link: viewtopic.php?f=8&t=215383&start=175
jimboston wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Since you insist.....
ugh... why do I both. You're right. I just need to ignore your BS.PLAYER57832 wrote:
Not true. Both "some" and "largely" mean fewer than all. If you want to get truly technical, then "some" usually means "more than 4" and "largely" means more than half. Neither means "the vast majority", as you claim -- though the exact number is indeterminate enough to include a large majority, generally one would say "nearly all" if that is what one meant.
Please tell me that you are not trying to say the words "largely" and "some" are synonymous.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/largely
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/some
Now its my turn to say "reread" .. want me to cite various style guides as reference? I can y'know, but it could be that some out in the past 10 years have decided to alter the previously accepted definitions. I am a tad stubborn in that regard.
jimboston wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:jimboston wrote:I never said "some" of the BIble was written by witnesses. If anything my comment implies that very little if any was written by witnesses.
You gave a couple of examples, you hardly stated that every book is written by non-witnesses. Also, yYour examples were disputed opinion, not verified fact.
I gave enough examples (be it opinion or fact) to dispute your claim. Again, your post... the entire post...PLAYER57832 wrote:The New Testament was written largely by witnesses. Parts of the Old Testament were as well.jgordon1111 wrote:first point of fact, the bible,koran or whatever text you follow wasn't written by any actual wittness of any of the events spoken of therein.
To prove you wrong I just have to prove that it wasn't "largely" written by witnesses. Or at least put the question of authorship in doubt. We can both claim that neither of us "knows" the right answer... hence the authorship is in doubt. Hence you are wrong.
No, to prove me wrong you would have to prove that virtually all of the Bible is not written by, or for that matter, based upon witness accounts. You provided exactly 3 examples, and ones I and many others dispute. Hardly the "proven fact" you claim.
jimboston wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:jimboston wrote:We are not in agreement.
Let me be clear on my understanding and position here.
I think very little if any of the Bible (New or Old Testament) was actually written down by witnesses. Furthermore, the Bible has been edited and translated so many times... that even if some small parts were written by witnesses, the end-result of what we have today (in the US; English versions, like the King James version), is substantially different than what was written supposedly 2000 years ago.
If this were not true, why is there more than one version of the Bible?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_E ... anslations
If the book was written by witnesses and handed down without dispute, there should be only one... no?
No. Having witnesses and being without dispute are 2 different things from the outset, also I never every said the Bible is without dispute, but this is getting into an involved tangent. its interesting, but way off topic... and a better subject than the topic.
I said "handed down without dispute". Perhaps this is not the best way to say what I meant... I meant that it was "handed down without changing". If it was written by witnesses, and handed down over the centuries without change, then we'd only have one Bible. Wether or not the witness's version is in dispute is moot.[/quote]Now you are changing the entire meaning of the discussion. You said the Bible was not written by witnesses. I said it largely was.
jimboston wrote:I stand by what I said.
My whole point... it's not really written by witnesses. Even if parts were... these have been changes and translated so many times, that they are really nothing like the original. So to say "the Bible" as we read it today was "written" by witnesses... it's so much of a stretch that it becomes false.
This is so incredibly untrue I have a hard time believing you are actually trying to argue this point.
Among other issues,scholars typically look to the Greek text as the essentially unchanged whole Bible, and other texts that predate that Bible. Some of the more recent translations were as a result of better scholarship in translation. English was not even a language back then and by the time it was written or the first translations made.