On 3/27/2012 3:14 PM, JTEM wrote:
> Weland<
gi...@poetic.com> wrote:
>
>>> The ossuary was real, as was part of the inscription.
>
>> LOL! Good ol' JTEM! You never fail to disappoint!
>
> Great. You're demented. The ossaury was real as far as anyone knows.
> Nobody is disputing it. What was always under dispute was the part of
> the inscription that was only added later.
Yep, that's our JTARD, never on topic. And uh, that isn't true either.
At various early stages the whole inscription was accepted, and the
whole inscription rejected.
>
>> You're babbling about things that have nothing to do with the
>> issue Giwer raised and asked me about.
>
> No, you stupid jackass, YOU raised the ossaury yourself, and I was
> responding to what YOU said.
No, JTARD, we were talking about the trial and Giwer wanted to know why
I think the whole was politically motivated.
>
> Here, you fucking idiot, I quote you:
>
> : Golan had a world renowned expert examine an ossuary he : had owned
> for some time, the inscription was deciphered, : an announcement
> made, the IAA declared it a fake sight unseen.
Which is only part of what I said and out of context.
>
> There. What you said is untrue.
No it isn't. Golan owned an ossuary, he had Lemaire examine it, Lemaire
did, an announcement released of this find. IAA declared it fake before
any tests had been done.
Nobody claimed that the
> ossaury was a forgery, but EVERYBODY noted the problems.
Not true. In fact, the first tests on the ossuary were not performed on
the inscription but on the box itself determining that it was genuine.
By the way, this bandwagon fallacy will get you nowhere. In fact, not
only 9 years ago when the controversy first came up as well as through
the trial, not EVERYBODY noted the problems, since the defense in part
argued for the authenticity of the objects and presented expert opinion
that indeed they were genuine.
> The very first stories I read on the subjected noted that it would
> have been quite unusual for a "Brother of..." to appear on an ossaury
Yep, unusual but not entirely unknown.
> in the first place, and the fact that it is completely unprovenanced
> automatically rings alarm bells. The final nail on the coffin was
> always the fact that the "significant" part of the text was added
> later, and this was always clear.
SO clear that even experts like Lemaire and Frank Cross were fooled (the
former argued and still argues for authenticity, the latter thought the
inscription likely a forgery but utterly rejected the notion of "2
parts" based on a flawed conclusion by a self-proclaimed expert who
hadn't even seen the box.
>
> So shut your idiotic pie whole, shit head.
Aw, JTARD, such language. Momma not calling you anymore? Poor baby.
>
>>> There was never a time when even the "Biblical scholars" who
>>> pretended that it was real didn't find great issues with the
>>> inscription. It wasn't carved (scratched, more like it) all at
>>> once. Part of it was added later. And, yes, this alone is nearly
>>> impossible to explain if it were real.
>>
>> Actually that isn't true.
>
> No, dip shit, it's true.
No, shit eating dumb ass, it isn't. There were a number of scholars
early on who rejected the whole "2 parts" nonsense, most of whom argued
for forgery, some argued for authenticity. But there were sufficient
numbers of scholars who didn't find great issues to enliven debate in
2002 at the Society for Biblical Literature conference (a huge
conference in the field). So claiming that Biblical scholars always had
problems with it just doesn't fit the evidence.
>
>> It was the contention of the prosecution that there were two parts
>> to the inscription, they failed to make their case.
>
> No, it was the contention of everybody.
Ok, let's play. Show me the defense arguing that there two parts to the
inscription.
>
> Go on, cite some "Experts" who say that's not the case.
Frank Moore Cross, Ada Yardeni, Andre Lemaire, Joseph Fitzmeyer to name
four who went on record publicly.
>
>>>> The pomegranate had been known for 20 years and was never
>>>> thought to be a forgery until the IAA started to accuse Golan.
>>
>>> Wrong again.
>>
>> Nope.
>
> Yup.
Nope. Anyone can easily look up the history of the ivory pomegranate,
sold in 1979, bought the museum in Jerusalem in 1988, on display as an
object connected with Solomon's temple until 2004 when its authenticity
was questioned.
> Many experts even automatically reject any ivory artifact,
Name one.
and
> there have been so many forgeries over the years.
And fakers who pretend they know what they're talking about.
>
> This particular item dates to the wrong time,
A redating occuring in 2004, now dated to the 13th century BCE rather
than the 10th century BCE.
and appears to be a
> household item, something used in an upscale home for spinning
> cloth.
Maybe. Maybe not. That was the suggestion of one archaeologist, but
not everyone agrees.
>
>> The Ivory Pomegranate was sold to a French collector in 1979 and
>> purchased by the museum in Jerusalem in 1988.
>
> So it's existence begins in 1979.
No, 13th century BCE.
That's one of the points. It is
> completely unprovenanced. This alone makes it archaeologically
> worthless and automatically suspect. Well, to non-morons....
Archaeologically, but not historically.
>> It was considered authentic until after the IAA began
>> investigating Golan
>
> This doesn't mean what you think it means.
It's a simple recounting of the sequence of events.
>
> It was considered "Authentic" for two reasons: The object appeared
> to be truly ancient, and the writing seemed to have a patina
> consistent with the rest of it. It is interesting to note that
> neither of these addresses the actual question of authenticity.
It was also considered authentic on paleographic and linguistic grounds.
>
> New inscriptions are placed on old objects, and patinas are easily
> duplicated in the lab.
Not in the 70s.
This is why you need a well provenanced item.
> "A" patina is a great deal easier to accomplish than matching the
> patina on items found in the same place of the same age...
>
>> when it was reexamined and declared a forgery,
>
> Again, there was never a time when there weren't more doubters WITHIN
> THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL COMMUNITY than there were believers.
When did you poll them? ANd where did you publish the results? Yes,
it's true that there were doubters, but that doesn't change a whit of
what I said.
Sure, amongst
> the lay people and the "biblical" scholars it might have been
> popular, but it was always challenged.
By whom? Point to someone challenging the authenticity between 1979 and
1999.
>
>> and reexamined again and declared genuine.
>
> Again, this is meaningless. It is a genuine antiquity. That's all
> they were noting -- real ancient item whose patina seems to be
> consistent. BUT IT'S THE WRONG AGE! We know for a fact it can't be an
> artifact from any Solomon's temple, and not just because there was
> never a Solomon. We also know that, even if there had been a Solomon,
> this is too old.
Which has nothing to do with the brief history I gave. I'm not claiming
it was from Solomon's Temple, merely reporting that it was thought to
have been. And that is true no matter how much you stamp your wee feet
and insist it's false.
>
>>> It was always known to be a forgery.
>>
>> Strike 3. No, it was considered genuine until
>
> Only idiots and the uniformed thought it was genuine.
Ah, you mean idiots and uninformed like the Jerusalem museum curators
who hired Avigad, and the IAA, and Andre Lemaire among others. Got it.
That's what I like about you JTARD: anyone who disagrees with your
opinion is always an idiot, uninformed, something or other.....never
back down no matter how many times you've been proven wrong.
Of the none
> idiots, nobody thought an unprovenanced item belonging to the period
> of an imaginary king was real.
>
> Nobody.
Except those already mentioned. In fact, some even thought it adorned
the high priest's staff. Oh, they musta had a good laugh at how they
were fooling everybody about an object they knew wasn't real 30 years ago!
> And I hate to keep pointing it out, but it is not real.
Well, it is real. The question is whether object and inscription are
genuine. They are. The object was wrongly dated. The latest
examination of the inscription indicates that it too is genuine.