Your rhetoric, Bernard Richards, is crafty... but it is not logical.
You argued exactly as I predicted. Attempting to take the focus off the message by bringing up nazi's.
If a nazi said 2 plus 2 equals 4... would you say it was a lie because the author is a nazi?
It is truth that matters not the messenger. A historical argument made by a Christian could be biased just as an argument made by a non Christian... the graveman of the issue is truth and accuracy not the messenger.
As much as I would like to read greek and Hebrew, I do not have the time. I have to rely on concordances and the work of scholars.
Luckily, I was familiar enough with the subject that I knew your statements were misleading and specious at best. I challenged you and you added very little to our knowledge. Our loss.
As far as scholarship and quality of citations your Walker might have well have been Paul Walker. (I think he is an actor.) Your Walker's statements about hearsay were juvenile. I did not see him declaring he was a licensed attorney - so by your standards his work is worthless. They were worthless by jurisprudential standards as well.
Just to let you know - there are so many exceptions to the hearsay rule - that a lawyer can almost always find a way to get important statements into a trial record. Frequently the evidence comes in for the truth of the matter asserted. (not just state of mind)
Although in this instance the state of mind of a historian recording history would be quite probative on the issue of the "historicity" of a person. So in my considered legal opinion Joespheus' evidence would be allowed into a trial record as straight evidence, over a hearsay objection, or as an exception to a hearsay objection.
your case has been dismissed for lack of credible evidence in support of your argument.
You argued exactly as I predicted. Attempting to take the focus off the message by bringing up nazi's.
If a nazi said 2 plus 2 equals 4... would you say it was a lie because the author is a nazi?
It is truth that matters not the messenger. A historical argument made by a Christian could be biased just as an argument made by a non Christian... the graveman of the issue is truth and accuracy not the messenger.
As much as I would like to read greek and Hebrew, I do not have the time. I have to rely on concordances and the work of scholars.
Luckily, I was familiar enough with the subject that I knew your statements were misleading and specious at best. I challenged you and you added very little to our knowledge. Our loss.
As far as scholarship and quality of citations your Walker might have well have been Paul Walker. (I think he is an actor.) Your Walker's statements about hearsay were juvenile. I did not see him declaring he was a licensed attorney - so by your standards his work is worthless. They were worthless by jurisprudential standards as well.
Just to let you know - there are so many exceptions to the hearsay rule - that a lawyer can almost always find a way to get important statements into a trial record. Frequently the evidence comes in for the truth of the matter asserted. (not just state of mind)
Although in this instance the state of mind of a historian recording history would be quite probative on the issue of the "historicity" of a person. So in my considered legal opinion Joespheus' evidence would be allowed into a trial record as straight evidence, over a hearsay objection, or as an exception to a hearsay objection.
your case has been dismissed for lack of credible evidence in support of your argument.
Quote from BernardRichards:
