)
--"The Formation of the New Testament Canon" (2000)
Surveys the history of the formation of the New Testament canon, summarizing the work of Bruce Metzger.
--"History of Ancient Epistemology" (2000) [Index]
An ongoing project, of which only the first installment is now available, completing a summary of the rise and development of philosophy, and in particular epistemology (the theory of knowledge, the groundwork for a scientific method) from its beginnings to the end of the 4th century C.E.
--"Jewish Law, the Burial of Jesus and the Third Day (2002)
Demonstrates from sources that in the time of Jesus the Jews had the full practice of their own laws, and that these laws required that Jesus be taken down Friday, that he be placed in a temporary tomb for the Sabbath, and that he be buried Saturday night in a special graveyard reserved for criminals. Therefore, Jesus could not have been in the tomb of Joseph Sunday morning. Also, a "third day" motif in Jewish law and exegesis is examined that may relate to early Christian resurrection belief.
--"Was the Burial of Jesus a Temporary One, Because of time Constraints?" (October 3, 2002) by Glenn Miller (Off SiTe)
Miller rebuts the hypothesis that Jesus' body was only temporarily stored in Joseph of Arimathea's tomb. [Note: Carrier's 2001 essay was updated in May 2002 to address Miller's significant points.] Reply to Glenn Miller on the 'Burial of Jesus' (2002)
--"Kersey Graves and 'The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors'" (2003)
Carrier explains some of the essential reasons to distrust the information in The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors by Kersey Graves.
--"Kooks and Quacks of the Roman Empire: A Look into the World of the Gospels" (1997)
Carrier argues that when we examine the background of the time and place in which the gospels were written, we discover that "these were times replete with kooks and quacks of all varieties, from sincere lunatics to ingenious frauds, and there was no end to the fools and loons who would follow and praise them."
--"Luke and Josephus" (2000)
Summarizes Steve Mason's argument that Luke drew material from the works of Josephus.
"On Musonius Rufus: A Brief Essay" (1999)
Musonius Rufus was a 1st century Stoic philosopher, greatly admired by the pagan Romans and Greeks as one of the two best men in history (the other being Socrates). His story and philosophy do not get much attention because so little has survived of his teachings, and this essay attempts to correct that balance by giving him the notice he is due. I have often remarked how this man's wisdom and values were more humane and progressive than those put into the mouth of Jesus, and though he is not without flaw, he is a better man, and this should cause us to question how Jesus can be at all divine, if this mere mortal was his better.
--"Was Musonius Better than Jesus?" (2006) by Richard C. Carrier
In her critique of Richard Carrier's 'On Musonius Rufus: A Brief Essay,' Amy Sayers' misunderstands several of Carrier's actual points, such as those concerning the ambiguity of passages attributed to Jesus or the brutish nature of his parables. In this rebuttal, Richard Carrier clarifies his earlier comments, explaining various instances where Sayers misses the point of his original arguments that Musonius Rufus was a better person than the biblical Jesus.
--"The Nazareth Inscription (2000)
'Several authors have advanced a particular inscription as early evidence of the empty tomb story in the Gospels. Upon close examination, however, it provides no evidence for Christianity or its claim of an empty tomb: it contains no new or unusual laws regarding grave robbing, the decree itself is not unique, it has no references or direct links to Christianity of any kind, it's date is most likely pre-Christian, its origin is not likely to be Nazareth, and its contents are not explainable even as a muddled imperial reaction to the theft of Jesus' body.'
--"Osiris and Pagan Resurrection Myths: Assessing the Till-McFall Exchange" (2002) (Off Site)
As a degreed expert on ancient history, Carrier assesses the ongoing debate between Mark McFall and Farrell Till regarding the influence of the pagan resurrection myths on Christianity and finds that both are right--and wrong.
--"On Paul's Theory of Resurrection: The Carrier-O'Connell Debate" (2008)
Richard Carrier opens this debate by defending the proposition that the Apostle Paul, our earliest source for original Christian beliefs, believed that God supplied Jesus (as he will supply us) with a new body at his resurrection, rather than raising up the body that was buried (contrary to the evolved versions of Christianity we find today). To the contrary, Jake O'Connell argues that first-century Jewish sources always use the term "resurrection" to denote a "one-body" view of resurrection, and thus Paul is likely using it to mean the same. In the end, O'Connell concludes that there are a few instances in which Paul unambiguously affirms a one-body theory, while there are none in which he clearly affirms a two-body view. By contrast, Carrier ultimately concludes that much of scholarship, as well as Paul's own words (explicitly and implicitly), supports the notion that Paul held a two-body view of resurrection.
--"The Problem of the Virgin Birth Prophecy" (2003)
Carrier summarizes the debate over whether Isaiah in 7:14 meant 'virgin' in what is taken by Christians to be a prophecy of the messiah's birth. He concludes that whatever the case Isaiah probably did not mean a virgin would conceive in any supernatural sense.
--"Review of 'In Defense of Miracles' (1999, 2005) [Index]
Review of the latest grand opus of contemporary apologists: a comprehensive case for Christian miracles with contributions from fourteen Christians and two skeptics. Well-composed, with material that all critics should read, but it suffers from major faults, especially that ubiquitous fault of almost all apologists: historical incompetence. Carrier critiques almost every chapter in detail, but also provides both short and long summary reviews of the entire book.
--"Review of 'The Homeric Epics and the Gospel of Mark' (2000)
This is an incredible book that must be read by everyone with an interest in Christianity. Dennis MacDonald's shocking thesis is that the Gospel of Mark is a deliberate and conscious anti-epic, an inversion of the Greek "Bible" of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, which in a sense "updates" and Judaizes the outdated heroic values presented by Homer, in the figure of a new hero, Jesus (whose name, of course, means 'Savior'). His evidence is surprisingly solid and pervasive, and the implications for the historicity of Christ are profound.
--"Severus Is Not Quoting Tacitus: A Rebuttal to Eric Laupot" (2006)
In "'Tacitus' Fragment 2: The Anti-Roman Movement of the Christiani and the Nazoreans," Eric Laupot argues that a passage in Sulpicius Severus actually comes from the lost section of the Histories by Tacitus, and is therefore a very early testimony that the original "Christians" represented a major Jewish rebel movement that participated in the War of 66-70 A.D. and used the Temple as its base of operations. Carrier points out several flaws in Laupot's argument, noting that alternative explanations of the facts are far more probable than Laupot's account given current historical knowledge.
--"Response to Richard Carrier's Alleged Rebuttal" (2012)
According to Eric Laupot, Richard Carrier's alleged "rebuttal" to his first Vigiliae Christianae article published in 2000 is extremely muddled, as Laupot never referred to the Christiani as Christians or implied that they were Christians. Instead, Laupot has always maintained that the Christiani were Jewish Zealots or anti-Roman guerrillas (as opposed to pacifistic Christians)—an opinion ironically shared by Carrier himself! Carrier and Laupot therefore arrive at similar conclusions by different routes, a circumstance of which Carrier appears to be entirely oblivious. Carrier thus does not appear to understand Laupot's work. Moreover, top Latinists since 1866 have agreed that, contra Carrier, Fragment 2 belongs to Tacitus.
--"Some Godless Comments on McFall's Review of On Jesus" (2003) (Off Site)
Carrier remarks on five conceptual and historical issues raised by Mark McFall in his review of On Jesus by Douglas Groothuis. Claims discussed are: that Jesus should be reckoned a philosopher; that "Socrates and Jesus are on equal ground" in regards source reliability; that Jesus had "a strong concern for logic and argument"; that "at that time, only a handful of philosophers...stood on the threshold of reforming patriarchal society" in respect to women; and that "ultimately skeptical rejection of Jesus' resurrection hinges more on one's personal philosophical outlook than it does on evidential arguments of historical significance."
--"A Look at Carrier's Godless Comments in Review by Mark McFall" (Off Site)
This is a rebuttal to Carrier's review of On Jesus. McFall argues that Jesus qualifies as a bona fide philosopher.
Reply to 'McFall on Jesus as a Philosopher' (2004) by Richard C. Carrier (Off Site)
McFall's rebuttal seems to have largely misunderstood much of what I said, and relies on several fallacies or errors of fact. This essay responds in detail. "Thallus: An Analysis" (1999)
--"A Preliminary Essay Outlining Important Facts about Thallus (or Thallos), a Pagan Chronologer of Unknown Date"
. . . who is occasionally mentioned in the works of Christian apologists, modern and ancient, as a 1st century pagan witness to the gospel tradition of a "darkness" at the death of Christ. Concludes that he either is not such a witness, or else wrote in the 2nd century.
--"Two Examples of Faulty Bible Scholarship" (1999)
"In response to remarks by Douglas Wilson in a debate with Ted Drange, I have composed two examples of how some Christians don't understand the importance of scholarship in truly understanding the New Testament, centering around 1 Timothy. The first concerns the abuse of ancient Greek. The second concerns ignorance of the usefulness of textual criticism."
--"Was Christianity Too Improbable to Be False?" (2006) [ Index ]
Was the success of Christianity too improbable for Christianity to have been false? According to James Holding's 'Impossible Faith,' no one would have accepted early Christianity if it were not true. In particular, he offers seventeen hostile conditions, plus an additional critical assumption about the role of luck, that he claims would have made it impossible for Christianity to succeed--unless it was true. In this remarkably extensive chapter-by-chapter critique, Richard Carrier evaluates Holding's arguments in light of historical scholarship and identifies several troubling fallacies in Holding's reasoning.
--"Why I Don't Buy the Resurrection Story." 6th ed. (2006) [ Index]
There are many reasons that I am not a Christian. I am an atheist for reasons more fundamental than anything to do with particular religions, but the arguments in favor of the Christian creed as opposed to any other are ubiquitous and always center around the historical claim that Jesus was raised from the dead. As an historian with a good knowledge of Greek, I am now very qualified to make a professional judgement in the matter. This essay explains why I find the Resurrection to be an unconvincing argument for becoming Christian.
--"Julie's River Run: On Comparing the Rubicon to the Resurrection," (2005) by Robert Turkel (Off Site)
Turkel discusses an analogy used by some apologists to compare the resurrection of Jesus to the crossing of the Rubicon by Caesar as well as skeptical critiques of that analogy, including Carrier's critique. Turkel contends that "the evidence for the Resurrection is as good as, or better than, that for Caesar crossing the Rubicon."
--"The Rubicon Analogy" (2006) by Richard C. Carrier
Against Carrier's argument in the "Main Argument" of "Why I Don't Buy the Resurrection Story," James Holding claims (in "Julie's River Run: On Comparing the Rubicon to the Resurrection") that we have as much evidence that Jesus rose from his grave as we have that Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon. There are numerous errors in Holding's argument. Carrier's rebuttal responds briefly to the most important issues. In the end, Carrier's claim remains unchallenged: we have more evidence that Caesar crossed the Rubicon than we have that Jesus rose from the grave. Therefore, the claim that this resurrection is "as well attested" as the Rubicon crossing is still false.
--"What Can We Infer from the Present about the Past? (2006) by Richard C. Carrier
In "No Miracles Today Implies None Then," a section of the "General Case for Insufficiency" of "Why I Don't Buy the Resurrection Story," Richard Carrier develops an argument against the reliability of historical account of miracles. In response, Amy Sayers argues that negative analogies from the present to the past are logically invalid. But, as Carrier shows in this rebuttal, Sayers herself commits the fallacy of false generalization in arguing against negative analogies. Moreover, she incorrectly formulates Carrier's argument that the current absence of miracles implies none in the past--an argument which is deductively valid when formulated correctly.
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Reviews of Richard Carrier's Debates
--"The Big Debate: Comments on the Barker-Carrier vs. Corey-Rajabali Team Debatez" (2004)
Carrier offers his impressions of the Barker-Carrier vs. Corey-Rajabali team debate on the existence of God, assesses the technical merit of the debate, and sets the record straight with regard to some of the relevant facts.
--"The Cooke-Aijaz Debate: Closing Remarks from the Debate Moderator" (2003)
Carrier registers his disappointment with both sides, concluding that nothing new or useful came out of this debate on the existence of God.
--"Lawyer vs. Theologian: The Tabash-Craig Debate" (2001)
Carrier reviews the VHS tape of the debate between famous Christian apologist William Lane Craig and noted atheist activist Eddie Tabash. The subject was sweeping: Secular Humanism or Christianity - which is true? The conclusion was far from decisive. Lessons are to be learned from the mistakes made by both sides.
--"Review of the Barker-Rajabali Debate" (2003)
Carrier reviews a rare, formal, public debate involving a Muslim, molecular biologist Brother Hassanain Rajabali, a teacher at the Tawheed Institute, a Mulsim high school in Queens, New York, and his debate opponent, Dan Barker, a former evangelist, now Public Relations Director of the Freedom From Religion Foundation. Subject of the debate: Does God Not Exist?"
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Richard Carroer on Ethics and Values
--"Does the Christian Theism Advocated by J. P. Moreland Provide a Better Reason to be Moral than Secular Humanism?" (1998)
Carrier refutes Moreland's claim that theism offers more and better reasons to live a moral life than atheism or secular humanism.
--"Is There A Secular Case Against Abortion? The Carrier-Roth Debate" (2000) [Index]
Most arguments against abortion are based on religious belief. It is often assumed that pro-life advocates consider it immoral and campaign for its prohibition by law because of their commitment to religious doctrine. But is there a secular justification for the pro-life stance? Jennifer Roth argues yes. Richard Carrier argues no.
--"What Do We Do When Some Theist We Don't Know Sends Us E-mail?" (1997)
Also includes advice on how to treat theists in public online debate forums, added in 1999.
--"What an Atheist Ought to Stand For" (1999, revised 2004)
"I enumerate the values that should be held by all atheists. If you want to know what my value system is based on, and what sort of moral standard I hold my life to, you should read this essay."
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Richard Carrier on Faith and Reason
--"A Fish Did Not Write This Essay" (1995)
Award-winning essay examining the difference between faith in god and 'faith' in reason.
--"Critical Review of Victor Reppert's Defense of the Argument from Reason" (2004)
"In C. S. Lewis's 'Dangerous Idea: In Defense of the Argument from Reason' (InterVarsity: 2003), Victor Reppert has contributed what is surely the most extensive defense of the so-called 'Argument from Reason' yet to appear in print. In this critique, I will point out what I believe are the most important conceptual flaws in his arguments, and explain in detail how his arguments are ineffective against my own personal worldview."
--"Do Religious Life and Critical Thought Need Each Other? (1996)
Text of a paper published in the Fall (1996) issue of "Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines." Actually a reply to another author from a previous issue, this paper does explain many of Richard's views on spiritualism and the relationship of religion to reason.
--"Proving a Negative" (1999)
The myth of "you can't prove a negative" circulates throughout the non-theist community, and it is good to dispel myths whenever we can. The real issue is the problem of induction, which is faced by both positive and negative claims. But there can still be a reasonable belief or unbelief even in what we can never know for certain.
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Richard Carrier on Science and Creationism
--"Are the Odds Against the Origin of Life Too Great to Accept? (2000)
All too frequently we hear statistics being offered to "prove" that the odds against the origin of life are so great that we must posit a Creator to explain the event. This is a summary analysis of all known examples. Carrier writes, "Although I cover a wide range of sources, I am certain that I have not found all of them. If you ever encounter a statistic being cited from a source which is not discussed here, please let me know and I will investigate and expand this essay accordingly."
--"Bad Science, Worse Philosophy: The Quackery and Logic-Chopping of David Foster's 'The Philosophical Scientists' (2000) [Index]
Lengthy critique of David Foster's creationist book The Philosophical Scientists. Many different sciences are discussed, especially physics, thermodynamics, biology, and evolution by natural selection. Slightly improved from 1998 edition of this same review.
--"Cosmology and the Koran: A Response to Muslim Fundamentalists" (2001)
Muslim Fundamentalists are fond of claiming that the Koran miraculously predicted the findings of modern science, and that all of its factual scientific claims are flawless. There are two important objections to this claim that I will make, one pointing to a general problem, the other a specific example of the failure of the claim.
--"Defending Naturalism as a Worldview: A Rebuttal to Michael Rea's 'World Without Design'" (2003)
This is a rebuttal of Rea's claim that naturalism "is without rational foundation." This essay shows that adopting the "research program" of basic empiricism is universally appealing, and since naturalism as a "worldview" follows from adopting basic empiricism and applying it to the facts of the world, naturalism has a rational foundation. Rea's conclusion that naturalism must abandon materialism and realism about material objects and other minds because naturalism cannot "discover" intrinsic modal properties is also disproved.
--"Entropy Explained" (2003)
A survey of what entropy really is, and how it is often misunderstood or misused in theist literature.
--"Fundamental Flaws in Mark Steiner's 'Challenge to Naturalism' in 'The Applicability of Mathematics as a Philosophical Problem'" (2003)
This is a critical rebuttal to Mark Steiner's book, "The Applicability of Mathematics as a Philosophical Problem" (1998). Steiner argues that naturalism appears to be false because nature is fundamentally mathematical. Carrier argues otherwise.
--"I Was a Big Bang Skeptic" (2002)
Carrier explains his change of mind from doubting the Big Bang theory to believing that it is well supported and probably true. This has replaced his previous essay which was skeptical of Big Bang theory, "Was There a Big Bang? I Honestly Don't Know."
--"The Koran Predicted the Speed of Light? Not Really" (2002)
Yet another bogus claim about the Koran (this time, it predicted the speed of light!). The claim is analyzed and debunked.
--"Response to James Hannam's 'In Defense of the Fine Tuning Design Argument'" (2001)
Response to James Hannam's defense of the Fine Tuning Argument for a Creator. Lists and discusses several sweeping problems with even carefully-stated versions of the argument like Hannam's.
--"Ten Things Wrong with Cosmological Creationism" (2000)
Response to a short series of exchanges on cosmological creationism which explains many of my views on the subject and exhibits what I see are paradigm examples of what is wrong with the thinking and methods of creationists. This essay is aimed at those creationists who are not beyond all reason, but who admit they may be wrong, and thus may yet notice their mistakes and learn from them, and who at any rate are genuinely open to honest debate.
--"Contra Carrier: Why Theism is Needed to Make Sense of Everything" (2006) by Paul Herrick
In "Ten Things Wrong with Cosmological Creationism," Richard Carrier argues that if we try to explain the existence of the universe by positing God, we still leave the existence of God itself unexplained--invoking an additional, unnecessary entity without any explanatory benefit. But Paul Herrick resists this conclusion, arguing that theists have a reasonable reply to Carrier's argument. Moreover, this reply requires the existence of God, as it cannot be applied to any material object or collection of material objects. This, in turn, demonstrates that theism offers an explanatory advantage over scientific naturalism, collapsing a crucial premise of Carrier's argument.
--"Test Your Scientific Literacy!" (2001)
This essay dispels many myths about the scientific mind, detailing what scientific methods really are, and how science really gets done, based on a scientific study revealing troubling levels of scientific illiteracy among college students and high school science teachers.
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Richard Carrier's Featured Editorials
--"Antony Flew Considers God . . . Sort Of" (2004)
Antony Flew is one of the most renowned atheists of the 20th century. He is now considering the possibility that there might be a God--sort of. What's going on? Carrier has had direct contact with Flew and tells us what's going on; it's certainly not, at least not yet, what some theists would like to think.
--"Belief, Truth, and the Columbine Tragedy" (1999)
Exploration of the "myth" of the Columbine Martyr, along with apology
--"The Bonebox of James: Is It Physical Evidence of the Historicity of Jesus?" (2002)
A recent find, an ossuary (or bonebox) may well be evidence that Jesus existed. Carrier compares the facts and arguments, pro and con, and offers his expert opinion.
--"Defining Our Mission" (2002)
After handing the reigns to Don Morgan, editor emeritus Richard Carrier composes a brief essay explaining the mission of the Internet Infidels, especially our focus on Metaphysical Naturalism.
--"Doctors Pronounce Jesus Dead!" (2001)
I look at a prime example of the 'genre' of medical literature that declares Jesus died, and find it hopelessly wanting, especially for their incompetent use of historical method.
--"Of Love, Brunettes, and Biology" (2000)
"When Cupid's arrow strikes, is it mere molecules in motion or have we finally found our soul mate? Carrier explores nature's greatest mystery--amore!--as well as the notion of physical beauty, impulse, biology, and Hollywood's obsession with sex."
[RealAudio, "Our Philosophy: Infidel Interview with Richard Carrier" [Download RealAudio Player]
"The Secular Web is the definitive resource for online atheists, humanists, agnostics and freethinkers. We've grown tremendously over the last five years as more and more people have come to see that metaphysical naturalism is a worldview that makes sense. In this interview, then Editor-in-chief Richard Carrier describes in plain language what metaphysical naturalism is, our general philosophy, as well as our goals and vision for the nonbelieving community in the 21st century!"
--"Predicting Modern Science: Epicurus vs. Mohammed" (2004)
Michael Corey claimed in a recent debate that the Koran predicted the expanding universe. But did it? Only if you employ a liberal reading of the original text. Carrier uses the same interpretive methods on the poetry of Lucretius to show that Epicurus was a far more amazing prophet of modern science than Mohammed. Yet if Mohammed really had a pipeline to God, surely he would have done better than a mere mortal who used nothing more than human reason and observation.
--"The Real Ten Commandments" (2000)
'What ever happened to Solon? An Ancient Greek that founded democracy and the concept of equality, Solon's work is the true inspiration behind America. His moral code far outshines Moses' Ten Commandments and would be a much more appropriate document to place within our public schools. It is time that the long forgotten Athenian be resurrected.'
--"True Bible Found--"Holy Sh**!" Says Pope" (2002)
History was made recently when a group of archaeologists working in a dig at Mabell, Israel stumbled across an ancient stash of wooden tablets. Numbering over three hundred in all, the tablets are made of gopher wood onto which Hebrew characters were inscribed in ink. They appear to contain the personal diary of Moses.
("Official Website of Richard Carrier," at;
http://www.richardcarrier.info; and "Richard Carrier," at:
http://infidels.org/library/modern/richard_carrier/)
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Richard Carrier Biographies
"Homepage: www.richardcarrier.info
"Birth Date (YYYY.MM.DD): 1969.12.01
"Occupation: Author
"Degrees:
"B.A. History (minor in Classical Civilization), UC Berkeley (1997)
"M.A. Ancient History, Columbia University (1998)
M.Phil. Ancient History, Columbia University (2000)
"Ph.D. Ancient History, Columbia University (2008)
"Affiliations:
"Member of the American Philological Association
"Member of the Association of Ancient Historians
"Member of the Freedom From Religion Foundation
"Member of the History of Science Society
"Member of the Historical Society
"Member of the Society of Biblical Literature
"Publications:
"Richard Carrier is the author and contributor to several books.
See Richard Carrier's personal Writings Catalogue for the various indexes and lists of his writings online and in print, including a PDF list of his academic print publications.
"Military Service:
"United States Coast Guard: 2 years (1990-1992). Achieved the rank of Petty Officer Third Class (E-4), qualified marksman, flight-deck firefighter, damage control petty officer, duty gunner's mate, and sonar technician (electronics, anti-submarine warfare). Served aboard the USCGC Sherman (Alameda), patrolled Alaskan, arctic, and international waters. National Service Medal. Navy Letter of Commendation. Honorable discharge at the convenience of the government.
"Religious Background:
"Parents were freethinking Methodists (mother was church secretary)
"Went to Sunday School, and to church on holy days
Philosophical Taoist at the age of 15
"Atheist (Secular Humanist) at the age of 21
"Extensive study of philosophy and world religions, formal and informal
"Languages:
"English
"German
"French
"Latin
"Greek (Ancient)
"Marital Status:
"Married to Jennifer Robin Paynter (now Carrier) since 1995"
("Brief Biography of Richard Carrier," at:
http://infidels.org/library/modern/richard_carrier/bio.html)
"Richard Carrier
"Born: December 1, 1969 (age 45)
Nationality American
"Education: BA (History), MA (Ancient history), MPhil (Ancient history), PhD (Ancient history)[1]
Alma mater University of California, Berkeley, Columbia University[1]
"Religion: None
"Website
http://www.richardcarrier.info/"Richard Cevantis Carrier (born December 1, 1969) is an atheist activist, author, frequent public speaker, and blogger. He is a trained historian and one of the leading current proponents of the Christ myth theory.
"He is the author of the books 'Proving History' and 'On the Historicity of Jesus.' These books explain and utilize a historical methodology that employs 'Bayes's Theorem for the purpose of historical inquiry'; specifically within the context of Jesus studies. He is also an advocate of atheism and metaphysical naturalism, which he has defended in his book Sense and Goodness Without God.
"Carrier was featured in the documentary film 'The God Who Wasn't There,' where he is interviewed about his doubts on the historicity of Jesus. He also appears in the documentary, 'The Nature of Existence,' in which film-maker Roger Nygard interviews people of many different religious and secular philosophies about the meaning of life.
"Carrier received a PhD in ancient history from Columbia University in 2008: his thesis was entitled 'Attitudes Towards the Natural Philosopher in the Early Roman Empire.' He has published several articles and chapters in books on the subject of history and philosophy. He was formerly the editor of and a substantial contributor to the 'Secular Web.' He has engaged in several formal debates, both online and in public, on a range of subjects including naturalism, natural explanations of early Christian resurrection accounts, and the morality of abortion. In public he debated Mike Licona on the Resurrection of Jesus (at UCLA); online he debated atheist Jennifer Roth on the morality of abortion. He has defended naturalism in formal debates with Tom Wanchick and Hassanain Rajabali.
"[Carrier] [o]n the origins of Christianity
"He is a supporter of the Christ myth theory. In his contribution to 'The Empty Tomb,' Carrier argues that the earliest Christians probably believed Jesus had received a new spiritual body in the resurrection, and that stories of his old body disappearing from its tomb were developed later. He also argues it is less likely, but also possible, that the original body of Jesus was misplaced or stolen. This work was criticized by philosophy professor Stephen T. Davis in 'Philosophia Christi' and Christian apologist Norman Geisler. Carrier's first major book was published in 2012 by Prometheus Books, describing the application of Bayes Theorem to historical enquiry (specifically the historicity or otherwise of Jesus of Nazareth).
"Though originally skeptical of the notion, and subsequently more agnostic, since 2005 he has considered it 'very probable Jesus never actually existed as a historical person,' yet he also said 'though I foresee a rising challenge among qualified experts against the assumption of historicity [of Jesus]... that remains only a hypothesis that has yet to survive proper peer review.' In June 2014 Carrier's 'On the Historicity of Jesus: Why We Might Have Reason for Doubt,' was published by Sheffield Phoenix Press. Carrier has claimed that it is "the first comprehensive pro-Jesus myth book ever published by a respected academic press and under formal peer review."
"When reports spread of Antony Flew's rejection of atheism in 2004, Carrier engaged in correspondence with Flew to find out what happened and published an extensive analysis of the situation on the 'Secular Web,' finding among other things that Flew changed his belief into there being some sort of 'minimal God' (as in Deism). Carrier also came away with the opinion that Flew's changed ideas were not accurately represented in the book Flew co-authored, 'There is a God.' It is, however, worth noting that Flew himself insisted 'the idea that somebody manipulated me because I'm old is exactly wrong. This is my book and it represents my thinking.'
"Carrier appeared on national television in 2004, debating William Lane Craig on Lee Strobel's talk show, 'Faith Under Fire,' on the PAX network (now ION Television), in a segment on the resurrection of Jesus. Also in 2006, 'The Columbus Dispatch' reported that Richard Carrier had been selected as the keynote speaker for the Humanist Community of Central Ohio's annual Winter Solstice Banquet in Columbus, Ohio in December of that year, where he spoke on defending naturalism as a philosophy. Carrier is also listed in' Who's Who in Hell.'
"Publications:
Selected articles
"Flash! Fox News Reports that Aliens May Have Built the Pyramids of Egypt!," in "Skeptical Inquirer" 23.5 (September–October 1999).
"The Guarded Tomb of Jesus and Daniel in the Lion's Den: An Argument for the Plausibility of Theft," on "Journal of Higher Criticism" 8.2 (Fall 2001).
"Pseudohistory in Jerry Vardaman's Magic Coins: The Nonsense of Micrographic Letters," in Skeptical Inquirer 26.2 (March–April 2002) and 26.4 (July–August 2002).
"The Function of the Historian in Society," in "The History Teacher" 35.4 (August 2002).
"Hitler's Table Talk: Troubling Finds," in "German Studies Review" 26.3 (October 2003).
"The Argument from Biogenesis: Probabilities Against a Natural Origin of Life," in " Biology & Philosophy" 19.5 (November 2004).
"Whence Christianity? A Meta-Theory for the Origins of Christianity." in "Journal of Higher Criticism" 11.1 (Spring 2005).
"Fatal Flaws in Michael Almeida's Alleged 'Defeat' of Rowe's New Evidential Argument from Evil," in "Philo" 10.1 (Spring-Summer 2007).
"On Defining Naturalism as a Worldview," in "Free Inquiry" 30.3 (April/May 2010).
"Thallus and the Darkness at Christ’s Death," in "Journal of Greco-Roman Christianity and Judaism" 8 (2011-2012).
"Origen, Eusebius, and the Accidental Interpolation in Josephus," in "Jewish Antiquities" 20.200"; "Journal of Early Christian Studies" 20.4 (Winter 2012)
"666 (6 Atheists 6 Christians 6 Topics)," Dangerous Little Books 2015
"On the Historicity of Jesus: Why We Might Have Reason for Doubt" (Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2014) ISBN 978-1-909697-49-2 ISBN 978-1-909697-35-5
"Hitler Homer Bible Christ: The Historical Papers of Richard Carrier 1995-2013" (Richmond, CA: Philosophy Press, 2014) ISBN 978-1-49356-712-6
"Proving History: Bayes's Theorem and the Quest for the Historical Jesus (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2012) ISBN 978-1-61614-559-0
"Chapter: 'How Not to Defend Historicity,' in "Bart Ehrman and the Quest of the Historical Jesus of Nazareth" (Cranford, NJ: American Atheist Press 2013) ISBN 978-1578840199
"Why I Am Not a Christian: Four Conclusive Reasons to Reject the Faith" (Philosophy Press, 2011) ISBN 978-1-45658-885-4
"Chapters: 'Christianity's Success Was Not Incredible,' 'Neither Life Nor the Universe Appear Intelligently Designed,' 'Moral Facts Naturally Exist (and Science Could Find Them),' in "The End of Christianity," edited by John W. Loftus (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books 2011) ISBN 978-1-61614-413-5.
--"Chapters: 'Why the Resurrection is Unbelievable,' 'Christianity Was Not Responsible for Mo,dern Science,' in The "Christian Delusion," edited by John W. Loftus (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books 2010) ISBN 978-1-61614-168-4.
--"Chapters: 'Bayes's Theorem for Beginners: Formal Logic and Its Relevance to Historical Method,' in "Sources of the Jesus Tradition: Separating History from Myth," ed. R. Joseph Hoffmann (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books 2010).
--"Not the Impossible Faith, Why Christianity Didn't Need a Miracle to Succeed," Lulu.com (2009) ISBN 978-0-557-04464-1
--"Abortion Cannot be Regarded as Immoral," in "The Abortion Controversy" (edited by Lucinda Almond) Greenhaven Press (2007) ISBN 0-7377-3274-1.
--"Chapters: 'The Spiritual Body of Christ and the Legend of the Empty Tomb' 'The Plausibility of Theft,' 'The Burial of Jesus in Light of Jewish Law,' in "The Empty Tomb: Jesus Beyond The Grave" (edited by Robert M. Price and Jeffery Jay Lowder) Prometheus Books (2005) ISBN 1-59102-286-X
--"Sense and Goodness without God: A Defense of Metaphysical Naturalism," AuthorHouse (2005) ISBN 1-4208-0293-3.
--"Entries on 'Epicurus,' 'Lucretius,' 'Philodemus,' 'Second Sophistic,' 'Soranus of Ephesus,' in "Encyclopedia of the Ancient World" (edited by Thomas J. Sienkewicz). Salem Press (2002). ISBN 0-89356-038-3
("Richard Carrier," at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Carrier)
Edited 4 time(s). Last edit at 01/04/2017 01:16AM by steve benson.