HansMustermann
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2009
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This does not mean that Jesus did not exist, but that, due to his characteristics, he is not a "historical" character.
Keep in mind that the same criteria you use to affirm that Jesus of Galilee did not exist would disqualify the existence of a certain Thales of Miletus. However, no one doubts that such a philosopher existed. Where is the difference?
We can however have a sneaking suspicion that some stuff attributed to Thales may be mis-attribution in all that time.
Probably the easiest is the fight that supposedly stopped because of the eclipse that Thales predicted. It's self-contradictory even in Herodotus, since elsewhere he has one of the combatant kings there being dead for 10 years at that point.
Actually even easier is his calculation of the year length. Egypt's civil calender is AT LEAST 2000 years older than Thales -- but may go all the way back to the predynastic era --- and already had the duration of the year at 365 days. Because, you know, for an agricultural civilizations it was kinda important to know that kinda stuff. Thales, who is reported to have spent time in Egypt, yeah, gets credited with something that he totally didn't invent.
The angles of an isosceles triangle, same story. More than 2000 years before Thales was even born, the Egyptians already knew that if you have a right angle with length x for one side, and y for the other (as would happen if you take a perpendicular through an isosceles triangle), it's the same angle. It was in fact how they measured angles. They didn't measure angles in degrees, but used what we nowadays would call the tangent of that angle: the ratio of the two perpendicular lines. They called it the sekhed, and they KNEW it's always the same angle if it has the same sekhed. They built the pyramids with that. E.g., the great pyramid has a sekhed of 9/10 for the sides.
Thales's accurate predictions of weather for a whole year, with what year would be great for olives and whatnot, yeah, probably didn't happen either. Because never mind the meteorological models, but he wouldn't even have the data from all over the place to put in such models.
Etc.
So again we have a historical guy called Thales which may or may not have actually done anything that our Thales is credited with. I.e., the Thales we get from the ancient authors may well be a very different person from the Thales who actually lived in the 6'th century BCE.