Home (theory of the ego death and rebirth experience)
Contents
Anatoly
Fomenko's Book -- History: Fiction or Science?
Edwin Johnson's Pauline Epistles
book reformatted, study guide
"Ancient" writings,
writers, and conflicts are actually Reformation-era
All purported ancient Christian
writings are early-Modern forgeries
Challenge and potentials of New
Chronology
Defining and deleting historical
time periods
Timing and chronology of rise of
Christianity
Extreme discernment, critical
radical hermeneutics of suspicion
The Early Middle Ages didn't
exist. Studies of falsification of history.
Web page: The New Chronology:
Dark/Middle Ages Didn't Exist
Occam's razor and revisionist
chronology
Plausibility of forging in Koine
Greek around 1510
The very late invention of the
Cross
Turin Shroud of Jacques de Molay,
Christianity recent
Terence McKenna's Time Wave Theory
Morton Smith: does "To Those
Who Know" mean "That the Entire Corpus Is Forgery"?
History: Fiction or Science?
Anatoly Fomenko
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/2913621058/
March 2004
Search Inside
The
only book in English on revisionist chronology other than Edwin Johnson's study
of the Paulines.
I'm
finding a viable hybrid between Edwin Johnson's conventional Radicalism of his
book Antiqua Mater and his Extremist proposal in his book Pauline Epistles.
The key
point at issue is whether the Catholic/Gnostic conflict and the Catholic
roundup of all esotericisms happened around 200, or around the year we call
1500. I get a fully clear feeling that
in some important sense, the "Gnostic diversity" was actually
Renaissance, and that the Church as we know it is from around 1500.
Going back
in time, the Church fizzles out much faster than the Church's official history
would have it. Christianity was just one
more esotericism combination in a field with many such combinations. Informal Christian-styled religion existed
but fades into the background rapidly as we move our gaze back in time to
earlier than the Middle Ages -- however many years actually exist between fall
of Rome in 476 and Reformation in the year we number "1517".
There's
only a slight degree of truth in the legacy of the familiar, institutional
Church. All the official strong
superstructure we associate with the Church didn't exist; that structure was a
later forged claimed history to bolster the new dominance of the Church,
fabricated in the
This lion,
the Church with its proclaimed tremendous power for a thousand years prior to
1500, is really just a pussy cat that quickly, almost as much as Christianity
itself, rapidly vanishes into the background as we look further back in time.
Study
Version of Edwin Johnson's "The Pauline Epistles - Re-Studied and Explained",
1894
http://www.egodeath.com/edwinjohnsonpaulineepistles.htm
Reformatted
copy for increased comprehensibility by Michael Hoffman Oct. 8, 2003. Proposes that the years 700-1400 didn't
exist, and that Christianity, the "early" Christian texts, Paul, the
Gospels, the Church Fathers, the Dark Ages, and the Middle Ages were literary
inventions fabricated in competing monasteries around 1500.
As part of
this revisionist interpretive framework, I expect we can find that the
apostolic succession was a doctrine first dreamed up and invented around 1500
-- together with the key doctrine of Jesus' descent in the flesh literally, and
the addition of the bunk "pastoral" epistles.
o The pastoral epistles insisting on Jesus'
literal fleshliness as a human: invented in 1500 and added to the canon in 1500
-- not around 180.
o The apostolic succession: dreamt up in 1500
and claimed as ancient -- not a doctrine of the Catholic church of around 180.
Per Edwin Johnson,
turn down the volume of the Church's presence around 180-476 as much as
possible, even completely, the extreme being that there were only Jewish and
Pagan and general Gnostic proto-Jesus varieties of esotericism around 180-476
-- nothing really deserving the label "Christianity" until the
briefer-than-claimed period that we can call the Middle Ages. Institutional Christianity was even later:
fabricated during 1450-1550.
When
reading about Western esotericism, I fail to sense the looming strong presence
of the Catholic church -- same with reading about Middle Ages Christianity: it
seems like folk popularist mysticism, distinctly in touch with the entheogenic
wellspring, in spirit -- only *later* and *afterwards* appropriated by the
Roman Church Corporation. This would
explain the tangible, strong presence of entheogenic authentic mystic
spirituality.
According
to the liberal moderate radicalist revisionist history, the intense mystic
altered state was present way back in 180, but was effectively suppressed upon
the rise of the Catholic Church starting about 180, which early on heavily
distorted its subject matter and ruined the esoteric dimension of
Christianity. From 180 to 1500 and
beyond, all of that Christianity was almost entirely literalist, controlled
firmly and degenerated wholly, by the powerful Catholic Church. Supposedly if we would look for strong
presence of gnosis in Christianity, we must go back 1800 years, to the ancient
time before the powerful church commandeered and ruined the religion around
180.
But that
liberal story can't be correct, because I detect orders of magnitude more
presence of gnosis and the intense mystic altered state in Middle Ages
Christianity, during the entire period between the fall of
Empty
liberal Deism began when the Catholic Church Corporation began -- after 1500;
in the start of the modern era. Seyyed
Nasr's book Knowledge and the Sacred investigates when and why Tradition
(authentic high religion/high philosophy) was generally lost. When?
The era of Luther, 1517, it seems to me.
Why? I haven't figured it out
yet. The centuries before 1500 scream
out "gnosis" and "authentic esotericism" to me; not the
thoroughly corrupted and degenerated Catholic Corporation version of
Christianity that the liberal history proclaims.
Book:
Knowledge
and the Sacred
Seyyed
Nasr
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0791401774
1990
If the
Church Corporation was so strong and powerful before 1500, how come there is
such strong gnosis evident in pre-1500 Christianity, with the fall of gnosis
only starting in the 1500s? The
entheogen theory of religion combined with the liberal story of Christian
history asserts that entheogens were only present in the inner circle of Christianity
way back before 180, and occasionally used but very effectively suppressed
throughout the dark era all the way from 180 through 1500 and through
2003.
If that
were the case, then why do I sense such intense and colorful and vivid style of
Christianity before 1500? Why is
entheogenic experiencing so strongly evident in pre-1500 Christianity, if
entheogenic gnosis was so firmly and successfully suppressed for 1500-200=1300
years? The entheogen theory which
accepts overall Church chronology shoots itself in the foot by having to postulate
the *absence* of entheogens ever since the Church started in power, which was
supposedly 180, which was supposedly 1517-180=1337 years.
The Church
claims that the years 180-1517 were filled with great spiritual inspiration --
but not enough to threaten the Church's monopoly on the holy spirit. Liberal scholars of Christian history instead
claim that these years were filled with arid dry-canal degenerated
spirituality; thus the entheogen theory that is absurdly accepting of the
Church's bunk autobiography also claims that these centuries 180-1517 were all
filled with low-grade imitation religion.
The truth
is a hybrid:
o Christianity 180-1517 was rich and vital as
the Roman Church Corporation claims, but *not* based on the Roman Catholic
model of a powerful institution carrying the weight of apostolic succession.
o Christianity 180-1517 was filled with
entheogens like is claimed by the entheogen theory for the era around 180.
The real
history of Christianity:
1-476
proto-Christianity, nothing we'd naturally consider Christianity. No Christianity yet: no churches, no Jesus,
no Paul, no apostles, no Church Fathers with their writings, no cross of Christ
at
476-1517
-- Christianity gradually forms, organically.
No Roman Catholic Church Corporation yet (only weak
proto-versions). Entheogenic
psychoactive sacraments were used in full force during this entire time
(Entheos journal, issue 2, "Daturas for the Virgin" article by José
Celdrán and Carl Ruck ( http://www.entheomedia.org/Entheos_Issue_2.htm ). How many years were there, really, between
those two events: fall of
1517 --
Roman Catholic Church Corporation begins and writes a false history with mostly
fabricated claims to influence, lineage, succession, and power.
1517-2003
-- During this modern period, liberal as well as conservative scholars of
Christian history, and even many radical scholars, take for granted the
official history and chronology that was actually fabricated and engineered by
the Church upon its artificial construction and formal institutional birth
around 1517.
>>However,
this starts to raise other problems.
Problems
in a minor sense. For one who masters
interpretive frameworks, there is never a "problem" in a serious,
difficult sense -- only little tasks of explanation that fits the pattern that
constitutes the target paradigm.
Problems are no problem. Per
conspiracy, everything can be explained.
It used to be difficult for me to explain how Paul could say A and B --
now it is no problem at all: there was no Paul, and conflicting monastic groups
fought to control the Paul figure, resulting in wise and foolish sayings both
jammed into Paul's mouth. No problem at
all.
>>Why
say "no actual Christian art (only *roots* of Christian art, out of which
Christian art later developed)."?
How does that improve on the standard account: Christians, in hiding,
used the fish symbol (Greek ichthys, the initial of JC), which is why we see it
on walls etc. (Also, see Freke or
Fideler on the esoteric meaning).
["mere roots"] Then, to combat Docetism, the cross, especially
with a body nailed on it, to emphasize the bodily nature of Christ developed.
["Christian art later developed"]
The
standard account is an excuse for the complete lack of any evidence for
Christianity and Jesus in the ancient era.
Why are there no signs of Christians?
"They were in hiding."
Why no cross? "They found it
so embarrassing." Why no mentions
in the ancients? "There are lots of
mentions." (forged) Why no cross?
"There is the insulting donkey on a cross -- that means
Jesus."
Why are
there no images of Jesus in antiquity?
"There are images of Jesus: that fellow carrying a sheep means
Jesus, the good shepherd" (never mind it portrays Orpheus) "...and the guy carrying two
pillars" (never mind that it portrays Hercules) "... and the fish was
a symbol of Jesus (take our word for it)".
"So we see that there is a ton of evidence for the Christians in
antiquity -- it just all happens to be totally indistinguishable from Pagan
symbols, because of the tremendous persecution of Christians."
The
standard account is nothing but a blustery system of flimsy excuses for the
unanimous message the evidence gives us: there was no Christianity, no
Christians, no Jesus, until well after 476.
As we move backwards, Christianity dissappears into the pagan
background; it certainly does *not* become more clear and strong and pure in an
original big bang of the earth-shattering historical literal resurrection event
that made such a huge impression that it converted the world in the face of
great persecution.
When
reading the book Lost Christianities, it struck me that a scrap of scripture in
a monk's tomb in
The officials
are wrong about fact #1, Jesus' historicity (and the nature of resurrection),
so why should they be taken seriously in dating lesser details such as
supposedly ancient quasi-Christian scrolls that mention the apostles?
>I
wonder what Elaine Pagels would have to say about the Johnson theory. She is a
scholar of early church history and orthodox and gnostic christianity. If
anyone could fire some big holes in this theory it would be her. She seems to
know all these characters intimately.
That's why
I'm hoping to put forward Johnson's "Pauline Epistles" for widespread
scholarly consideration in light of hybridization possibilities with
"Antiqua Mater". My gut
feeling is the reliable contact point with Truth: however wrong PE is, it is
Right and True in some innovative, important sense, that can be retained in
selective hybrid combination with many other corrections being made.
This is my
reformatted copy for increased comprehensibility.
The
Pauline Epistles - Re-Studied and Explained
Book by
Edwin Johnson, 1894
http://www.egodeath.com/edwinjohnsonpaulineepistles.htm
145
pages (72 page webpage printout)
Proposes
that the years 700-1400 didn't exist, and that Christianity, the
"early" Christian texts, the Dark Ages, the Middle Ages, and the
Church Fathers of the Roman era (Origin, Augustine, and the rest) were literary
inventions fabricated in competing monasteries around 1500.
Done:
Removed
original page numbers in square brackets.
Changed
endnotes to inline notes.
Added
inline section headings.
To Do:
Move
inline headings to correct locations.
Change
roman numbers to Arabic.
Add
hyperlinks to references.
Add
highlighted notes or takeaway points per chapter, forming a study guide.
Johnson
brings the time of the
Every
interpretive framework has its difficulties.
Even reality is full of implausibilities. Reality is quite commonly stranger than
fiction, so the fact that a framework has apparent difficulties and
implausibilities in a sense doesn't matter at all.
o Can you believe we put a man on the moon,
with 1960s technology? Such a feat was
perhaps possible, but *highly* unlikely -- one could reasonably say.
o Can you believe that lowly *drugs*, can
produce classic peak religious experiencing?
Highly implausible, yet it's a fact that no one is able to deny, though
a fact that torments many who wish to mentally separate the two. The entheogen theory of religion -- drugs as
by far the main wellspring of religion -- has apparent difficulties and
implausibilities, yet it is reasonable to accept and commit to that view as a
research paradigm.
o Determinism has apparent difficulties and
implausibilities, yet it is reasonable to accept and commit to that view as a
research paradigm.
o The entirely fictional and
mythic-metaphorical-mystic nature of Jesus, Paul, and the other Apostles has
apparent difficulties and implausibilities, yet it is reasonable to accept and
commit to that view as a research paradigm.
(It is
ironic that of the above examples, the most liable to be suspect of being
off-topic in a Historicity of Jesus discussion group is the entheogens
example.)
The only
way to understand what it is that Johnson is asserting, is to fully believe
him. I believe so that I may
understand. Later may be time to doubt. I gather that everyone loves Antiqua Mater,
but The Pauline Epistles is beyond the ability of scholars to consider, because
it presents too alien of a paradigm to even grasp what he's saying. Part of the problem, though, is merely the
formatting and presentation of Johnson's ideas.
That's why I'm doing whatever it takes to make a clear study
edition.
I might
apply a gray-background highlighter effect to some sentences, transferring my
color highlighting from paper to the screen.
There's no reason why this book needs to be so unclear; I can make it
fully skimmable so that you can see his key points and assertions in a few
minutes.
"It
is suitable to the solemnity of
What's
this utterly meaningless gibberish doing in this supposedly "English"
paper? Who the hell does Johnson think
his audience is? This is *so*
annoying. Johnson couldn't write in a
comprehensible manner to save his life!
I kept thinking of describing what I'm working on as
"translation" and then I "corrected" myself, thinking of
course it's not a translation, because it is in English -- but if so, tell me
why I am doing the same kind of cleanup, meaning resolution, as when finishing
the translation process on Eysinga's articles?
The fact
is, I *am* doing a translation, from the language of pinhead cloistered
19th-Century British Christian scholarship writing, to plain intelligible
English. I'm doing a 109-year language
and presentation update. His book is
damn near worthless as is -- no one will read it, and those who do, even
radicals like me, are not capable of grasping it, as is: it is far too stilted,
specialized.
This book
would need to be totally re-edited and rewritten, if a mainstream popular
publisher wanted to publish the ideas today, such as Freke & Gandy's book
The Jesus Mysteries, which is just about as opposite of Johnson's presentation
conventions as possible. Johson writes
for an audience that literally no longer exists; he writes in a dead language
that no one can read anymore.
It's a
model of bad, ineffective communication; incomprehensible, *roundabout*, *stilted*:
"the book under discussion"... (he never commits to a title, and just
describes the book, several long paragraphs above, mixed with other books...
He's
*constantly* saying "this author" while he's just mentioned three of
them, or "it" or "these Letters", leaving me constantly in
the dark: it's insane and absurd that he expects me to read every one of his
sentences, *in order*, memorizing them with infinite patience... he writes as
though his audience has *infinite patience* and will follow him through three
levels of indirection -- "this work", "these letters",
"Letters" -- what the hell is *up* with *that*?
He *never*
provides clues or tips of what he thinks he's talking about, some secret idea
he barely hints at five paragraphs above.
What a mess! To make sure no one
can possibly follow him, he is always in this book using *meaningless* date
expressions, such as "late Tudor period" or "the beginning of
the reign of Henry VIII". What,
does he mean to exclude everyone who is not a PhD in Western history? Who does he imagine his audience is --
himself?
I have
half a mind to just say f it, go for broke, and freely rewrite all his
sentences: If *you* want to deal with his original garbled constructions, be my
guest. With Eysinga's articles, I started
with barely intelligible, poorly formatted material that you could read twice
and still not comprehend; much formatting and clarification was needed,
replacing meaningless constructs that are not used and completely fail to
convey a clear idea.
I'm doing
the exact same thing with this supposed "English"-language book of
Johnson's. He is completely
*ineffective* at *communicating* his ideas; that's one reason why his book was
a failure and made almost no impression.
A set of good ideas communicated badly and ineptly is no better than bad
ideas.
The
audience, language, and culture Edwin Johnson writes to is long dead. The fact is, I'm translating from a dead
dialect of English to a more lastingly popular and comprehensible dialect. Johnson particularly condemns himself to
obscurity by crazy parochialism, writing "our country" and "our
mother tongue" -- what is this, a celebration of
I'm going
to title this as a "Translation" and then take free reign to repair
his communication disaster.
"Translated from 19th-Century British scholarly language to
intelligible English by Michael Hoffman.
Click here to see the book in the original untranslated language."
James
wrote:
>But
doesn't Johnson assume, then, the earlier idea: he knows nothing of Koine, and
imagines the monks writing the NT in their barbarous Greek. How could the monks have written the entire
NT is a special dialect of Greek, unknown to them (or anyone) at the time,
which has now been re-discovered, through thousands of everyday life type
fragments? Only Lovecraft could imagine
that!
>Also,
weren't fragments of Gospels etc. found at
Just like
the first two times I read this book, that is the main question: what would
Johnson say about the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Nag Hammadi Library?
>>It's
certainly valuable stuff for freeing up the conceptual imagination. I'm booking my weekend for Antiqua Mater!
The gist
of what Johnson is saying is correct, though some aspects are distorted and
have to be discarded. The task at hand
is to discover and identify what changes have to be made to the way we think
about the "ancient" Greco-Roman era and the scrolls that belong to
it, and what changes we must make to Johnson's "Pauline Epistles"
book, in order to bring the two together.
What is so
exciting about this book isn't so much that it is certain; but rather, that it
portrays just about the hugest paradigm shift possibly imaginable, like
compacting all the Philip K.Dick books into one. It describes a paradigm shift of the first
magitude. Surely the essence of this
paradigm can be retained, even while making adjustments.
Even if
you discard half of this book's views, what is left amounts to a mind-reeling
transformation of our understanding of history, pseudo-history on steroids, and
how history is painted. One might think
"resuscitated Jesus in India" is staggering news, that "no
Historical Jesus" is even more mature big news, then that "no Paul
and Apostles" is even bigger news; yet this proposal that the
"ancient Church fathers" and "Paul" are products of the
monasteries in 1500 is, in some way, even bigger or more encompassing news than
all of those.
Lately I
waffle on whether or not to read any more about Christianity, whether to read
Christian mysticism, Church history, Gnostic Christianity, or Theology. As usual, it's a matter of reading what's
currently Right for me. I thought I was
finished reading about Gnosticism and the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Nag Hammadi
Library. However, due to the valuable
mind-blowing paradigm shift offered by many aspects of Johnson's Paulines book,
and the great and not-too-difficult puzzle of how to bridge his trip with the
consensus trip by making certain modifications of both, I decided to read Bart
Ehrman's new book, Lost Christianities: The Battle for Scripture and the Faiths
We Never Knew.
Unlike
Johnson's book on the Paulines, Ehrman's book is written in the English
language. He doesn't strive to throw as
many barriers to comprehension as possible in your path. Ehrman is an award-winning teacher of real
human beings.
Book:
Lost
Christianities: The
Bart
Ehrman
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0195141830
September
2003
Lecture
course:
Lost
Christianities: Christian Scriptures and the Battles over Authentication
http://www.teach12.com/store/course.asp?id=6593
Lecture
courses by Bart Ehrman:
http://www.teach12.com/store/professor.asp?id=150&d=Bart+D%2E+Ehrman
This book appears
to give a wonderfully clear overview of the alternative proto-Christian
writings. This presents an enlightened
perspective from essentially the "liberal critical" received view. This review of the discovered writings should
be the ideal kind of worldview to be conjoined, by modifying both, with
Johnson's theory of the recency of the Paulines and extreme radical revision of
chronology.
Study
Version of Edwin Johnson's "The Pauline Epistles - Re-Studied and
Explained", 1894
http://www.egodeath.com/edwinjohnsonpaulineepistles.htm
Reformatted
copy for increased comprehensibility by Michael Hoffman Oct. 8, 2003. Proposes that the years 700-1400 didn't
exist, and that Christianity, the "early" Christian texts, Paul, the
Gospels, the Church Fathers, the Dark Ages, and the Middle Ages were literary
inventions fabricated in competing monasteries around 1500.
I reached
a milestone. The section headings are
improved and correctly located.
Enhancements
and fixes done:
o Added hierarchical table of contents with
page numbers.
o Added inline section headings.
o Made the detailed TOC hierarchical, added
page numbers/hyperlinks to each entry.
o Removed original inline page numbers in
square brackets.
o Changed endnotes to inline notes.
o Replaced common latin abbreviations.
o Fixed scanning errors.
o Added hyperlinks to references.
o Changed Roman numbers to Arabic.
o Added instructions to print with full page
numbering.
To do:
o Resolve notes and questions in square
brackets.
o Enter my highlighting and remaining
corrections from hardcopy.
Added at
top:
Why
everyone should read this book
This
100-page book from 1894 shows that:
o The Paul figure was a literary invention from
the 1500's
o The purportedly early Church Father writings
were literary inventions of the 1500's
o Eusebius' Church History was written in the
1500's.
o The Gospels were written in the 1500's.
o No Cathedrals are ancient; they are from the
early part of the modern period, such as 1400.
o We don't know how many centuries actually lie
between the time of Augustus Caesar and the modern era -- the time of the
o I survey many radical theories of Christian
and religious origins, but this book is the most extremely paradigm-shifting
theory I've found. Most excited books
putting forth a new earth-shattering theory are really pretty narrow, accepting
the great bulk of the received liberal-critical paradigm, proposing to shift
just a couple of aspects.
o Prior to this book, Johnson wrote the more
conventionally radical book Antiqua Mater.
The present book is a sequel that leaps even beyond the excellent
Antiqua Mater in terms of amount of deep paradigm shifting.
Many of
Johnson's points are revolutionary, even if some might turn out to need
repositioning such as in light of the Nag Hammadi library and
Edwin
Johnson's book "Pauline Epistles" (
http://www.egodeath.com/edwinjohnsonpaulineepistles.htm ) proposes that all of
this theological debate and all of the religious writings about it was invented
in the 1500s, with the entire debate falsely back-projected to over a thousand
years earlier. The supposedly ancient
controversies around 200 CE is actually entirely Reformation-era controversies
and Jewish-Catholic-Heretic relations, where heresy includes various
Protestant-esoteric combinations.
Johnson's
theory implies that we ought to be studying
Jewish-Catholic-Protestant-Gnostic/esoteric conflicts of 1-450 CE *alongside*
studying those same conflicts in the late medieval-early Reformation era -- an
immensely insightful approach, it seems to me.
So much resonates between the two eras, if you inquire into and become
familiar with:
o The Jews of the ancient and late Middle Ages
eras
o The Catholics of the ancient and late Middle
Ages eras
o The Protestants and Jansenists of the ancient
and late Middle Ages eras
o The Gnostics, dualist heretics, and
esotericists of the ancient and late Middle Ages eras
The
Pauline Epistles - Re-Studied and Explained
http://www.egodeath.com/edwinjohnsonpaulineepistles.htm
A translation-in-process
from 19th-Century English
Per Edwin
Johnson's theory, the term "the late Middle Ages" asserts too many
false implications about chronology; the construct "the late Middle
Ages" is a major part of the full implicit system of the Eusebian false
chronology.
If Morton
Smith realized the truth per Edwin Johnson -- that 100% of all
"ancient" Christian (and Jewish and Islamic?) writings are forgeries
of the late Middle Ages, or perhaps better, "the era we call 'the
1500s'" -- then he had as much reason as any creator of the
Christian-history myth to add his own discovered writing, Secret Mark, to the
canon of such discovered writings. In
that sense, like Alan Watts, Smith's discovery was a genuine fake.
The whole
"authentic versus fake" distinction collapses; it becomes a giant
joke to talk in serious tones with a straight face about "the *authentic*
writings of the apostles", like studying the *authentic* memoirs of
Cinderella and disparaging the mere "forged Cinderelline writings". I adhere to the genuine Cinderellines.
Quasi-historical
religious writings -- including forgeries -- can be mystically authentic though
literally false.
The term
"forgeries" has its conventional meaning in contrast to the
taken-for-granted notion of *genuine* ancient Christian writings; the
conceptual category of 'forgery' thus actively though covertly reifies or
artificially constructs the category of 'authentic' writings. Certain writings are certainly forgeries --
this seems to therefore necessarily imply that some other writings are
genuinely ancient Christian writings.
Forgery
thus effectively acts like a method of creating a solid basis of reality of
antiquity. Through distraction-based
magic, this sleight-of-hand logic runs "Forgery; therefore,
antiquity." Grossly glaring
forgeries make the more subtle forgeries look relatively authentic and
convincing.
Such is
the spirit of Johnson's "Pauline Epistles". It is interesting to read Johnson's
"Pauline Epistles" and then read Ehrman's "Lost
Christianities". Everything Ehrman
says about forgery and constructing history through writing history takes on a
different light, an ironic amplification far beyond what Ehrman seems to have
intended. So often we come across, in
Ehrman's type of writing, the old pattern of wild ranges of dating scripture
fragments to ancient times or Medieval times.
The
Renaissance was so similar to the ancient era, it is no longer possible to
think of them as two separate eras; the year 1400 is the year 700,
renamed. Johnson asserts that the years
700-1400 didn't exist and that we can't know but can only blindly guess how
much time there really was between the ancient era (Antonines) and the
Reformation era.
Johnson is
more radical than Illig/Topper in proposing 700 rather than 300 phantom years,
but more durable in that he remains agnostic about the number of centuries
between the Antonines and Reformation -- but it's surely much shorter than the
invented received chronology.
>Do you
mean that the whole of Christianity is an invention of the midddle ages?
That's
part of the proposed paradigm shift.
>>The
Dalai Lama, in
I agree
with the chapter in On Drugs that essentially says people are doomed to founder
in the dark if they are unable to recognize and comprehend their own native
version of the perennial philosophy.
They glorify everything that seems alien, as though only the Other can
provide wisdom. Yet they are blind to
wisdom, if they cannot perceive it in their own myth-religion system. Our native religion is technology and
Christianity; I think of this theory of ego death as the Stanford model because
that campus, late 20th Century, had a background in technology and
Christianity.
>What
about the Nag Hammadi gnostic texts discovered in Eqypt in 1945. Would they be
forgeries also? They have been dated
to the second century. There is also a scant section of one of the canonical
gospels( John?) which has been dated to the 2nd century.
To ask
your question, you need to define what 'forgery' means here. It's all quasi/pseudo-history attributed to
fictional authors; that remains easy to argue even if the NH texts are very
old. The main question is their age, not
who wrote these historical-fiction styled mystic works. When questioning their age, question the
entire system of centuries; were there really so many centuries between
Augustus and the Reformation?
The best bet
is some type of combination of the usual view of the Nag H. writings with E.
Johnson's theory. Johnson would still
remove 700 phantom years between the two eras, strive for a late dating as late
as possible of the NH writings, look for Paul, look for deliberate backdating
of the NH writings. Were NH designed
deliberately to appear far older than they were?
Michael
writes:
>The
Renaissance was so similar to the ancient era, it is no longer possible to
think of them as two separate eras; the year 1400 is the year 700,
renamed. Johnson asserts that the years
700-1400 didn't exist and that we can't know
but can only blindly guess how much time there really was between the
ancient era (Antonines) and the Reformation era.
Jim wrote:
>>Is
the idea that
They
didn't exist. They were fictional
mouthpieces invented semi-systematically by orders of monks in the Reformation
era. The Paul character was invented a
few years after the Church Fathers were invented; a few years later, the gospel
Jesus lifestory was invented. This is
why the Church Father writings (the ones Peter Kirby considers relatively
authentic) are silent about the Paul figure and about the specific gospels, and
why the Paulines are silent about the specific gospels. The order of writing, in the Reformation era,
was:
1.
Creation of the Augustin, Thomas, Anselm, and other "illustrious"
fictitious authors, and creation of their writings (for example, 1490)
2.
Creation of the Paul character and the creation of his writings. (for example,
1510)
3.
Creation of the specific written gospels and concretely historicized Jesus
lifestory. (for example, 1530)
The Paul
character was involved in a tug-of-war between Rome-allied monastic orders and
anti-Rome monastic orders, which is why the theology of Paul is so garbled and
inconsistent, and inelegantly expressed.
The Jesus
lifestory, hyper-reified, was invented around 1525 and then back-projected into
the Jewish Wars era, which was then pushed back even further by inventing and
inserting 700 phantom years, added to the 350 real years between the fall of
Rome in 476 and the Reformation. The
whole body of official Christian writings was invented in the Reformation era,
including the characters "Augustine", "Celsus",
"Origin", and soon thereafter, "Paul".
Take the
familiar radical theory of the tug-of-war between Gnostics and Orthodox around
200, and move that entire conflict to the years we number as
"1510". The Peter Kirby time
machine would reveal no single identifiable Jesus, no Historical Paul, and even
through the year 476 and beyond, no
Johnson
does seem to accept ancient *non-Christian* history such as Plato, Aristotle,
Emperor Augustus, and Thucydides.
Personally, I have deep doubts about Socrates, but I concede the reality
of ancient non-Christian history, including the Jewish temple and Jewish
rebellions -- however, with Johnson, I delete 700 phantom years between 476 and
1525; Augustus is 700 years closer to us than the Church-approved chronology
would have it. Heribert Illig and Uwe
Topper remove only 300 years: 600-900, as phantom years that never existed.
I
currently delete 700 years only on hunch, seeing where it leads per Johnson and
in terms of how informal mystic Christianity grew out of a rich Renaissance
soup of diverse Western esotericism, as diverse and richly colorful as the
ancient era's myth-religion. Only with
the Reformation did Christianity doctrinally crystallize -- the conventional
chronology pictures the Church reacting against the Gnostic canon and heretics;
but there actually were no *Christian* gnostics and heretics or Church that
reacted against them, until the Reformation era.
>>These
are all fabricated? Or only the
Christian writings are fabricated?
The Jewish
scriptures and Christian scriptures, as fixed, structured, official documents,
were invented around 1470-1550. All the
ideas which critical scholars of Christian origins are familiar with, must be
shifted from the era 180 CE to the era called 1510. The Jews had a serious claim to antiquity (though
the Old Testament is essentially fictional) because of the received Greco-Roman
writings and the temple and evidence of the Jewish-Roman wars.
>Caesar
actually led the Gallic leader Vercingetorix in chains to
Edwin
Johnson does not really question the historicity of Caesar. He refutes the Church inventory or chronology
of the centuries -- "the scheme of centuries" -- between the era of
Caesars and the Reformation, and he refutes the entire system and set of
official Church writings, including the gospels, Pauline epistles, and Church
Father writings, as fiction that was invented semi-systematically in 1450-1550
and back-projected to the era of Caesars.
>>a
theory such as this -- whatever the theory actually states -- would be
difficult, because you end up with a lot
Vanishingly
little, actually.
>of
physical evidence that would be difficult to explain,
Not
difficult at all, with the right paradigm or interpretive framework, actually.
>in
addition to having to explain why someone would have decided to fabricate the
entire collected words of St. Thomas around the same time that Colombus set
sail.
Easy to
explain, actually.
Rome-allied
monastic orders battling against anti-Rome monastic orders, backed by lots of
political forces with conflicting interests.
Eventually the conflict came out of the closet as being actually
political rather than religious, when some Protestants became politically
allied with some Catholics. The rest of
the explanation is merely details. Even
a film that so suppresses the political motivations as the current Luther
movie, shows the ruler backing, funding, supporting, and enabling Luther's
labors.
The
official Church writings, all fabricated and back-projected by monastic orders
around 1510, were forgeries in the sense that they served to grant authority,
power, and authorization to the Church, and the Church had various alignments
with the State. There is a plethora of
motives for semi-systematically forging all of the pseudo-ancient Christian
writings.
The roots
of the system of pseudo-old Christian writings are in the rich esoteric mystic
trends of the Renaissance. By the 1600s,
the mystic dimension increasingly gave way to the ossified, politically
motivated new formalized version of Christianity. From mystically fluid, to politically
ossified -- not around the year 180, but around 1510, back-projected to the
earlier era, with 7 added phantom centuries fabricated and added to the 3 real
centuries, to grant the Catholic Church (which was born and invented around
1510) even greater antiquity.
>I just
have no idea what is actually being asserted.
I now have
a clearer understanding, as summarized in this posting, through editing and
writing about Edwin Johnson's book. I've
given a reasonably undistorted summary of Johnson's theory, but you'll have to
study it, with Topper and Illig's theories, and with a study of Middle Ages
history, and astrology, and Nag Hammadi, so on, to get a clearer understanding
of Johnson's theory and assess which aspects of it can be retained and combined
with other historical revisionist theories such as the Dutch Radical Critics
like the earlier work of Edwin Johnson, Antiqua Mater.
Johnson assumes
an extremely high level of attentiveness and a background of education or
indoctrination that matches a very narrow period and scholarly culture. His communication is an utter failure and was
only kept alive and put on the Web due to the popularity of his Antiqua
Mater. Topper found it, and his interest
gave me the affirmation I needed to move ahead with rescuing the book from its
own self-imposed communicational oblivion.
Read this
study edition of Johnson. I intend to
work on it more, for readability and skimmability, but my version has already
come a long way from his 1894 format of presentation.
Study
Version of Edwin Johnson's 1894 book "The Pauline Epistles - Re-Studied
and Explained"
http://www.egodeath.com/edwinjohnsonpaulineepistles.htm
Jim wrote:
>>But
it's one thing to invent a character or a story, and quite another thing to
invent an entire corpus of writings that the invented person was supposed to
have authored.
It is not
difficult to invent an entire corpus of writings that a set of invented persons
was supposed to have authored. Try
it. Where is the difficulty? There is no difficulty whatsoever. Just do it.
>>But
look in particular at the gospels. If
these were invented in the 1500s we have to ask why *those* gospels and not others;
why *those* stories and not others.
The same
is true if the gospels were fabricated around the year 180, as the moderate
radicals and the radical liberals claim.
The dynamics of the problem are mostly the same, whether the supposedly
implausible conspiracy was set in 180 or 1510.
>>For
example, why write gospels in Koine Greek rather than in Aramaic? Why in those Greek gospels include various
Aramaisms?
Either the
proto-Catholic Church selected and revised writings along these lines in 180,
or in 1510. The essential problem is the
same in either era. So the above
question is of little relevance to revisionist chronology. The question can be answered, but the
hypotheses will be largely the same whether
>>Why
portray the disciples as basically clueless most of the time?
That
question is of only tangential relevance.
I can summarize some proposed answers for the question, but I don't see
how the radical chronology revision depends on this question. The Church forgers had the same reasons,
whether they wrote & redacted the story of the clueless disciples in 180 or
1510.
The best
answer is mystic: before a series of intense mystic state initiations, the
initiate is clueless and doesn't mentally grasp, comprehend, and see the
transcendent relationships; takes himself as the locus of control of his
thoughts and movements of will. Upon
full initiation, the initiate sees the meaning of King Jesus figure,
representing the hidden and now revealed power of cosmic determinism over our
thoughts.
Block-universe
determinism is an experiential insight of the mystic state, allegorized as the
secret-then-revealed sovereignty of God over all our thoughts and actions.
>>Why
have the family of Jesus question his sanity?
The family
of Jesus stands in for the group "the Jews", who reject Jesus as
messiah. Also, the intense mystic
altered state is essentially similar to the schizophrenic loose-cognition
state.
>>Why
write four gospels that are basically composed of several different sources,
rather than having four separate accounts?
What is
the conservative Christian answer to that question? What's the liberal Christian scholar's
answer? What is the conventional Radical
scholar's answer? What is the extreme
Radical scholar's answer? There is
nothing difficult about formulating a set of answers for these sets of
questions. It's a routine exercise in
paradigmatic fill-in-the-blanks.
Everyone is capable of supplying potential answers to all these
questions, if they just try -- by mastering the art and science of interpretive
frameworks. Let the framework show the
answer to all these questions.
The
multiplicity of gospels is a problem that remains the same whether you place
the problem in the context of 180 CE or 1510 CE. The four gospels are a problem for all four
interpretive frameworks: conservative, liberal, radical, and extreme.
>>Why
set the stories in
The
hierarchical and monastic-network Church -- whether in 180 or 1510 -- had ample
motives to set the stories in
>>Why
include various grammatical and geographical errors, and yet get other details
right?
There is
nothing in the least difficult about that question. The corpus of official Church literature
(canonical scriptures, Church Father writings) is a ragtag mishmash of
coherence and incoherence, fantasy and fact without distinction; Eusebius'
Church History is typical, and only the conservative scholars take it
seriously.
>>Why
set the gospels in the first century?
Why four gospels? Why not
one? Why not forty?
That's an
old question and problem within the conventional chronology: "Why did the
early Church settle on four gospels?"
You can find that type of conventional problem amply grappled with
regardless of the radical chronology issue.
Why would an early group of power-mongering forgers settle on 4
gospels? Why would a late group? In the beginning -- 150 or 1450 -- there were
diverse rich gnostic [Western esoteric] versions and variants of the Jesus
lifestory; the Church around 180 [1510] forcefully swept together all these diverse
gnostic [Renaissance heretic dualist Templar/Cathar] groups by commandeering
and jamming together and modifying the versions of the gospels, and by
rejecting many of such writings of the early days of 180 [1510].
>>These,
of course, are all interesting questions whenever the gospels were written.
Of course;
that is, these questions are no challenge to the theory of the ~1510 origin of
the entire corpus of Christian writings, but are questions of what the minor
adjustments are.
>But
under a theory that the gospels were 16th century
>fabrications,
I think they become impossible to answer.
They are
easy to answer whether they were 2nd or 16th Century fabrications.
>>This
is because it would be hard to fathom what the motive for all this would be.
It is easy
to fathom the motive. Start by reviewing
the motive according to the liberal and conventional radical paradigm, as
clearly covered in the book:
Lost
Christianities: The
Bart
Ehrman
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0195141830
September
2003
Rank:
102 (extremely popular)
It's only
difficult if one starts by assuming that the problem is difficult, and refrains
from engaging the speculative imagination.
The truest paradigm is often the simplest and most plausible. There is much that is simpler and more
plausible in the theory that the canonical history is a system of designed
semi-systematic fakery. The familar
paradigm only *seems* easier and more plausible because one has gotten used to
mentally apologizing for it, rationalizing all of its many implausibilities.
>>Why
first fabricate writings of "early church fathers"
Why would
a man choose to write the writings that are attributed to "Augustine of
Hippo (354-430 AD)" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustine_of_Hippo ,
whether the author actually wrote in the year 180, 410, or 1510? Why would anyone ever choose to write the
works that are attributed to Augustine?
Look at Hermes -- he wrote many hundreds of books, and many of these
weren't actually written by Hermes himself -- why would anyone do that? There are plenty of reasons. Did the forgery factory network, the
monasteries, have the ability and the incentive to design and haphazardly
produce a half-baked corpus of half-integrated theological and historical
writings, set in various locales and eras, and the power to control and manage
the corpus of official historical, philosophical, and theological
writings? Yes, it is not highly
implausible. More research is needed
within the new chron paradigm, to further assess the plausibility.
Is it
plausible that the
>>Why
first fabricate writings of "early church fathers" that debate and
discuss the Trinity at length, and then write gospels that do not even mention
the Trinity, and only allude to the divinity of Jesus?
The
gospels take various positions on the Trinity, not a uniform single-voiced
opinion. I'm not completely interested
in the sequence of the types of writings -- it's one topic in a set. Each of these topics has liabilities and
strengths, various arguments and views and hypotheses. For example, we can say that the Church Fathers
lack any awareness of the Paul figure, but that statement needs to be qualified:
in some of the writings which some people call inauthentic, there are some hazy
and vague references to Paul as one who wrote epistles.
>>The
problems go on and on.
There is a
large set of easy problems, many of which are only 'problems' in a light sense,
not difficulties.
I am
against the 1-way mentality of only working from assumptions or little problems
and facts toward an explanatory system.
Instead, one must both start from a top-down strategy, starting with a
paradigm/ interpretive framework, while also wiggling the facts and the many
little problems, jiggling and adjusting both the framework and the many little
problems until a stable viable steady-state system results. Then line up several such stable systems and
do a beauty contest between the conservative, liberal, radical, and extreme
models of Christian history and origins.
>>You'd
have to fabricate literally thousands of pages of supposed "writings"
There is
nothing difficult about that. Why does
anyone ever write thousands of pages of truth or fiction or
philosophical-religious speculation?
Writing is not expensive and hard; it is cheap and easy.
>>making
them appear to be authored by different people at different times, discussing
doctrines at different stages of development.
There's
nothing difficult about designing such as system, especially if the outcome is
allowed to be as sloppy as what we have.
>>You
would need different writing styles for each author, yet styles that would be
reasonably consistent with each author.
Is the
corpus of official church literature reasonably consistent? Read Edwin Johnson's "Pauline
Epistles" to see one negative answer.
When one refrains from actually reading these works, it is easy to
assume that everything is fine with the corpus' integrity. But upon inspection, the corpus is messy and
filled with anachronisms and unreal perspectives, and forgery and suspicion of
forgery is rife throughout. Forgery and
false writing, false dates and authorship and location of writing, is the rule,
not the exception.
>>Further,
you would need authors with different language skills.
Was there
a shortage of various language skills in the network of monasteries around
1510? No. The monasteries were monkeying with texts all
night and day.
>>But
the big problem is that all of this would have to be planned from the
start.
There is
no problem there, no difficulty. One
should not be easily overawed by a bit of planned system of fiction.
"Star
Trek must have really happened -- because no one would have fabricated an
extensive detailed world for a tv show."
>>In
other words, the guy fabricating the extensive "works" of
There is nothing
so profound in
One should
not be so easily overawed by a personality.
Read Edwin Johnson's "Pauline Epistles". Piles and piles of philosophy and theology
are dirt cheap: read the best existing writings, undergo a standard series of
intense mystic altered state experiences, write, collaborate, gather, sift,
edit, and assign to one illustrious figurehead.
Welcome to the machine; we are a factory that has it down to an art,
fabricating these figureheads for our mystic theology writings and
pseudo-history.
There is
nothing essentially difficult or implausible about designing a system of
writings. There were motives, there were
opportunities, there were capabilities and powers and authority to do it. What were the monasteries for, if not for
such a production? What is the mutual
benefit relationship and tension between church and state? There were opportunities and incentives. It is not difficult to imagine and formulate
viable sets of hypotheses.
>>and
would have to be able to write so as to make it appear that the author was
really writing 300 years earlier.
There's no
difficulty in that. Systematize writing
materials and writing styles. Forgery is
merely a craft; there's nothing difficult about it, and if there's one thing
everyone agrees was present in overabundance in monasteries, it is forged writings.
>>But
it gets even worse.
It's been
trivially easy so far; far easier and more plausible than the conservative,
liberal, or moderate radical positions.
>You
mention that the order of events would be
>1.
Creation of the Augustin, Thomas, Anselm, and other "illustrious"
fictitious authors, and creation of their writings (for example, 1490)
>2.
Creation of the Paul character and the creation of his writings. (for example,
1510)
>3.
Creation of the specific written gospels and concretely historicized Jesus
lifestory. (for example, 1530)
>>So
this means that the guy writing
I don't
know whether Paul as a specific writer of the specific epistles with specific
content is reflected in Augustine in particular, or in Acquinas; or whether the
specific gospels and historical facts about Jesus' life on earth are reflected
throughout all of the writings attributed to these fictional figureheads who
were made to mouth the views of the monastics.
Johnson seems to emphasize the vagueness throughout most Church Fathers'
writings regarding Paul and the historical Jesus.
Peter
Kirby is a living person qualified to report on the extent of references to a
specific Paul character, and he recently had an epiphany, realizing that Paul
appears hopelessly late within the Church Father writings which Kirby considers
(or used to consider) authentic. Simply
ask him. He is always in the Jesus
Mysteries discussion group and is constantly expanding DidJesusExist.com, and
now has added DidPaulExist.com (not really).
>>The
guy writing Origen's stuff has to know that there are going to be four gospels
written, even before they have been written.
Did he
know anything about the four gospels which we have in mind, or is he all hazy
about them, just saying the *idea* of four gospels? We need to look up Kirby's view on Origin.
http://www.earlychristianwritings.com/origen.html
-- 203-250 CE, knew of Paul, is a very late writer. Johnson holds Origen (with all the others) to
be an invention of around 1510.
I don't
know these details of the extent of Origin's knowledge of specific gospels, and
Johnson's view of this.
My role
now is to make Johnson's book readable and skimmable online, enabling you to
read it more easily to answer your own questions. I have always hoped to find out what you all
think of Johnson's book after you learn what its theory is.
>Or,
the gospel writers, coming along 40 years after all the other writers, have to
fabricate gospels that include all prior references to the gospels, in addition
to adding other material, and somehow make it into a consistent story that
appears to be made up of different sources, includes various obscure Aramaic
phrasing, different main themes, and so on.
You also have to create not just four gospels, but various fragments and
portions of gospels that appear to have been written a various times, and then
you have to hide some of them so they will be discovered in future centuries.
>What
this means is that all of this would require a massive conspiracy operating
from an unbelievably complex
That's
overstating the difficulty.
>and
lengthy master plan involving literary, artistic, and linguistic geniuses
possessing a depth of scholarship that is utterly unimaginable.
If such
scholarship as we hold in our hands is unimaginable, then it is
"unimaginable" that Aquinas or Augustine were able to write the
writings in question. It's a core error
of thinking to assume that a handful of illustrious individuals can accomplish
something great, but that the monastic factories could not accomplish that same
achievement. With the right training and
studies and mystic experiencing, the "utterly unimaginable" becomes
relatively routinized, like the Rock superstar factories of the 1970s: we can
make you a star.
>>And
all of this without benefit of computers, photocopy machines, telephones,
techniques of modern project management, or any other aid, and requiring
enormous quantities of expensive parchment, paper, scrolls, etc.
Were the
men of 1510 imbeciles, barbarians, cavemen?
No. Don't be conned by the
religion of progress, that casts a darker light upon everyone up to 5 minutes
ago as hopelessly and entirely backwards.
How is it that towering men wrote towering works that have been influential
all over
Yet
despite having the severe handicap of lacking the virtually miraculous benefits
of the Internet newsgroups and suchlike, everyone agrees that the networks of
monasteries preserved the ancient writings for over a thousand years, and that
many great minds produced many great works, which were spread throughout the
land, becoming well known. These
accepted facts and achievements remain in place whether the monasteries
received or created the canon of Christian writings.
Much of
the supposed huge corpus never existed, never was implemented; writings were
planned and not executed, but were later claimed to have been destroyed and
lost. The corpus has been magnified in
our minds to appear overwhelmingly large, ancient, and involved, but that's a
thin illusion that dissipates upon critical inspection.
>>And
all of these people have to do this with without any one figuring out the scam,
without leaving any trace of the master plan, or any other documentary
evidence, completely destroying all evidence of the conspiracy, and somehow
keeping all of this a total secret until Edwin Johnson shows up.
A main way
of appearing to refute or dismiss a theory is by attributing it to a single
person. Edwin Johnson built on the work
of Hardouin;
The
evidence wasn't completely destroyed; simply *read* the Church Father corpus of
writings; it's garbled fiction, a system that's only half-coherent, containing
such gross implausibilities as the Church Fathers being ignorant of the Paul
character, and being completely hazy about the specific gospels.
>>As
if this weren't enough, the same thing has to happen in the Eastern church as
well.
The
network of monastic forgery mills kept in touch and kept synchronized between
A system
of Christianity did in fact spread throughout greater
We all
accept the notion that the Church had the power to formally restrain and corral
the various brands of mystic/gnostic Christianity into a virtually single
religion -- Johnson merely moves that formal restraint, accepted by all liberal
scholars of Christian origins, from the year 180 to the year 1510. If it is unlikely that such could be achieved
by the network of monastic forgery-factories in 1510, then it would be much the
same difficult and unlikely achievement in the year 180, to design and engineer
a single text-based and text-constrained religion out of a gnostic
diversity.
How hard
would it have been to design and disseminate a large corpus of semi-systematic
writings, attributed to various eras, given a network of monasteries all over
Were the
monks stupid and inept? (No.) Are the writings genius and perfectly
integrated? (No.)
Jim wrote
(paraphrased):
>>First,
you underestimate the difficulty of creating (forging) writings that were
supposed to have been written some hundreds of years prior. ... Second, you
understate the difficulty of creating a work outside of the time period in
which it was supposedly written.
The
examples of Shakespeare and Mormon are interesting. The structure of presentation was:
"Firstly, forgery of early writings is not easy; secondly, forgery of
early writings is not easy. Here are two
examples of debates about forgery, showing that forgery of early writings is
not easy." The two points were
really about the difficulty of forging literature set in one's own time, and
then the difficulty of forging literature about historical events and about the
history of literature.
Were the
writings in question, the ancient and medieval Christian writings, convincing
in their evidence of antiquity? Or are
they shoddy and unconvincing? Johnson
says they're all shoddy and unconvincing, with malformed and unrealistic
perspective. Scholars in general say the
same of a large subset of the received corpus -- it is packed with many
examples and degrees of unconvincing pseudo-history.
>>It's
not like just anyone can come along and create a convincing ancient textual
forgery, even in English, and much less in an ancient language.
Was
Eusebius' shoddy and unconvincing forgery difficult to write and to pawn
off? It was accepted for a long time,
and still is accepted by conservative Christian scholars as "essentially
historically legitimate", even though it's a poor invention according to
liberal and radical critics. There are
many forgeries, of varying persuasiveness; and many writings that are debated as
to their authenticity, author, date, and locale of writing.
>>Now
take all of those difficulties,
These
difficulties are nothing other than the routine, ordinary challenges of writing
forgeries, challenges which were met with varying degrees of success by many
different writings.
>>and
imagine trying to write the works attributed to Shakespeare some 300 years
later, without the benefit of actually living during that time.
We are not
debating the authenticity of the writings of Shakespeare, but the corpus of
official Christian writings (which Johnson is inexcusably vague about
identifying). Are we all in agreement
that the sophistication of the official corpus, and historical complexity of
elements, is comparable to that of Shakespeare?
Are the challenges of forging Shakespeare in later times the same as the
challenges of forging the span of Christian history by writing literature in
later times? The challenges are partly
same, partly different.
>>Who
would be capable of this?
The
"unbelievably brilliant geniuses" who authored Augustine's works and
the other products of monastics and churchmen.
How perfect are the writings we have?
Not very perfect. How stupid and
inept are the people who authored the works of Augustine and the other official
Church writings? Not very stupid and
inept.
If the monasteries
really wanted to, they could have engineered a system of writings such as we
have; the writings *are* the product of real monastics and churchmen; the
debate at hand is whether these works were all later forgeries back-dated, or,
whether some of them were written in the sequence defined by the official
chronology of centuries.
I'm not
qualified to defend or assess Johnson's theory; no one person today is. His theory must be discussed and considered
by a group of people, which is why I've made an additional study version of it,
that I intend to clarify further.
>>The
theory is that literally hundreds or thousands of works were created under
similar circumstances, except that the time between the events and person in
question and the writing of the accounts would have been up to 1500 years, not
300.
Johnson
doesn't assert that the time between the founding Christian events and the
writing of the books of the New Testament was 1500 years. He removes 700 years, 2/3 of the 1,050-year
duration between 476 and 1525, as phantom years, leaving only 1/3 the duration:
350 years. Thus for example, the time
between the year we call 30 and the year we call 1530 was not 1500 years, but
rather, 800 years.
Reference
dates:
30 --
Jesus' death.
313 --
476 --
fall of
500-1500
-- Middle Ages
700-1400
-- didn't exist, per Johnson
1517 --
Luther's Reformation
1533 --
the first literary date Johnson thinks we can reasonably rely on.
1545-1563
-- Council of
>>And
in those thousands of works, there is not a single anachronism, not a single
phrase demonstrating that the works were created at a much later time. At least you don't mention any.
No one is
asserting that position, of the pristine perfection of the writings, free of
any anachronisms. In the official corpus
of Christian literature spanning 50-1517, there are plenty of
anachronisms. It's irrelevant that I
haven't listed anachronisms. Johnson's
book focuses on anachronisms and lack of a realistic perspective and time-sense
in the official Christian writings which are claimed to span 50-1517.
>>The
theory fails the test of archeology.
Martin Palmer's book _The_Jesus_Sutras describes the origins of early
Chinese Christianity. Around 1890, a
Chinese Taoist priest discovered a number of scrolls that had been sealed into
the room around 1000 A.D. Excerpts:
>"Therefore,
my Lord Ye Su, the One emanating in the three subtle bodies, hid his true
power, became a human, and came on behalf of the Lord of Heaven to preach the
good teachings. A virgin gave birth to
the sacred in a dwelling in the Da Qin Empire.
The message was given to the Persians who saw and followed the bright
light to offer him gifts."
>"Beyond
knowing, beyond words,
>You
are the truth, steadfast for all time.
>Compassionate
Father, Radiant Son,
>Pure
Wind King -- three in one."
>"The
Sutra of Proclamation
>The
Acts of the Apostles According to Luke
>The
Sutra of Paul's Dharma, and of Zakarias
>The
Sutra of George the Monk, and of Anchillia
>The
Sutra of Ceremonies and in praise of the Three Powers"
I am
perfectly ignorant of these claims and of the evidence put forth for the
discovery of these scrolls, and the evidence that they were discovered in 1890,
and that the room had been sealed around 1000.
I have not critically scrutinized these claims and sub-claims, and don't
know who has. This is an area for
potential investigation. The word
"sealed" reminds me of the proof (magic trick) that a stone idol in a
temple ate food. The discovery provides
the perfect type of evidence, just in time to refute Johnson's 1894
theory.
It's too
early for me to be skeptical about the discovery and its subclaims, but
naturally a critical thinker can never accept claims without some
investigation.
As a
matter of fact, the ossuary of Jesus' brother James was recently
discovered. So much for discovery of
evidence cast in stone. Such evidence is
as cheap and plentiful and worthless as relics of saints.
>>In
1625, Chinese gravediggers discovered a carved stone dated 781. The text recounted the major events and
teachings of a mission of the early Church to
>>The
dating is all wrong. The theory states
that all of this stuff would have been written around 1500.
The theory
doesn't state that all Christian texts dated between 476 and 1500 were written
around 1500. It's difficult to decipher
Johnson's terrible semi-English 19th-Century presentation that was literally
written for his immediate peers and scholarly friends.
Johnson
believes there were informal bits and scraps and assorted folk writings,
exactly as ordinary radicals and liberal scholars are used to postulating prior
to the official version of the gospels.
He takes what might become the dominant view (partly supported by
Ehrman's book Lost Christianities), that the gnostic versions of gospels were
the basis for the later official canon, and simply shifts this relationship and
sequence of literary events from around 180 to around 1510.
>>Archeological
dating of the scrolls and the stone show that these were in existence long
before the 1500s. They are dated not in
isolation, not only because of their content, but in the context of other
non-Christian artifacts and scrolls found at the same sites. Also discovered were the ruins of a monastery
containing the remains of an icon painted in the style of the Eastern Orthodox
church, again, hundreds of years prior to 1500.
>>If
you want to still hold to the dating implied by the theory, you have to then
say that Chinese history is all wrong, that the dating of the Chinese dynasties
is wrong, that the archeological dating of scrolls and artifacts is all wrong,
etc. etc.
These
points have already been argued by the chronology revisionists.
The New
Chronology: The Dark Ages Didn't Exist -- time falsification, Edwin Johnson,
Heribert Illig, Uwe Topper, Hans-Ulrich Niemitz, Christoph Marx, Jean Hardouin,
Wilhelm Kammeier
http://www.egodeath.com/newchronology.htm
Edwin
Johnson, A Radical Advocate of Chronology Criticism -- Uwe Topper on Edwin
Johnson
http://www.egodeath.com/uwetopperonedwinjohnson.htm
>>Isn't
there a point at which we simply conclude that the theory, however interesting,
simply doesn't work?
No. All theories, interpretive frameworks, and
paradigms can be developed into a stable steady-state, and then lined up and
judged in a beauty contest, using the measuring stick of overall plausibility
of the whole system. What's more
plausible: the official Church story of Church origins and history, or the
revisionist chronology and wholesale fabrication per Johnson, or some hybrid
theory? The conservative, liberal,
radical, or extreme paradigm?
I place my
bet on a hybrid of the radical and extreme explanatory paradigms of Christian
origins and history. What hybrids can be
formed between the radical and extreme explanatory paradigms? That is the real question.
Edwin
Johnson's 1894 book "The Pauline Epistles - Re-studied and Explained"
is worth some study, together with his earlier, more conventionally radical
book Antiqua Mater.
http://www.egodeath.com/edwinjohnsonpaulineepistles.htm
Jan wrote:
>>All
conspiracy theories are by nature provable.
People
ought to understand that fundamental principle of critical thinking. It's necessary to learn the conceptual
language or mode of thought of conspiracy theories and paradigms. Schizophrenic delusions of reference are like
this. The mind is designed to settle
upon worldmodels, self-reifying steady-state worldmodels that reach homeostatic
equilibrium; and the mind can jump from one to another, such as from
freewillist thinking to determinist thinking, through a kind of conversion
experience or metanoia.
Kuhn's
theory of paradigms or interpretive frameworks is treated by Robert Anton
Wilson as reality tunnels. To even begin
questioning the historicity of Jesus -- whether there was a single historical
individual serving as the lone kernel required for the legendary accretions
forming the received Jesus character -- is already to embark on a paradigm
shift and conspiracy theory. The
question becomes, when, how, how much, how intentional, and what motives for the
conspiracy, rather than wondering *whether* there was a conspiracy.
There was
some sort of conspiracy; that's not a significant point of debate, except
between conservative Christian scholars and the rest of the world. Only conservatives believe that we can read
Eusebius straight, and there was no conspiracy, no dissembling, no deliberate
systemic distortion and strategic invention of false histories. The debates concerning Christian origins
among liberal, radical, and extremist scholars are all about which conspiracy
theory is correct.
The
problem of revisionist chronology and phantom centuries, wholly transporting
the "early" Gnostic/Orthodox debates to many centuries later, is the
largest and thorniest, most paradigm-shifting challenge I've come up against
since the days when I still assumed a historical Jesus and historical Paul and
sought to figure out how the New Testament was mystically true and
perfect. The problem of figuring out
world religion and world mysticism as mystic-state myth was relatively easy;
once I was prepared, the problem melted immediately as soon as I raised the
question.
Studying
Western esotericism and the 20th-Century take on it was also relatively easy: I
had merely to postulate the "ordinary state of consciousness fallacy"
as the fatal flaw of 20th-Century approaches such as Jung and Campbell. Any fundamental fallacy permeating Jung and
Campbell naturally would apply to the whole of 20th-Century misguided and
off-base theories of myth.
Even the
Western esotericism problem of making rational sense out of magic, astrology,
and alchemy was easy to reduce to a choice between: either it's all extremely
difficult to figure out, or, it's all essentially very easy.
Without
having read all the books, or all issues of Gnosis magazine, the choice for me,
a way to declare victory of essential comprehension, is easy in this field:
declare it all to be stylized description of a series of mystic altered state
sessions leading to transformation from basically the egoic mental worldmodel
to the transcendent worldmodel, with a strong emphasis on *experiential*
insight rather than on direct systematization.
These Hermetic systematizations have a dirty blend of direct and
indirect, relevant and roundabout, systematization and description.
But the
radical revisionist chronologies such as Uwe Topper, Heribert Illig, and most
relevantly Edwin Johnson ("The Pauline Epistles - Re-studied and
Explained", 1894) are puzzling in their potential ramifications.
They have
the potential to powerfully shift so many assumptions about religious history,
but it's not clear what assumptions and aspects will fly in the long run, and
what relevance and potential these theories have for the entheogen theory of
religion and for providing some shortcut or leverage point to suddenly have a
new more sound and firm grasp of religious history, of the real nature and
origin of Western religions and Western esotericism and mysticism.
So many
things are all unclear at the same time:
It's
unclear what Johnson is saying, because he writes in an aggravatingly elusive
and roundabout fashion, with terrible conventions of presentation, almost
worst-case -- he actively and forcefully prevents people from understanding
what he is saying. This sounds like idle
complaint -- until you actually try to read the book. I can never figure out what he is talking
about, or who, without reading and searching his previous pages, and
researching on the Internet too.
Everywhere
in his book I am constantly circling *vague*, vague indirect words -- "our
author", "the book under discussion", "the age of
publication", or "during the revival of letters" -- it's
impossible to follow what he's talking about, which is why, though I hate
changing his writing, it's obvious and certain which flaws must be fixed and
edited before anyone lacking a PhD in English history and another PhD in
Christian History is able to follow his position and line of argument.
It's not
clear what benefits I might stand to gain from rescuing "our
author's" "book under discussion" -- that is, Edwin Johnson's
1894 book "The Pauline Epistles - Re-studied and Explained" -- from
its stupidly self-imposed oblivion due to Johnson's own fault, due his incomprehensibility
of language and presentation.
His manner
of presentation is aggravating and drives me up the wall; it's a perfect
negative model, a classic example of everything that's wrong with the valuation
of "lofty" writing. His way of
writing is a failure of his own making, largely due to his targeting of a
incredibly, bizarrely, surrealistically parochial and narrow audience: people
who have had a very particular educational and cultural background. He seems to be intent on parodying all the
most noxious aspects of parochial high culture and educational
indoctrination.
He speaks
as one unit manufactured on a particular production line, to the others, who
are exactly the same as him. He is
utterly incapable of communicating to anyone who doesn't come from his exact
narrow little educational/cultural background.
He utterly lacks communicative empathy for anyone else outside his
cultural school of thought. He is a
caricature of everything bad we read about Western imperialism, the kind that
applied evolution theory to characterize other cultures as
"savages".
He's worse
than mean, worse than just consciously choosing to target a tiny audience: he
genuinely does not realize that there's anyone else in the world to communicate
to, other than people exactly just like him, with his exact, particular
background -- that is the essence of the worst assumption a writer can possibly
make, for communication.
Today,
good writing is defined as writing for people who *don't* share your
identically same cultural/educational background: a good example of real,
effective *communication* to the general readership is Bart Ehrman, who often
refers to his own "easily readable translations".
Today,
writers assume that it's a *big* world, that there is no standard universal
body of educational knowledge or indoctrination. You *can't* make the assumption that all your
readers know what "synoptic" means, or "New Testament", or
who "Eusebius" is, or who Paul is, or what the Pauline epistles are,
or what the official Eusebian story of the origins of Christianity even
is.
Today,
before you can victoriously declare Eusebius' history to be entirely fabricated
and back-projected by many centuries, you have to first teach your readers what
the conventional "received" history-story is, and teach them the
system of century-numbering that you are about to disprove.
There is
something refreshing about today's audience, who is so full of diverse wisdom
(having watched a variety of tv shows, and been edified by following a broad
range of sport teams), is such a blank slate as far as any "common core
basic knowledge" is concerned. Each
individual knows alot, but there is no common ground you can assume.
I'm
unhappy about how people are so sick of Christianity, they can only hate it
rather than comprehend it. However,
people are becoming so perfectly and absolutely empty headed, so innocent of
even propaganda, one day they may say "What is or was that thing, rumored,
called Christianity?" Then it will
be easier to convey fresh perspectives, clear the mind and think anew.
Edwin
Johnson's worst-case writing style and manner of presentation are almost as bad
as the postmodernism style of providing no substance and all impressiveness of
style. These days, we are justified in assuming
that impressiveness of style is certain proof that there is no substance; if a
writer had substance, he would not stoop to lathering on such obfuscating
layers of lofty and pretentious style.
To the
flames with Johnson's lofty and pretentious style: to save the life of his
ideas in his book, I am going to kill the cancerous abominable parasite, his
lofty and pretentious style that prevents anyone from being able to figure out
what he's trying to say underneath it all.
I must push Johnson rudely out of the way and grab the microphone out of
his hand, push him away from the podium, and take over, lest Johnson's ideas
remain obfuscated behind the mumblemouthed stilted mode of active
anti-communication he walls them around with.
I have to
steal and rescue Edwin Johnson's ideas from the underground prison, the
Or,
Johnson writes like a doctoral candidate in a Postmodernism programme, except
that he underneath the terrible, worst-case manner of communication, does
actually have some ideas worth conveying, if only he would simply state what he
has in mind.
Uwe Topper
and Heribert Illig are also out of the reach of comprehensibility for
real-world English speakers, because their books and the debates about them are
only available in German, despite the great popularity of their theories in the
German-language world.
So many
things are unclear at the same time, regarding the New Chronology. *That* it can offer valuable new alternative
ways of combining ideas and explaining religious history, is certain. But specifically what changes might be
possible, and which are viably supportable, is completely unclear at this point.
I'm set
back to the days of January 11, 1988, when I first locked onto the worldmodel
of block-universe determinism as mystic revelation, and began learning about
the New Testament in order to connect the newly found core theory to
Christianity: it was certain that the core theory would shed brilliant light on
Christianity, but at that point it was mostly obscure what the insights and
comprehension of Christianity would amount to.
Such is my
feeling and challenge now about the New Chronology: it is certain that the New
Chronology has much potential to resolve problems and make new solutions
available in understanding religious history and maybe the nature of religious
experiencing in Western esotericism, and how Christianity was perhaps gradually
formed out of the rich late middle ages esotericism, instead of out of ancient
Alexandrian esotericism; but it's not at all clear what the specific insights
provided by the New Chronology may turn out to be, in the longer term.
Everyone
gets this feeling about the New Chronology: it is the nuclear bomb of paradigm
shifting hypotheses; the equivalent in the field of History to the Heisenberg
Uncertainty Principle (in Physics) and Kuhn's book on paradigm shifts (in the
field of Epistemology, Theory of Knowledge, and Science Studies). The field of History has now gone postmodern,
particularly with respect to the official Christian "system of
centuries" (Edwin Johnson).
Everything
that we are accustomed to disbelieving in Eusebius' Church History (about the
historical origins of Christianity to 325 CE), we must now extend not just to
the Historical Jesus and even Historical Paul, but much more; *much* more: the
entire system of counting and identifying the centuries, and the entire system
of dating Christian writings.
Everyone
is astonished at how easily Heribert Illig and Uwe Topper appear to have found
it to shift as sand what everyone took for granted as unassailable and
unquestionable bedrock foundation, the familiar-as-water-to-a-fish "system
of centuries" -- a worldmodel which we were so intimately familiar with,
we truly didn't know we even had it. The
New Chronology has, at least, enabled us to stand back and consciously perceive
for the first time, like with some consciousness-elevating LSD, the system of
centuries we grew up within as an intimately familiar worldmodel.
How do we
know that the Nag Hammadi writings were gathered together around 350 CE rather
than 1550 CE? We know because of how
they relate to the standard established and taken-for-granted chronology -- the
established system of numbering and inventorying the centuries and their
contents -- and because of some stray papers that were used to strengthen the
bindings; these papers are dated to around 350.
How these scraps of papers are dated to 350 is not spelled out in James
Robinson's edited book "The Nag Hammadi Library".
There are
many strikingly strange things about Christian origins, some of which are
easily explainable within the new paradigm of the New Chronology. For example, there is no artwork showing
Jesus on the cross on earth until the seventh or eighth century (600-800) --
why not? Because, explains Johnson, the
Jesus character wasn't invented until the year 1500, which is the year 800,
relabelled.
For those
of us who are in awe of Kuhn's theory of paradigms and laugh at the dullness of
those who criticize other people's theories as being based on "circular
arguments", as though noncircularity were even possible, New Chronology is
as profound as the implications of Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle were on
the smug confidence of positivistic instrumentalist theory of knowledge in the
early 20th Century.
This is a
releasing dance of circularity, applying embarrassing Humean revelations (that
we only *postulate* linear causality, based on constant conjunction) now to the
foundations of the field of History, the very measuring stick of the system of
centuries called wholly into question, just as Einstein's moving frames of
relative reference did away with the confident, unconscious assumption of
absolute spacetime.
Questioning
the historical existence of Jesus, and finding the solid evidence so quickly
withering to nothing, shares much in common with questioning the received
chronology, particularly per Johnson's treatment of the problem of chronology
or the system of centuries in the story of Christian history.
The New
Chronology
http://www.egodeath.com/newchronology.htm
Edwin
Johnson, A Radical Advocate of Chronology Criticism -- Uwe Topper on Edwin
Johnson
http://www.egodeath.com/uwetopperonedwinjohnson.htm
Study
Version of Edwin Johnson's "The Pauline Epistles - Re-Studied and
Explained", 1894
http://www.egodeath.com/edwinjohnsonpaulineepistles.htm
I have
tentatively settled on doubting the existence of the Dark Ages = Early Middle
Ages = 500-1000, so that the existing years are 499, 500/1000, 1001... This 500-year phantom duration is a
reasonable compromise between the theory that 600-900 didn't exist (300 years)
and the theory that 700-1400 didn't exist (700 years). I also hold the Catholic Church and its grand
history of power to be 10% real and 90% exagerration, a false and grossly
distorted history invented in the Reformation era around 1517.
Taking a
paradigm-centric view, the details are unimportant; the interpretive framework
is important, and it's certainly easier to conceive of the history of fully
syncretistic esotericism as carrying immediately over from Greco-Roman
Antiquity (to 476, Fall of Rome) into the *immediately succeeding* era
conventionally called the "Late Middle Ages", conventionally said to
be followed by the "Renaissance".
Instead, I mentally adopt this chronology:
Antiquity;
Alexander to Fall of
Middle
Ages aka Renaissance, 476 (="1000") to 1525
Modernity
1525 to 2000 or to 1960
The term
"Renaissance" is as problematic as "Dark Ages"; the two
terms only make sense as a pair: the rebirth was, by definition, a rebirth
after the dark ages; the end of the dark ages.
But if the dark ages is a phantom period invented in the Reformation era
around 1525, as part of fabricating the supposed vast antiquity, power, and
authority of the Catholic Church, then the concept of "rebirth after the
dark ages" is equally spurious and based on illusion and fiction. However, the term "Renaissance" is
valid as a stylistic descriptor as in "Renaissance esotericism".
Technically,
the term "middle ages" is less full of doubtful implicit assertions
about chronology than the term "renaissance". But by convention, the term "middle
ages" is usually thought of as preceding the era of the
"renaissance", with certain cultural styles being labelled as
"middle ages" while other cultural styles are labelled
"renaissance". I'm happiest
with the sequence:
Antiquity
Middle
Ages/Renaissance
Modernity
The term
"modernity" is as waffly as the rest; it's held to start either at
the Reformation (1517) or Kantian Enlightenment (1750). Having read about Spinoza as the real start
of the Enlightenment, in 1650, I prefer earlier rather than later -- such as
1517.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval
-- "The Middle Ages (500-1500) was the middle period in a schematic
division of European history into three 'ages': Classical civilization, the
Middle Ages, and Modern Civilization. It is commonly considered as having
lasted from the end of the Western Roman Empire (5th century) until the rise of
national monarchies and the beginnings of demographic and economic renewal
after the Black Death, European overseas exploration and the cultural revival
known as the Renaissance around the 15th century as well as the Protestant
Reformation starting 1517."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Periodization
-- "Periodization is the attempt to categorize or divide historical time
into discrete named blocks. Periodization is a complex problem in history.
History is in fact continuous, and so all systems of periodization are to some
extent arbitrary. It is nevertheless necessary to divide up history in order to
make sense of the past and to articulate changes over time. Furthermore
different nations and cultures experience different histories, and so will
require different models of periodization. Periodizing labels are being
challenged and redefined all the time. Thus an historian may claim that 'there
was no such thing as the Renaissance', while others will defend the
concept. The reasons for this are
complex. Periodizing blocks will inevitably overlap, or even seemingly
contradict one another. Furthermore, certain periodizing concepts only apply in
specific conditions. Some have a cultural usage (such the ' Romantic period'),
others refer to historical events ('the Inter War years: 1918-1939'), yet
others are defined by decimal numbering systems ('the 1960s', 'The Seventeenth
Century'). Others are named from influential or talismanic individuals (the Victorian
period, the Elizabethan period, the Napoleonic Era)."
"Most
professional historians ... now refer to the historical 'period' commonly known
as The Renaissance as the Early Modern period."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renaissance
-- "During the last quarter of the 20th century, however, more and more
scholars began to take a view that the Renaissance was perhaps only one of many
such movements. This was in large part due to the work of historians like
Charles H. Haskins, who made convincing cases for a "Renaissance of the
12th century," as well as by historians arguing for a "Carolingian
renaissance." Both of these concepts are now accepted by the scholarly
community at large; as a result, the present trend among historians is to discuss
each so-called renaissance in more particular terms, e.g., the Italian
Renaissance, the English Renaissance, etc. This terminology is particularly
useful because it eliminates the need for fitting "The renaissance"
into a chronology that previously held that it was preceded by the Middle Ages
and followed by the Reformation, which was sometimes patently false.[??] The entire period is now more often replaced
by the term 'Early Modern' in the practice of historians." "The second half of the Renaissance is
also the period of the Reformation."
Conventional
chronology -- my summary/collection (what a mess, no wonder named eras seem so
confusing: they are indeed confused)
700
BCE-476 CE - Ancient or Classical era: (end of Greek Dark Ages to end of
313
BCE-27 BCE - Hellenistic era (death of Alexander the Great to ascension of
Augustus Caesar)
476-1000
- Early Middle Ages
476-1300
- Medieval era
500-1000
- Dark Ages
500-1500
- Dark Ages
500-1500
- Middle Ages
1000-1500
- Late Middle Ages
1300-1600
- Early Modern Period
1300-1600
- Renaissance era
1517-1600
- Reformation era
1700-1800
- Enlightenment era
1575-1950
- Modern era
1750-1950
- Modern era
1950-2100
- Postmodern era
What era
is most suspect for phantom years?
Between the fall of
The widest
imaginable is deleting the years 476-1525, so that the year 1525 is just the year
476, relabelled. Which deletion feels
most natural? I don't know any history,
but how many centuries does it feel like there were, to me, between the year
called 476 and the year called 1525? I
don't know why Johnson identifies the years 700-1400 as the range to be
deleted: what's so real and certain and tangible about the years up to 650, or
the years back to 1450? Did he just pull
700 and 1400 out of a hat?
What drew
Edwin Johnson to name *these* years as the endpoints in his near-aside in his 1894
book "The Pauline Epistles - Re-studied and Explained"; why does he
feel that the years outside 700-1400 pass his test of perspectival realism,
while the years inside that range fail his test? How serious is he about the particular
endpoint years of 700 and 1400?
Should we
delete fewer centuries, such as 614-911 per Illig/Topper, or why can't we go
ahead and delete all the years between 476 and 1525, if Johnson's proposal of
deletion is such a good idea -- why stop at deleting the years 700-1400; why
not push the start point back to 476, in addition to pulling the end point to
1525 (as Johnson often does in his book)?
We need a
little elbow room in between 476 and 1525 (fall of
o Illig and Topper say we need 750 years
between 476 and 1525; (1050-(911-614)) =
conventional 1050 - 297 phantom years = 753 years
o Johnson says we need to fit just 350 years
between 476 and 1525; (1050-700)
o The conventional chronology packs this period
with a full 1050 years,
o I nuke it all away for our convenience by
declaring a duration of 0 years.
I
sympathize with Johnson: given how very similar the late middle ages or very
early modern or renaissance thinking is to the thinking of 250-476 CE, it seems
to me that there was only a little development, about 350 years worth, not the
conventional massive 1050 years worth of history, nor even Illig/Topper's 753
years worth of events and development transpiring. If we are going to delete 700 years, why
delete the 700 phantom years called '700-1400' -- why not delete the 700
phantom years called '476-1176' instead?
Putting
the same question another way, why do the 222 years 476-700, implicitly favored
and affirmed by Johnson, have any better claim to reality than the 222 years
1178-1400, which Johnson deletes as the last part of his range?
This is a
good example of how Johnson's book leaves one highly puzzled even after reading
it three times: he convincingly demolishes the conventional chronology, but
provides no clear statement of why he picks the end years of 700 and 1400 as
the phantom range of years to be deleted, or why he feels that there positively
were 350 years we need to retain, the actual years between the year we call
'476' and the year we call '1525'. The
clearest way to portray his model is probably:
1. The
years up to 476 (fall of
2. The
350-year period usually called '477-1525', usually exagerrated as lasting 1050
years long, but now shortened by 700 years by Johnson by removing the specific
years 700-1400.
3. The
years 1525 and beyond.
Johnson
grants reality to the years conventionally called '476-700' and '1400-1525',
but it's not clear why those periods pass his realism test, while the years
between those periods, the years called '700-1400', fail his
realism-perspective test.
Johnson's
takeaway point is expressed most clearly as:
There were
not 1,050 years between the fall of
Sure,
there were 1,050 years between those events -- but these years were only 4
months long, each. (3x350=1050) Johnson removes exactly 2/3 (700 years) of
the 1050-year duration between 476 and 1525.
Two out of three years between 476 and 1525 didn't exist -- regardless
of what numbers you put on the years between the endpoint dates.
The period
between 467 and 1525 was only a third as long as the conventional
'Neo-Eusebian' chronology claims. The
Church and monasteries (and Rabbis and Imams?) claimed that the interval was
1,050 years long, but 700 of those years were merely phantasmic inventions;
only 350 of those years actually existed (or, each of those 1,050 'years' were
only periods 4 months in duration).
The Middle
Ages (500-1500) indeed existed, but that era was actually only 300 years long,
not 1000 years long; 700 phantom years were added in. Johnson's proposed chronology amounts to
retaining the Middle Ages between 476 and 1525, or 500 and 1500, but only as a
350- or 300-year period. Between
During
that third of a millenium, out of Western esotericism, folk-mystic Christianity
was born, finally in the end (around 1533) leading to the invention of the
Jesus and Paul pseudo-historical lifestories, back-projected and antedated to
the years after Augustus, which were then pushed even further back into seeming
antiquity by fabricating and inserting 700 phantom years.
In
explaining the origin of Christianity, it's necessary to be radically skeptical
about timing, years, chronology, false history, false chronology.
If
Christianity started around 300 CE, then we want to look for a godman hero on a
cross before 300.
If
Christianity started around 30 CE, then we want to look for a godman hero on a
cross before 30.
We must
use greatest caution in our assumptions about what it means to have a non-Jesus
religious cross "before the Christian use of the cross". It is very much the central issue, not
something we can simply assume, *when* the "Christian use of the
cross" began.
The use of
the cross gradually began, from 100 BCE if not earlier, and *eventually* became
known in Europe as the Christian cross, but did this happen suddenly around
year 50, or slowly between 100 BCE and 300 CE, with many variations,
formations, interpretations, traditions, and innovations gradually coalescing?
Why does
anyone want to find a "precedent for the cross"? The tau cross became a religious symbol
uniquely identified in Western Culture with the Jesus figure.
If we find
religious crosses before or after the claimed (30 CE) or actual (suppose 200
CE) time of formation and definition of Christianity as "cross of
Jesus", this overabundance and multiplicity of religious crosses weakens
the singleness of Jesus that is inherent in the Historical Jesus proposal.
Dick
Richardson wrote:
>Be careful
when reading gnosticism, for like all religions of priestcraft the best has
been eliminated and the worst is all invented to scare the sh*t out of people
in order to wield power over them.
Also, much
mystic writing is humorous tall-tales with deliberate misleading and
double-entendre, and ironic inversion such as "the lower mind is drunken;
we must become sober for the first time".
>Keep
in mind also that most of the mystics who truly did discover the gnosis of the
transcendent realm were only half-baked mystics
This
agrees with what I've written in this discussion group. All forms of esoteric allegory are more or
less distorted expressions of transcendent truth.
An early
issue of Gnosis magazine, such as #2 or #3, fielded letters to the editor which
made the mistake of conceiving of gnosis as Gnosticism in the narrowest sense
possible, and criticizing gnosticism with a broad brush based on silently
assuming a particular version of Gnosticism (world-hating, ascetic,
unappealing).
That's a
common tactic: broadly dismiss a large area by silently reducing it to a
particularly flawed, selected, narrow definition, like saying that all
psychoactive "drugs" should be suppressed because drugs -- now
suddenly reduced and redefined to dirty street heroin -- are dangerous.
Similarly,
some vague broad thing "Christianity" is dismissed in scorched-earth
broad terms, by pointing to specific reprehensible qualities or versions. Beware of deliberately sloppy generalization
that covertly conflates broad and narrow definitions. An issue of Gnosis, such as the Middle Ages
issue, dismisses the idea of "dualistic" Cathar heretics as utterly
unfounded; the accusation of dualism and sexual deviance only says something
about the standard Catholic official accusation, and says nothing credible
whatsoever about the actual beliefs and practices of the accused.
It's
automatic for the official Church to accuse any and all enemies of the standard
shocking offenses; all that we know about the accused is that they were opposed
by the official Church -- we don't positively know anything about their
beliefs. The accusations are empty and
totally generic, indicating nothing at all about the actual beliefs of the
groups.
All the
"facts" about the history of Western religion should be held
completely in doubt and taken with a huge grain of salt; total skepticism about
all the established historical facts is the only reasonable starting point in
this subject area. All we have is
official claims and official assertions, official stories, never the underlying
reality. The credibility of the official
history is exactly nil; we cannot take *any* of the proclaimed facts for
granted.
It's all
claims, claims, and more claims, a wall of claims. One thing we can be certain of is that the
official story has every reason to prefer distortion and lies and fabrication
and forgery over the truth; the truth is entirely a liability from the point of
view of the officials, just as with today's situation with psychoactive drugs:
the officials hate reality and truth; to their mentality, reality and truth are
nothing but impediments, liabilities, and obstacles to be conquered, defeated,
and done away with.
They have
every reason to lie, to distort, to fabricate.
The most absurd and foolish thing is to investigate why the bunk Ecstasy
research was conducted -- don't these exposers realize yet that *all* the
anti-drug research is 100% lies and corruption?
Here is a giant dragon dumping its toxic waste all over the planet, and
these foolish exposers of this one bunk Ecstasy research study think they are
revealing something when they point out that one little dropping from the
dragon stinks -- as though the rest of the dragon and its products were healthy
and functioning fine.
That's the
old pattern of "debunking" one tiny aspect while leaving the entire
overall bogus framework in place. The
entire framework of official Church version of history is entirely lies,
entirely bunk, with zero trustworthiness or worse; the only sense in which it
is trustworthy is negative: you can be *sure* that the official Church version
of history is driven by lies, fabrication, invention, forgery, artifice,
dissimulation, and deception, just the same as the phony war on drugs, where
*phony* is the primary characteristic of the whole.
Church
version of history is not mistaken on one or two isolated points; the whole
story is characterized first of all by phoniness throughout. Phoniness and complete distortion is the
rule, not the exception.
I give up
all hope for our ever knowing the reality of religious history or the reality
about psychoactive drugs, when the people who are supposedly progressive and
enlightened reformers carelessly and uncritically take for granted the overall
correctness of the official framework as though it has only a couple errors --
when in reality the entirety is error, evil, lies, deception all throughout
down to the very core. They foolishly
battle the mere tip of the iceberg, as though that could make the slightest
difference.
What's
needed is a thousand, a million times the skepticism and debunking, like the
difference between the coverage of cannabis in a mainstream magazine versus
Jonathan Ott's truly enlightened and correct view of the matter. Or the difference between the tepid liberal
"revision" of Christian origins, versus the views of the more extreme
among the Dutch Radical Critics.
This must
be a standard feeling of revulsion felt by radicalism against "tepid and
insidious" liberalism, like how drug-policy libertarians shudder at the
faux-progressivism of the Democrat position; the latter's notion of
progressivism is a kinder, gentler absolute suppression of psychoactives.
It's
gotten to the point in
>they
had not know the bit which brought it all back to earth again. Two of the books which I wrote were on this
very theme. Thus it is that
approximately one third of all Gnostic literature is spot on true according to
direct human experience, but the other three quarters is all junk, lies and
diatribe.
90% of all
esotericism and mysticism and religion is junk, lies, confusion, literalism,
diatribe, and distortion. Discernment
and judgment are essential requirements for the modern searcher after truth in
these ancient schools. Even the mystics
who use entheogens may be way off-base on their own interpretations of their
own allegorical traditions, and may remain hopelessly blinded by chronic
literalist thinking.
It's not
nearly enough for us to understand what actual ancient or medieval mystics
thought; we must do better than them and correct their half-baked views and
interpretations of their own tradition.
For example, the question is not "What did the medievals who
tripped on datura and cannabis and mushrooms think the meaning of the Cross
is", but rather, "What *should* they have thought the Cross
meant", or "What is the most coherent view of the Cross?"
The
logical language of allegoricism must be the dictator of meaning; the garbled
confusions of past thinkers cannot be the ultimate measure and arbiter: the
systemic logic of the allegory components system itself must be the final
arbiter: not "What did they think of the allegory system?", but
rather, "What did the allegory system they were examining logically lead
to?" This is the opposite of
reader-response theory.
The true
ultimate meaning lies in systematic symbolic logic itself, not in the vague and
confused attempts of previous thinkers to understand that system. The System is born in individual minds but
should not be limited to those minds; the scriptures are inspired even though
they were given birth by flawed and confused minds.
Merlin of
Exmoor wrote:
>Obviously
a non mystic could not know which bits are true and which bits are not - it can
only be known from the hindsight of first hand experience.
>If you
are truly interested in the actual gnosis and what it reveals then my site will
be up and running soon - www.psychognosis.net.
>Don't
believe everything which your read over there about the Brits - the term is
British by the way - and they are influenced by no sod - let alone ten a penny
writers and actors, sh*t bags and false guru's - we eat them for breakfast
deary.
Here are
some starting points for researching the proposals that the Early Middle Ages
didn't exist, and various studies of the falsification of history.
There are
many crackpot theories, such as that Jesus didn't exist, or that all continents
were once joined, or that heavier-than-air flight is possible, or that time and
free will are illusory, or that drugs have always been the inspirational
wellspring for religions. Why should the
crackpot theory that the early middle ages didn't exist warrant any discussion
in the discussion group considering the historicity of Jesus?
Radical
Critic Edwin Johnson wrote an important work, Antiqua Mater, in 1887, which
included a little questioning of Paul's historicity, and then wrote in 1894 (7
years later) "The Pauline Epistles: Re-studied and Explained", which
started by questioning the historicity of all of Paul's epistles, and continued
on to question the reality and existence of all of European history prior to
the invention of the printing press.
My modified
version of the theory of Tradition is that, prior to the Enlightenment, no one
believed in the modern literalist version of Jesus; they entirely didn't think
about Christianity in such mundane terms; it was essentially all concerned with
mystic experiencing and derived from it, theological doctrine.
According
to the modern story, the ancients were stupid and supernaturalist, believing in
Christian miracles, while moderns are smart and skeptical, and know that the
Bible just reports materialist goings-on, embellished. The truth is the opposite: the ancients were
smart, knowing that Christianity was basically mystic-state mythic allegory;
the moderns are stupid, mistaking Christianity for literalist claims and projecting
their own stupid, clueless literalism onto the pre-Enlightenment era.
Could
someone please summarize these theories of falsification of history? I can't figure out what to make of them. I'm a theoretical systematizer of mystic
experiencing and allegorical metaphor, not a bean-counter of historical
studies.
Thanks
Edwin
Johnson: The Pauline Epistles: Re-studied and Explained,
Johnson's
radical late work. Anticipates theories
of Heribert Illig and Uwe Topper.
http://www.radikalkritik.de/pauline_epistles.htm
http://www.radikalkritik.de/PaulEpistles.pdf
Proposes
that several centuries before the printing press didn't exist.
If I
understand Johnson, combined with the Radikalkritik site, the sequence of
writings was actually:
Writings
of the early Christian fathers
Pauline
writings
The
Gospels (as complete compositions)
because
the early writings are silent about Paul and about the Gospels, and the Pauline
writings were silent about the Gospels.
Edwin
Johnson also wrote Antiqua Mater, relevant to the Quest for the (dissolving and
vanishing) Historical Paul:
http://www.radikalkritik.de/antiqua_mater.htm
-- 1887 -- "The reader may practically confine himself to Justin of
Neapolis as a dated witness from the middle of the second century. He knows no
authoritative writings except the Old Testament; he had neither our Gospels
nor our Pauline writings; his imagination was a blank where our own is filled
with vivid pictures of the activity of Jesus and of Paul. ... The history of the Church and of its
dogmas properly begins with the period of the Antonines, 138 180 A.D. Here we
find ourselves still in the midst of a legendary atmosphere. The foundations of
the Ecclesia, in the new sense, are being laid upon the Rock-man, and the
http://www.google.com/search?q="Uwe+Topper"/
click
Translate
Book:
The
Large Action
Uwe
Topper
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3878471726&langpair=de|en
http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3878471726
Book:
Time
Falsification
Uwe
Topper
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3776623489/&langpair=de|en
Aug.
2003
"As a
result of the many interesting mosaic chapters (s. table of contents) an
exciting overall view arises to the conditions of the present/immediate
discussion with many new, often surprising aspects, which energize for
thinking, e.g. over it, whether at all our time calculation is correct, we many
well-known, but legendary historical persons spareless to paint should whether
our religious conceptions have not nevertheless completely different roots and
not nevertheless only many later developed, which applies to all 3 large
"book religions" then, but above all whether not everything that we
believed to know was based to provided writing certifications in the long run
on only in the Renaissance and in the Humanismus and was formed after certain
interests and claims to power."
Incidentally,
here is a good cover picture of "Was Jesus Caesar?"
http://216.239.39.104/translate_c?&langpair=de%7Cen&u=http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3442150515/ref%3Dpd_bxgy_text_2/028-4888904-7627729
Edwin
Johnson, a Radical Advocate of the Chronology Criticism
Uwe Topper
Translation:
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http://www.efodon.de/html/archiv/chrono/topper/johnsohn.htm&langpair=de|en
2001
German:
http://www.efodon.de/html/archiv/chrono/topper/johnsohn.htm
http://www.efodon.de/html/archiv/chrono/topper/johnson.rtf
I made a
few minor cleanups to the translation below -m.hoffman
End 19.
Century were there in
Some
sentences therein sound like my own in my book "The Large Action"
(Tübingen 1998), without I could praise myself Johnson to have read
["without my even having discovered the 19th-Century innovative works by
Johnson"?]. A theologian, who represents the radical criticism in Berlin
after Dutch school, Dr. Hermann Detering, referred me recently to this book
[Edwin Johnson's book "The Pauline Epistles", 1894], of which it says
on its web page (www.radikalkritik.de), it represents just as radical criticism
as from Illig and Topper.
However
Illig is far overtaxed with this probably-meant evaluation, because its 296
(297) years, which he cuts out in the Middle Ages, can not measure with
Johnson's certainty that 1500 years church history are too much. Radically the
historical criticism of Heinsohn and Illig is main for the steinzeit and the
beginnings of history ("Sumerer ", old Egyptians, early Perser etc..)
Johnson's
realizations fit better the radical statements of Jean Hardouin, Wilhelm
Kammeier und Christoph Marx. In view of the accuracy and the Durchblicks of
this research work, which Johnson submitted more than hundred years ago, many
results of our chronology criticism of the last decades find an important
additional argumentative support.
Johnson
recognizes for example that also 16th Century still no firm data possesses; the
earliest useful date in England is 1533 (P. 9, last exp., I quote after the
Internet version, used the other page numbers than the original, whereby these
are always indicated).
But only
in the following decades a reliable dating system begins in
Latin the
first language of the church was, not Greek (P. 12, center and repeatedly), and
the church developed not in the Orient, but in
The
literary secondary sources, which Johnson uses, are unfortunately only scarcely
mentioned, there it mainly on original documents 16. Century falls back. It
knew however the writings of Jean Hardouin (P. 20 center), who I only break-by
the piece read could, and speaks of a board round (P. 19 center) with director
and implementing monks, as it had sketched comb eggs with the term "large
action", without the latter would have seen the implementing persons in
such sharpness.
Also haste
with the production of the Bible - at least the new will - represented Johnson
compellingly and this as argument for their recent age used (P. 33 center),
completely like I 1998 wrote and in "falsifications of history"
(2001, P. 240) quotes, where I outline the race between the Spaniards and
Erasmus of Rotterdam: "then the version of the Erasmus is almost the so
hot looked for original text of the Bible." If I would have known Johnson,
I would have inserted myself the word "almost" to save to be able and
a reference to its work.
It is
amazing, like many theologians and scholars looks through had and in this
enlightened age, the second half 19. Century, their research published. They
were read and fought, hushed up by no means.
Johnson
did not begin as a chronology critic, but by examining realistically the holy
writing in the follow-up of Baur and Harnack. Its first large book is ANTIQUA
MOULD, A Study OF Christian Origins (Truebner and CO, London 1887). Therein it
examines the church texts alleged 2. Century and it recognizes that they must
be older not younger, but than the drawing up of the new will.
In this
earlier work Edwin Johnson holds still the critical point of view of well-known
theologians such as D F. Strauss, Ferdinand Christian Baur and Adolf Harnack,
which rejected or at least questioned the historicity of the Biblical reports
very critically. Genuine chronological doubts did not emerge yet. Nevertheless
we can use some passages for our work, because they are valuable without
chronological corrections also, there it the relative pre and afterwards the
Ebioniten, Gnostiker etc. to make clear.
In its
later book published, "The Pauline of Epistles" (at this time the
professor is already emeritiert) the chronology criticism is fully spread seven
years, in a sharpness, as it had to be intolerable its contemporaries. After it
published numerous writings with this new tenor and harvested harsche
criticism, it summarizes now its thoughts in a discussion of the Paulusbriefe,
which are the result of its historical-critical life work, and which looks in a
revolutionary manner:
The
Christian church developed in the benediktinischen monasteries of France (Paris
and Lyon) around 1500, which became catholic church fathers by incompetent
monks written, which is new will as consequence of it developed. There are no
older texts, and contents betray the time: Beginning of the printing.
That is
indicated as well known as 1460, and already in the next twenty years first
Bibles are to have been printed. If all were back dated later these Bibles,
which Johnson at least suggest, I would have to correct the chronological
acceptance of Johnson around approximately fifty years.
Anyhow I
became hellhoerig here and tried, my version that it in 12. Jh. a first
beginning of Christian religion to have given could to save. But that is not easy
in relation to the knowledge of a theologian, who represented the truth, and
which reads with humor and in the consciousness of its weaknesses: The
reformation Martin Luther was the first attempt to down-struggle the rising
catholic church of
My draft,
which is papacy in
On which
chronology critics Johnson developed, whether he considered e.g.
The most
important thoughts Johnsons seem to be me the following:
Before the
Tridentini council (alleged starting from 1545 in Tirol and north Italy) there
was still no Vulgata, at least no complete or recognized version of latin
Bible. In the following twenty years it develops only. Luther's portion of the
Bible creation is enormously, particularly in the letters of the Paulus, which
reflects the controversy between rivaling Benediktinern and Augustinern etc.
and therefore so complex, contradictory and incomprehensible are. Also some
Augustinus texts might come from Luther or its environment.
Since
however the text of the Tridentinums was written by Hardouin, we do not know
again, what was really decided at that time. Nevertheless - so Johnson - he
tells us the whole procedure of the board round. That must probably be because
of it that the truth could not be masked anyway, at least not for theologians.
And the people did not read the decrees of the Tridentinums.
From
Johnson it follows that "reformed" a moenchische movement were, which
one can call late form of the Urchristentums perhaps two generations after
emergence of the Christianity, which for Johnson not before center "15.
Century "to have been can. The catholic church developed only as reaction
in addition, evenly on the Tridentinum. Here table "stood for the"
round, which Johnson uses as term for the "large action".
When
earliest date for trustworthy messages from the time of the reawakening of the
sciences, to which time of the printing indicates, Johnson several times 1533,
although it expresses itself carefully, because it does not know exactly, when
this year lies. It uses dear of terms like "Tudor time", king
Heinrich VIIITH from England etc.. About at that time must have been written
Beda and Chaucer, the church fathers and the new will. It knows also the
monasteries, where such work was made: Monte Cassino and Bobbio, Fulda, pc.
Irenaeus of Lyon and above all pc. Dénis and pc. Germains of Paris, even knows
some the participants (the notorious abbott Tritheim belonged naturally to it),
and does not save not with admiration for this achievement, whereby he does not
verhehlt however that he feels lies of this order of magnitude unworthily for
our culture, exactly the same as he the continuation of these lies by today's
scholars sharply condemned (P. 91-92). ...
For the
rest of the above page in translation, submit sections of the webpage for
translation.-mh
Sensation: A Cause for the Falsification of the Medieval
Time Calculation Found
Walter
Haug
http://www.efodon.de/html/archiv/chrono/haug/falsch.htm
http://www.efodon.de/html/archiv/chrono/haug/faelschung.pdf
2001
Article:
Isaac
Newton Shortened Greek History by 300 Years
Uwe Topper
Translate:
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http://www.efodon.de/html/archiv/chrono/topper/newton.htm&langpair=de|en
German:
http://www.efodon.de/html/archiv/chrono/topper/newton.htm
http://www.efodon.de/html/archiv/chrono/topper/newton.pdf
1999
The
criticism at the validity of our historical numbers, which is stated recently
with sharpness by the Zeitrekonstrukteure - all in front Marx, Heinsohn, Illig
and Gabowitsch -, is not new. One of the largest scientists of the clearing-up
age, Sir Isaac Newton (1643-1727), had concerned itself and had maintained 40
years long with the problem of the chronology that the historical data
recognized at that time lay around several centuries too highly. Above all the
highlights of the classical Greeks would have to be moved close around 300
years more near to us.
1998 had
given Eugen Gabowitsch, lively by Morosow and Fomenko, in the citizen of Berlin
historical salon a reference to Newton's chronology work, whereby he quoted
also the book of the American's F. E. Manuel (1963). Following I would like to
submit a summary of the Newton's work here to these references.
The
controversy over the dating of the antiquity had seized Christian Europe after
the Gregorian calendar reform of 1582 far circles. The works of Joseph Scaliger
(1540-1609) became fundamental, the son of the famous Julius Scaliger. Its
first book, directly after the calendar reform published, specified for all
mark the measure of the historical numerical data. All later Chronologen could
change only in it herumdoktern, essentially however nothing more. The
provenzalische catholic Nostradamus (1503-66) had already undertaken (in the
letter to his son) the attempt to connect the generation register of the old
person of will with astronomical back computations. By rejecting the numerical
data (heaths) of the Varro approximately, he arrived with his new method at a
at the beginning of the yearly counting: The first year of Adam was appropriate
4173 v. Chr.
http://www.berliner-geschichtssalon.de/html/salonhistorie.htm
1991-heute
: A disagreement with the calibration fount publishing house developed, when
Heribert Illig at the yearly meeting of the Chronologen spoke a thesis, which
maintained the invention of 297 years in world history [the years 614 to 911
didn't exist?], i.e. in the early Middle Ages, in Berlin 1991. The end of this
co-operation led to an intensified activity of the Mantis publishing house of
Heribert Illig. The book about the "invented Middle Ages" appeared in
extended version 1996 in the Econ publishing house and in so far 2 years
several editions experienced. The thesis the "invented Middle Ages"
seems on many humans obszoen to work. We place against the fact that it was the
methodical "training for many years" in chronology questions to
emotional less occupied topics, which it made possible to work on this so
absurd thesis seeming in the first Hinsehen nevertheless seriously. A summary
of the work of the "new historical school", which should appear
actually still with calibration fount, came out 1992 as "chronology and
Katstrophismus" in the Mantis publishing house and is at present out of
print. It is planned to bring the old calibration fount titles out again
whereby with "when lived the Pharaonen?" 1997 the first step one did.
Until today 10 buchtitel appeared and approximately 90 different authors about
400 articles for the magazine of time jumps contributed.
1998 :
Unbridgeable differences over methodology, contents and genesis of the
chronology revision of the Middle Ages lead to a break between the Mantis
publishing house and Uwe Topper. Consequently Uwe Topper publishes a book in
October 1998 for the chronology of the Middle Ages in the grave blank
publishing house. As sharp criticism is expressed both because of the
publishing house choice (the grave blank publishing house is considered one of
the rechtesten publishing houses of Germany) and because of the conscious
Verschleierns and falsifying of the sources for the spoken considerations and
thoughts. On 1 March 1999 to this problem a discussion meeting in the citizen
of Berlin historical salon will take place (see in addition the appropriate
date in the following section "activities in Berlin")
Search Web
for "Heribert Illig"
http://www.google.com/search?q="Heribert+Illig"/
Book:
The
Invented Middle Ages: The Largest Time Falsification in History
Heribert
Illig
http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3548364292
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3548364292&langpair=de|en
Sep 1996
hardcover
Reviews:
walterbender
wrote in October 2002: As history develops? Of the titles the Middle Ages
invented by Heribert Illigs book ";
The largest time falsification of history "affected so provokant me
that I had to buy and read this book simply.
One are safe, the book can the point of view extend. It lets become more critical. What is truth, which is falsification? And if it is a falsification, why it became
falsified and whom it has used and on whose costs? If one does not know at the end of a book
strong over 400 sides really whether everything which one to an important time
period of history to know believed, is true or whether it simply around
centuries later and besides piece a falsification developed for piece in
documents and even buildings in centuries acts it is this welfare SAM, very
welfare SAM even. - the book of Illig
has aftereffects with attendance of museums, when reading history or perhaps
nevertheless only stories? - however and
that is particularly importantly, even with reads the current daily paper or a
news magazine places itself one inevitably still more critical questions. If it is to have been possible, to always
push how Illig represents extremely convincingly, in particular by its papers
over building development of Sakralbauten to falsify in the center of the view
the cathedral of Aachen, 300 years into history inside it is how easy then only
possible small history around the today and now or the yesterday and with goals
for morning or purposefully to manipulate the day after tomorrow the day before
yesterday, facts and facts a little into a certain direction, until they are so
far alienated that them with what is described at the edge something to do to
only have? - I have something anyhow,
since I read the book always in vain searched, a proof that Illigs are wrong statements. For me as a layman such a proof until today
is missing. Isn't Illig right thus
nevertheless and it gave lived time between 614 and 911, so its work thesis,
but this time was later introduced, when the zeitzaehlung was used arbitrarily
of the Ottonen? Didn't it give to Karl
the large one really or it only none to traces received today in the form of
coins and other articles left, contrary to the much in former times living
Romans? Mankind would be it to be
goennen, one, besides holy spoken, mass murderer less. One cause a reading of the book, which is
unfortunately rather heavily digestible written over far passages, in any
case: It sharpens the healthy in
relation to distrust indigested and unueberprueft or for even not examinably a
taking over, which one regards as fact knowledge.
Peter
Gugerell commented: Totally or totally
ingeniously, in any case moves interesting, 8 September 1999
Rezensentin/Rezensent: One of the
however-funniest historical theories of the last time: The early Middle Ages do not have at all
really existed to separate are an invention, a purposeful historical
falsification. With that scarcely three
centuries (from 614 to 911) also Karl the large one, the karolingische art, the
wild Wikinger and much different one disappears. Which like a bad joke sounds, or like the
disease picture psychologically of a disturbing, emerges as quite serious-meant
and well argued theory. Heribert Illig
can present very much material for the supporting of its thesis, and its
conclusions are comprehensible and logical.
That is not called that they must be also correct, probably however it
seriously to be automatically taken must.
Despite the very liquid style the book is not a completely light
reading; Basic knowledge of medieval
history and history of art should the reader bring along. But the trouble is worthwhile itself, because
Illigs theory is not only confusing, but also very fascinatingly. (meanwhile also a continuation tape appeared: Heribert Illig: "who has at the clock turned".)
Book:
Bavaria
and the Phantom Era: Archaeology Disproves Documents of the Early Middle Ages
Heribert
Illig
http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3928852213
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3928852213&langpair=de|en
Oct. 2002
Reviews:
Peter
Gugerell wrote in Aug 2003: Monumentally, a future standard work -- That is a monumental, zweibaendiges
work. It requires something tenacity
when reading, but that is not critically meant:
With this book it concerns around a fact collection, a complete (!) representation
and discussion of all archaeological finds of the phantom time (614 -
912). Illig and Anwander created here a
book, which will become probable a standard work with enormous diligence and
energy. It requires previous knowledge
in the area of the phantom time, and should only after Illigs earlier books be
read - then however absolutely.
wollersbergerthomas
wrote in Oct 2002: Indeed extensively -- Finally! Mr. Illig supplies detailiert
investigated material to his phantom time thesis - the 300 years European early
Middle Ages actually never took place;
the year 614 would correspond the year to 911 after our current time
calculation. The evaluation of the
mittelaterlichen documents taken place in co-operation with Mr. Anwander is
compared in detail with the archaeological finds for the entire Bavarian
area. Here it shows up evenly that much
was present actually never and only for the purpose of most diverse interests
of power was invented. The book pleases
me because of its detailedness; at the
same time I recommend to bring along however a due portion of patience for
everyone when completing. The 2-piece
Schmoeker is to be read to some extent thickly and toughly. Who only times with the Phantomzeithese to
make familiar wants is with "who has at the clock turned" from
Heribert Illig better served.
http://www.google.com/search?q="Jean+Hardouin"/
http://www.museumofhoaxes.com/hardouin.html
- Jean Hardouin (1646-1729) was a scholar of classical literature. In 1685 he
published an edition of Pliny's Natural History. There was nothing unusual
about the edition itself, which was considered to be of merit and very well
edited. What was unusual was that despite being so knowledgeable about
classical literature, Hardouin had very strange ideas about its origins. //
According to Hardouin, the majority of classical Greek and Roman literature had
not been produced by Greek and Roman authors. Instead, it had been forged
during the Middle Ages by a group of Benedictine monks. He also argued that all
extant Greek and Roman coins were forgeries. He never revealed why such a vast
deception had occurred. He only declared, elliptically, that when he died the
reason would be found written on a piece of paper the size of his hand. The
reason, unfortunately, was never found."
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22Wilhelm+Kammeier%22
Uwe
Topper's comments about Wilhelm Kammeier's "The falsification of German
history" (Leipzig 1935/Husum 1979)
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http://www.jesus1053.com/l2-wahl/l2-autoren/l3-Uwe-Topper/kammeier.html&langpair=de|en
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22Christoph+Marx%22
The
theories of no-Jesus, no-Paul/Apostles, and no-Early Middle Ages share a
compatible spirit. Debaters of the
historicity of Jesus should at least be aware of this. Hermann Detering is staying in the loop on
this subject, and he's an important Radical Critic familiar with the no-Jesus
theory.
Debating
about dating is of central importance to the question of Jesus' historicity and
to the broader yet fully relevant question of reconstructing the actual history
of Christian origins. Therefore the
general subject of time jumping in historical dating timelines is a topic that
partly overlaps with and is relevant to the subject of Jesus' historicity --
especially when the subject of time jumping focuses specifically on the history
of Christendom.
Detering
saw this "new" time-jumping theory of Illig and crew, and pointed out
to Uwe Topper, author of the book "Time Falsification", that the
author of the important skeptical work Antiqua Mater, Edwin Johnson, proposed
the same theory back in 1894, in "The Pauline Epistles: Re-studied and
Explained".
I had been
planning for a year to discuss Edwin Johnson's book "The Pauline
Epistles" here because people have such conservative and diminutive
notions of what it means to be "radical", it's like an argument
between the liberal-conservatives and the conservative-liberals. Now with the historicity of the Apostles --
leg 2 of literalist Christianity -- being called into question lately, I
decided to ask for views about Johnson's book "The Pauline
Epistles".
When
getting the URL for the online book, I noticed Detering's little comment in
German "Anticipates theories of Heribert Illig and Uwe Topper". Searching on those names tonight revealed an
entire new burgeoning area of theorizing of which I was completely unaware,
addressing my wish to get more insight into what Johnson's "The Pauline Epistles"
was getting at.
When I
read Johnson's book carefully twice, I was still puzzled over what he was
saying. That feeling was like that of a
woman who visited the Jesus Mysteries Discussion group and was in a complete
daze over the gist of the group (discussing whether a single individual kernel
person existed, warranting the label of the Historical Jesus).
The last
time I discovered a huge hot but circumscribed area of discussion like this was
when I found popular discussion of recent books about Reformed theology.
There are
many crackpot conspiracy theories to debunk.
Many aspects of many of these crackpot theories fit together well. This discussion group is not appropriate for
sustained discussion of the general subject of time jumps, but some limited
amount of discussion is defensibly on-topic, because the period of Western
religion before the printing press was richly packed with the heritage of
Greco-Roman religion, which was likely more experiential, mystic, and
allegorical than the Christianity of the modern era.
Heribert
Illig has a new book, Who Turned the Clock Ahead? How 300 Years of History Were Invented, on
the subject of time jumping in historical dating timelines. There are some good webpages in English.
>Book:
>Bavaria
and the Phantom Era: Archaeology Disproves Documents of the Early
>Middle
Ages
>Heribert
Illig
>http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3928852213
>http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3928852213&langpair=de|en
>Oct.
2002
>Reviews:
>The
2-piece Schmoeker is to be read to some extent thickly and toughly. Who only times with the Phantomzeithese to
make familiar wants is with "who has at the clock turned" from
Heribert Illig better served.
Book
Who Turned
the Clock Ahead? How 300 Years of
History Were Invented
Heribert
Illig
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/361226561X&langpair=de|en
June 2003
>Search
Web for "Heribert Illig"
>http://www.google.com/search?q="Heribert+Illig"/
Search Web
for "Heribert Illig", pages in English only:
http://www.google.com/search?q="Heribert+Illig"&lr=lang_en
-----------
http://www.kitalaltkozepkor.hu/hi_vergessen_e.html
>>Forget
about the year 2000, we still live in 1703
>>Our
christian chronology is based on the calendar correction of pope Gregorius
XIII. In the year 1582 10 days were skipped in order to synchronize the
astronomic circumstances with the calendar. This correction did not take into
account the mistake which had accumulated in the Julian calendar since the time
of Julius Caesar (45 BC). It only corrected the mistake that accumulated since
300 A.D.
>>Specialists
claim, that Gregorius refers to the council of Nicea (325 AD). At this council
was either the calendar corrected or at least the equinox fixed to the 21st
of march. But there is no evidence for
this; all facts argue against it.
>>So
the time between pope Gergorius XIII and Julius Caesar seems to be 300 years
shorter than originally presumed. According to the thesis of Heribert Illig 297
years of fictious history have been inserted. For a fictious period of time -
according to Illig from 614 to 911 - there cannot be authentic evidences. These
centuries are also called the "Dark Ages" anyway for the historical
deliveries are as rare as the archeological findings. Today we do not find any
proof of colonization during the early Middle Ages in originally Roman cities.
The historical sources are by no means contemporary, but have been written
centuries later. Hundreds of Byzantinian towns seem to have been uninhabited
during this time. The findings in islamc spain do not begin in 711 with the
islamic conquest but not before the early 10th century - and so on.
>>If
Heribert Illig's thesis is right, there must not be a single serious finding
from that period of time. Therefore the rest of the findings dated back to this
time had to be examined in detail.
Did the
Early Middle Ages Really Exist?
Prof.
Hans-Ulrich Niemitz
http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/volatile/Niemitz-1997.pdf
Forget
about the year 2000, we still live in 1703
http://lelarge.de/wamse.html
Computer
scientist Markus Günther Kuhn writes at
http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25
>>A
group of people around Heribert Illig present the provocative hypothesis that
our historic timeline contains 300 years of phantom time (around 600 to 900
A.D.) that never happened physically. They provide interesting arguments that
these dark ages with their distinct lack of documents, graves and buildings
were made up a few hundred years later, when the modern A.D. year-numbering
scheme was introduced, and that Karl the Great (Charlemagne) is a character of
fiction.
>>Most
of the detailed argumentation is only available in German at the moment, most
notably in form of the recent books by Illig and Topper, but there is at least
one earlier English paper by Prof. Hans-Ulrich Niemitz on the same subject,
which focuses in particular on why C14 dating and dendrochronology might fail
to confirm the conventional early medieval timeline. Illig's thesis is a matter
of ongoing hot ... debate, especially in Germany and in various USENET groups.
...
>>The
entire discussion suggests that the standards for evidence in pre-1200 history
seem to be significantly weaker than what a scientifically trained outsider
might naively have expected and commonly accepted school textbook
"facts" mostly based on centuries old speculation and compromise
interpretations of often faked documents. In any case, excellent exercise
material for critical thinking.
Edwin
Johnson: The Pauline Epistles: Re-studied and explained, London
1894
http://www.radikalkritik.de/pauline_epistles.htm
http://www.radikalkritik.de/PaulEpistles.pdf
- 99 pages
Johnson
uses the questioning of the historicity of all of Paul's epistles as an example
to call into doubt the reality and existence of all of European history prior
to 1533.
The topic
of "The New Chronology" seems to focus mostly on debunking the
existence of the years 600-900 (Illig's years are 614-911). That is the mild, conservative, modest theory
of adjusting our calendars. Edwin
Johnson takes it to a radical extreme, which is why I have trouble grasping
what Johnson is saying.
To
understand Johnson, the more moderate hypothesis of repudiating the existence
of the years 600-900 is an effective stepping stone. I instantly liked doing away with 600-900;
that solves at once many cognitive dissonances I have had. Now I can be better equipped to grasp the
possible ramifications of Johnson's more sweeping reconceptualization of history.
I'm bored,
having figured out many things to my satisfaction about the real nature and
origins of religion. A deeper study and
a summary of Johnson's The Pauline Epistles may be just what I'm looking for to
provide an intellectual challenge and shake open the way for further major paradigmatic
shifts.
I hope you
read, and encourage you to read, the few online resources about the
nonexistence of the Dark Ages (the years 600-900), in order to then study the
possible ramifications of Johnson's The Pauline Epistles, which seems to be
surprising even to the would-be radicals who are putting forth the minor and
slight calendar adjustment of eliminating the years 600-900. Johnson seems to propose their "new
chronology" -- squared. The New
Chronology proponents are being surprised and humbled upon discovering that
Johnson was there first and puts their supposed radicalism to shame.
Johnson
doesn't provide an effective summary of what exactly he is proposing. I won't know until my third thorough reading
and summarization of Johnson, but it seems that he's saying -- at the extreme
-- that the entire corpus of ancient Greek, Roman, Jewish, and Christian
writings -- was written in the monasteries around 1550. Can someone please correct me on this summary
of Johnson's hypothesis?
I am not
firstly interested in proving or disproving the Illig/Topper theory that the
Dark Ages 600-900 didn't exist. My
driving motive is to find new ways for dating the authorship of Christian
scriptures and writings, and to find new instances of questioning the historicity
of figures, such as King Charlemagne.
I have
believed since at least a year ago that no history in the Bible is literally
true; it's all essentially mythic/mystic metaphor. Against the tendencies of the theorists of
time reconstruction, the Bible stories are certainly not just for the purpose
of writing invented histories in order to legitimate rulers and leaders. When one can read the language of
mythic/mystic metaphor, a coherent actual religion is reflected in the
writings.
Time
reconstruction brings Western Esotericism much closer to Christianity; rather
than an age-old strongly dominant Christianity, with suppressed resurgent
undercurrents of Western Esotericism (alchemy, astrology, and magic). Time reconstruction puts these all now on
more of the same level in terms of influence, popularity, authority,
predominance, character, and age. It
also brings them all closer together, Gnosticism with Hermeticism with
Christianity.
Instead of
the conventional history, moving from Christianity to Gnosticism, then a huge
Christian-dominated Dark Ages, then the rediscovery of Hermeticism, eliminating
the years 600-900 enables perceiving a seamless continuity of the whole grab
bag: esoteric Christianity, Gnosticism, Hermeticism, mystic astrology, high magic,
Jewish chariot/ascension mysticism, and high alchemy.
Doing away
with the years 600-900 can support my mystic reading of Christian writings on
Eucharist in the Middle Ages, a reading which recognizes the clear presence of
authentic sacred eating and drinking which actually induces the Holy Spirit --
against the entheogen scholarship error which tends to shoot itself in the foot
and diminish its own case by portraying authentic divine food as being only
present way back 2000 years ago in Jesus' inner circle and in very minor,
effectively suppressed alternative esoteric practices.
Against
the current entheogen theory, I recognize authentic spirit- inducing divine
food as being present loud and clear in more like a "mainstream"
Middle Ages culture.
When
people rail against 2000 years of strongly predominant literalist Christianity,
they too shoot themselves in the foot and end up perpetuating the received
paradigm, which is why the enemies of "Christianity", conceived
monolithically, are their own worst enemies: they end up reifying the false
history that the Church invented -- possibly invented very recently, such as
1550, according to Edwin Johnson.
Atheists
love most dearly the Dark Ages, as a club to beat "Christianity" with,
where the definition of "Christianity" is gullibly accepted as put
forward by the official literalist orthodoxy.
Maybe the
period between Julius Caesar and the Reformation was actually filled with only
esoteric Christian practice, and the placebo Eucharist has only been in use
since just before the Reformation era (1450).
Perhaps
the Eusebian history was actually written around 1450-1550, back-projecting
literalist Christianity over 1500 years, but the period between Julius Caesar
and the Reformation was at least 300 years shorter, and was filled with proto-,
esoteric, Gnostic Christianity (with a Eucharist that actually induced the Holy
Spirit), rather than with literalist Christianity with its placebo Eucharist.
Johnson
suggests that the old Augustine and Arian writings debating about freewill were
largely or entirely fabricated around 1500, and that the figures of Augustine
and Arius could be merely figureheads representing the doctrines of different
coalitions of monasteries, aligned with rulers.
I may be distorting Johnson's hypothesis to some degree.
A search
on Uwe Topper Illig in English currently returns only 1 real hit, unbelievably,
even though it's been a hot topic on the Net -- in German. If you want to read now about "Time
reconstruction" in English, you'll have to do without any mentions of
'Illig' and 'Topper', to date.
http://www.google.com/search?num=100&hl=en&lr=lang_en&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-
8&as_qdr=all&q=illig+topper+uwe&btnG=Google+Search&lr=lang_en
Fortunately,
machine translation works well enough to mostly decipher the results.
No one
claims time reconstruction is a waste of time.
It's insightful on the nature of historical theory and studies. Everyone should know about it; it's
mind-expanding. The subject opens myriad
possibilities for formulating new hypotheses about dating and authorship of
Christianity-related writings.
It's a
huge rich mess of new possibilities to sort out, like the mess one would have
to sort out after laying out all the (supposedly) "early" Christian
writings for the purpose of looking for recognition of a historical Jesus, and
then one day, to one's surprise, observing by accident that these writings lack
any awareness of the Paul figure -- as happened so recently in the 1800's.
http://www.egodeath.com/newchronology.htm
- Illig, Topper, Johnson
_________________
http://www.gernot-geise.de/html/archiv/zeit/zeitrechnung1.htm
Machine
translation with some cleanup from Michael Hoffman:
The
Christian church was created only in approximately in the 12th Century in France. It had to be portrayed as older than
comparable religions, to be taken seriously.
So it backdated the story of its emergence and of the fairy tale about
Jesus. So also the emergence of the Bible is to be understood: The Jews wrote
the Torah around the 12th Century and later.
It wasn't permitted to concern it, of course, now that the fabricated
Christian church could not show a comparable work.
Thus one
took the Jewish Torah to short hand as collecting main (it is kept in the Old
Testament will still quite good) and tinkered, thereby constructing, the Bible
together. Already one had a historiography with an impact (wimmelt, to it
someone however hardly ever took to impact of contradictions only in such a
way, because doubts about the "word of God" were punished on the
hardest) and invented the proof for the "true age" of the church.
There is actually not an earlier version of the Bible, or parts of it. Even the notoriously famous Qumran scrolls
only in first joy-overshot [?] into the time briefly after Christ dated. The
Bible and the Qumran scrolls actually originated in the Middle Ages.
An
artificially antedated history, filled up with (Christian) fantasy kings, Popes
and heroes, created for example also the justification, Spain of the Islam (the
supposed "re-conquering" of Spain, although there was no Christianity
there before.
The Middle
Ages - and also times "delivered" before it - are with the historians
(unlike the popular readership) admits to extensive and comprehensive
falsification actions, which usually served the Glory or the claim to power of
a ruler or the church. Even respectable scientists hold the opinion that hardly
an excessive quantity of evidence can be regarded as genuine or true. As
already for example Wattenbach/Duemmler/Huf in its standard works determine, he
knows that these points of the historians are on his side.
What
should be managed with a comprehensive falsification action of history? Obviously it concerned pure exercise of power
of the church, because it was predominantly the driving strength of the
falsifications. And that such an
falsification action broadly put on cannot take place completely smoothly and
error free, it actually provides numerous examples.
Documents
in large yardstick were not only falsified (by one it for example as copies of
"missing person" Original designated, it however never gave), but
also inscriptions to churches, or even gravestones. Many documents are well-known, in which names
and data were actually entered afterwards completely obviously later. I wait still for the fact that finally
someone with the Roman Reich and it clears up there carried, where it
belongs: into the waste-paper basket of
world history. Because there are
likewise many wrong statements, contradictions and wrong datings here as over
the Middle Ages.
About our
friend Tacitus we know in the meantime that it is a fictitious shape. And with it its works, on those nearly our
whole roemische (and thus European)
history constructs. The works of Tacitus
were written in the Middle Ages in the monastery Corvey. Nevertheless no one so far dares doubt the
Roman Empire. And it is completely
obvious nevertheless for a historically untrained layman that here somewhat
cannot be correct: Does one compare once
the ? roemischen? with the rulers of the?Heiligen Roman realm? The Middle Ages it is astonishing their
reigns are obviously a temporal duplication.
Wouldn't that be a topic for Uwe Topper?
Just to
remind people that time reconstruction is fully a matter of debate at this
point, here is one book that seems to be intended to disprove Illig's
elimination of the Dark Ages.
Franz
Krojer
The
precision of the precession
Illig's
medieval phantom time from astronomical view
With a
contribution by Thomas Schmidt
http://216.239.39.104/translate_c?
hl=en&u=http://www.negation.info/differenz/&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dillig%
2Btopper%26start%3D10%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26ie%3DUTF-8%26oe%3DUTF-8%
26sa%3DN
492 sides
ISBN
3-00-009853-4
26.00 euro
>>illig
precession equinoxes "300 year fake" ... site addresses Illig's claim
but points out that the movement of the stars do not point to any missing 300
years.
The phrase
'points out' is polemically charged and takes positions. 'Claims, argues, and seeks to demonstrate'
would be more neutral. To say 'points
out' is to imply that one has read the book and is in agreement with it.
>>The
site links to a "bitter" reply from Illig, but it's in german and the
link doesn't work.
It is too
early in the English-speaking world to take sides and draw even tentative
conclusions other than the lesson that our chronology, our map of how many past
centuries there were, and what happened in them, is not founded on stable
bedrock. It's too bad the books by Uwe
Topper and Heribert Illig are German-language only.
Research
page:
The New
Chronology: The Dark Ages Didn't Exist
http://www.egodeath.com/newchronology.htm
>>
In google type in "illig" and "precession" (i.e. of
equinoxes).
>>
one hit is titled "300 year fake".
This site addresses Illig's claim but points out that the movement of
the stars do not point to any missing 300 years.
>>The
site links to a "bitter" reply from Illig, but it's in german and the
link doesn't work.
>If you
want to , i can translate it. (i'm a native German speaker.)
Even a
1-paragraph summary of Illig's reply in English would be great.
New Web
page:
The New
Chronology: The Dark Ages or Middle Ages Didn't Exist
http://www.egodeath.com/newchronology.htm
Includes
books, Web pages, and searches.
Some
theorists of revisionist chronology assert that the Arabs preserved the
astrognosis writings for 300 years less than claimed by the established
chronology.
I am only
beginning to study the New Chronology theory.
http://www.egodeath.com/newchronology.htm It's almost all in German at this point -- I
am just beginning to scope it out, looking for English webpages and machine-translating
the German webpages. I'm also just
beginning to study the history of mystic astrology. I know little about the history of Roman to
Arab to Renaissance history and transmission of texts. If I knew anything more, I would write it,
insofar as it's on-topic.
I'm
learning Western Esotericism studies; I am currently making a $180 decision
whether to order the remaining issues for my Gnosis magazine collection before
they are shredded for good.
I am
extremely interested in the theory of paradigms. Paradigms are everything; everything depends
upon interpretive frameworks for organizing data and asking questions. Nevertheless, I'm not a radical relativist; I
think good sense leads the way, even though there's no formally clear basis for
"good sense".
Occam's
razor is paradigm-dependent. The
orthodox Christian assessment is that Occam's razor dictates concluding that
literalist Christianity came first, and then Gnostic Christianity came
second. Radical scholarship makes an
assessment that Occam's razor dictates concluding that Gnostic Christianity
came first, and then literalist Christianity came second.
From the
literalist Christianity paradigm, some three hypotheses are involved in the
orthodox Eusebian history, while some fifteen hypotheses are involved in the
Radical assertion of the priority of gnostic Christianity. From the point of view of the Radical
paradigm, one's model of history is far simpler and more plausible and sober if
one accepts the priority of gnostic Christianity, with literalist Christianity
as a later, deviant, degenerated form driven by power-mongering
hierarchy-builders.
Incommensurable
paradigms result in argument about which paradigm has the fewest hypotheses; in
the end, it may amount to a beauty contest, an aesthetic judgment call.
James wrote
(paraphrased):
>>The
1510 date is a lot more implausible for creating the pre-500 corpus of early
Christian writings. This is the major
problem. Thousands of papyruses were
discovered around the 1890s, which amazed everyone, since until then the NT
books were the only books written in what we now call Koine (common)
Greek. Until then, the NT language
("barbarous Greek" as Johnson calls it) was thought to be Greek badly
written by people whose first language was Aramaic, or a "special"
language invented by God to convey his Truth.
>>Now
we know that it was a real dialect, the common dialect, a simplified, pidgin
Greek used throughout the area. So if
the NT was written (forged or not) in 180, it was written in the language used
by the people, both writers and readers.
But if it was written in 1510, the forgers would have written them in
Hebrew or Latin or Greek. They didn't
even know Koine existed, much less how to write it.
>>It
is implausible, borderline impossible that a corpus was forged in Koine Greek
in 1510. How plausible would it then be
to claim that the first set of manuscripts were not only written by one guy as
fiction, but that he made up a then-unknown language, which actually existed
unbeknownst to him, but known now to us?
How could the monks have accidentally reproduced the actual Koine
grammar and vocabulary?
The theory
doesn't assert that they accidentally reproduced Koine; they may have had
examples of it. I don't currently see
this as the main or a major problem. Is
it so hard to think of how Johnson would respond? Is his theory so dependent on the Koine
issue? Why wouldn't the monasteries of
1510 have known about Koine? Also keep
in mind that Johnson removes 700 phantom years, leaving only 350 years between
the fall of
Why is it
implausible that the monks of 1510 knew about Koine and forged in Koine? Aren't many of the "known
forgeries" written in Koine?
Understanding Koine was a surprise to the scholars of 1890, but would
the monks of 1510 have been surprised?
Were all the authentically ancient writings in Koine, while the late
forgeries were all written in Greek? I
assume that all the supposedly authentically ancient writings *and* all the
forgeries were written in Koine.
I don't
follow the train of argument to be able to see a major or minor problem here
involving the monks' knowledge of Koine.
Johnson may have been mistaken in labelling Koine as barbarous Greek. He does seem to consider it significant, to
argue that the works were composed in Latin (therefore late) and then
translated into awful Greek, which scholars now hold to be decent Koine.
But I
don't see the Koine vs. awful Greek issue to be anything more than incidental,
though Johnson treats it as an important clue based on the assumption of awful
Greek. It seems like a minor peripheral
issue to me, though Johnson treats it as significant evidence. So perhaps it turns out that the corpus was
written in decent Koine rather than awful Greek: how does that make it
implausible that the corpus was written in 1510 rather than pre-500?
What is so
difficult about monks in 1510 forging in Koine?
Aren't the many monkish writings that scholars consider late forgeries
held to have been written in Koine around 1500?
Study
Version of Edwin Johnson's "The Pauline Epistles - Re-Studied and
Explained", 1894
http://www.egodeath.com/edwinjohnsonpaulineepistles.htm
Reformatted
copy for increased comprehensibility.
Proposes that the years 700-1400 didn't exist, and that Christianity,
the "early" Christian texts, Paul, the Gospels, the Church Fathers,
the Dark Ages, and the Middle Ages were literary inventions fabricated in
competing monasteries around 1500.
Takes a
little while to load:
http://hometown.aol.com/havrylak/x-symbols.doc
Visual
comparison of the 3rd century BCE Achaean League coin "Chi-Alpha"
symbol with two 4th century CE "Chi-Rho" symbols:
http://www.aug.edu/augusta/iconography/crucifixion.html
The reason
the cross was not used is because Christianity wasn't dreamed up until well
after the end of antiquity in 476. All
"early" writings are much later forgeries, back-projected by many
centuries. All evidence we have is
literary, and that is forged and back-dated.
The origins of Christianity lie in the Medieval or Renaissance era,
which happened only shortly after the fall of Rome. The center of gravity and origin of
Christianity as a canonical formal institution is the Medieval and Renaissance
era, *not* late antiquity (50 BC--476 CE).
The canon
was established around the year we call 1525, not 180. All the battle between gnostics and orthodoxy
actually occurred prior to and during the Reformation, and was falsely
back-projected into Jewish and Roman antiquity, which was then illusorily
pushed even further back into the venerable Past by inserting some number of
invented centuries.
The New
Chronology: The Dark Ages Didn't Exist -- time falsification, Edwin Johnson,
Heribert Illig, Uwe Topper, Hans-Ulrich Niemitz, Christoph Marx, Jean Hardouin,
Wilhelm Kammeier
http://www.egodeath.com/newchronology.htm
Edwin
Johnson, A Radical Advocate of Chronology Criticism -- Uwe Topper on Edwin
Johnson
http://www.egodeath.com/uwetopperonedwinjohnson.htm
Study
Version of Edwin Johnson's "The Pauline Epistles - Re-Studied and
Explained", 1894 -- Reformatted copy for increased comprehensibility by
Michael Hoffman Oct. 8, 2003. Proposes
that the years 700-1400 didn't exist, and that Christianity, the
"early" Christian texts, Paul, the Gospels, the Church Fathers, the
Dark Ages, and the Middle Ages were literary inventions fabricated in competing
monasteries around 1500.
http://www.egodeath.com/edwinjohnsonpaulineepistles.htm
It would
be an abuse of the discussion group to post a large number of hypotheses, as
enabled by the new chronology, in order to be able to claim to have published
the idea first. All these types of
"new" proposed ideas are largely fallout from Johnson's work in 1894,
and from Illig and crew.
Time
reconstruction might offer some coherent support for the Shroud problem and the
late dating of the Shroud, by suggesting a very late dating of Christianity as we
know it -- on this side of the purported Dark Ages. The New Chronology, when including Edwin
Johnson, might support this idea.
The
thrashing of Jacques de Molay (1244 - 1314) in 1314 could be, in some sense, an
original and first instance of the literal crucifixion.
http://www.google.com/search?q=Jacques+de+Molay
The shroud
of Turin shows de Molay. The history of
the shroud and the tradition of it might not really go back earlier than de
Molay; its antiquity may be an illusion back-projected through false history.
The Church
as a literalist hierarchical institution is perhaps young, perhaps 1100's. That seems to be what some proponents of time
reconstruction suggest.
The heresy
in the South of France perhaps wasn't a resurgence in long- established Christendom
of a late heresy; rather, esoteric Christianity was the only kind for
centuries, into the years after the Dark Ages, and then institutional
Christianity was invented, with a false story of its centuries-old strong
dominance, and sought to co- opt the widespread esoteric religion.
Take the
familiar idea of the struggle of the Church to co-opt Gnosticism and forcefully
pull together all religions, but move that idea into the near side of the
strange and mysterious gap called the Dark Ages.
>I,
like so many other people here, are trying to understand what you are saying
about block-universe determinism without taking entheogens.
>I'm
wondering if Terence McKenna's Time Wave Theory is a good example of your view
of the nature of time and supposed free will?
No, I
don't recall seeing any hooks in his theory for a frozen-time model of the
future, or hooks for timeless determinism as opposed to our instinctive feeling
of free will. The Time Wave Theory, from
what little I know about it, is not at all a good example of my view of the
nature of time and supposed free will.
It is
reasonable to define plausible future scenarios, or predict that mystics *will*
encounter ego death and come to respect the model of time I put forward. I am in principle against the hypothesis of
precognition. I'm against interpreting
Revelation as a magically prophecied report of the future. I can reasonably say "It's inevitable
that rational thinkers will eventually come to the conclusions I have,"
and "If things go on like this, the world will be choked in
pollution."
2012 may
very well be an explosion of novelty -- for one thing, many people will know
about frozen-time determinism, entheogens, and the mythic-only Christ by
then. 1995 was an explosion of novelty,
with the Web. The end of the world
happened then, as well, several times around the end of the millenium (I was
there and entered the Kingdom of Heaven).
I've scheduled the world to end several times during the coming
decade."
Ehman's
book Lost Christianities covers Morton Smith's suspected forgery of Secret
longer gospel of Mark. Smith's book pair
was partly dedicated mysteriously to Those Who Know. The most perfect explanation/expansion that
immediately leaps to my mind is, Those Who Know that it's *all* forgery -- the
gospels, letters, Church Father writings, everything. Smith, if gay, had a good, sensible motive to
insert the somewhat homoerotic-mystic "man with man all night"
passage, which does admittedly fit like a reconstruction of what could have
been there in some version of Mark.
Lost
Christianities is pretty good although more conservative than it should be,
skewing all ideas of Jesus and the Apostles toward the literalist mode of
reading even while he supposedly discusses allegorism; one man's
"allegorism" is another man's "literalism". So much is still taken for granted, so many
parts of Eusebius' world, even while putting forth a certain feeble
"skepticism" about the received history.
The book
seems to have nothing about intense mystic state experiencing or the gnostic
sacrament of apolytrosis (redemption); the *experiential* aspect of gnosis is
completely overlooked -- or suppressed.
Ehrman glaringly refuses and fails to engage with Freke & Gandy: can
he be so poorly read and ignorant as to be unaware of the no-Jesus theory,
which any scholar of "lost Christianities" ought to be highly
interested in? This book industry and
profession is such a scam, such posturing, so political, they only discuss
"safe" heresy aspects like docetism.
Ehrman in
his supposed coverage of the "wide varieties" of Christianity
perpetuates the strict orthodox boundaries on what ideas may be seriously engaged
and even acknowledged in passing -- the result is more fake scholarship,
claiming to acknowledge and cover more than it does. As a result, the book is positioned to sell
more copies among certain audiences, by sacrificing an honest engagement with
the full appropriate scope of the subject.
This type
of scholarship, the ubiquitous mainstream technique which I may call
"liberal conservative", is a technique of whitewashing and heading
off alternative views by claiming to cover them, but instead covering them
over.
Lost
Christianities is available as book, audio lecture course, and video lecture
course.
Lecture
course:
Lost
Christianities: Christian Scriptures and the Battles over Authentication
Bart
Ehrman
http://www.teach12.com/ttc/assets/coursedescriptions/6593.asp
"Professor
Bart D. Ehrman returns to The Teaching Company with a scholarly look at the
origins of the New Testament and Christian doctrines. Follow experts' efforts
to recover knowledge of early Christian groups who lost the struggle for converts,
and explore the early writings they embraced. This is a richly rewarding
learning opportunity for anyone interested in religion, history, or a good
mystery story."
Book:
Lost
Christianities: The Battle for Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew
Bart
Ehrman
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0195141830
Sep. 2003
Rank 1K
(very popular)
>Morton
Smith a gay forger? Holy Cow, maybe I
should read this book.
Read the
chapter in any bookstore.
"World
scholarship later came to accept the letter as genuine Clement"
If Morton
Smith realized the truth per Edwin Johnson -- that 100% of all
"ancient" Christian writings are forgeries of the late Middle Ages --
then he had as much reason as any creator of the Christian-history myth to add
his own discovered writing to the canon of such discovered writings. In that sense, like Alan Watts, Smith's
discovery was a genuine fake. The whole
"authentic versus fake" distinction collapses; it becomes a giant
joke to talk in serious tones with a straight face about "the *authentic*
writings of the apostles", like studying the *authentic* memoirs of
Cinderella and disparaging the mere "forged Cinderelline
writings". I adhere to the genuine
Cinderellines.
>Here
is a website devoted to the topic of the authenticity of Secret Mark:
>http://www1.uni-bremen.de/~wie/Secret/secmark_home.html
>I am
most interested in the statement there that the controversy was fueled by one
"Jack Neusner" who I assume is that over-productive Jacob Neusner of
Brown.
>I have
a small interest in this since at one time I was quite interested in the guru
then-known as Da Free John (see my article in FringeWare Review).
Which
issue or cover illustration?
>>Da
Free John's Dawn Horse Press paperback reprint of The Secret Gospel, with a new
introduction by Jacob Neusner.
Secret
Gospel
Morton
Smith
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0913922552
1982
>>The
uni-bremen.de website reprints Shawn Ayer's article from Alexandria journal,
which brings me in, having by that time become an contributor to that journal
(I think to that issue).
Which
piece is yours?
Alexandria
3: The Journal of Western Cosmological Traditions
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0933999542
The
Strange Case of the Secret Gospel According to Mark: How Morton Smith's
Discovery of a Lost Letter of Clement of Alexandria Scandalized Biblical
Scholarship -- Shawn Eyer
Issue 2:
Psychedelic
Effects and the Eleusinian Mysteries -- Shawn Eyer
Orphic
Hymn to Artemis -- Shawn Eyer (translator)
>I
wonder what led Jacob Neusner to change sides [from pro-authenticity to
forgery?]? Surely the whole issue is
well out of his specialty (The Talmud, which Edwin Johnson shows is a fraud
anyway).
All the
purported "ancient" writings of the religions of the book are
forgeries that generally include meaningful mystic allegory. The term 'fraud' alone is often an inadequate
descriptor, distorting the nature of the material.
Home (theory of the ego death and rebirth experience)