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patrick457
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The thing about Thiede’s claim that the Magdalen Papyri (Papyrus 64-67) containing text from the gospel of Matthew is that he claims that the style of handwriting - or to be more accurate, the forms of certain letters - is similar to that found in a few other Greek manuscripts which date from the 1st century BC or AD, such as a scroll of the Minor Prophets from a site called Nahal Hever in the Judaean Desert. But the thing is, if you actually compare both, even an untrained layman could see that … well, that is not the case.
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Papyrus 64
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Nahal Hever Scroll
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The counter-argument against Thiede’s argument really boils down to: Papyrus 64-67’s handwriting is more consistent with that you see in 2nd-3rd century manuscripts than it is with 1st century ones. Therefore, the conventional date assigned to the fragments (late 2nd-3rd century) is correct and Thiede is wrong.
(The flaw in Thiede’s reasoning is basically that he claims to see similarities between individual letters instead of the handwriting style as a whole, choosing to focus only on a few select letters while ignoring the other letters, not to mention he focused too much on similarities between letters (or what he thinks are similarities - which are usually too specific to even count) and ignored their differences.)
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Papyrus 64
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Nahal Hever Scroll
(Please Note: This uploaded content is no longer available.)
The counter-argument against Thiede’s argument really boils down to: Papyrus 64-67’s handwriting is more consistent with that you see in 2nd-3rd century manuscripts than it is with 1st century ones. Therefore, the conventional date assigned to the fragments (late 2nd-3rd century) is correct and Thiede is wrong.
(The flaw in Thiede’s reasoning is basically that he claims to see similarities between individual letters instead of the handwriting style as a whole, choosing to focus only on a few select letters while ignoring the other letters, not to mention he focused too much on similarities between letters (or what he thinks are similarities - which are usually too specific to even count) and ignored their differences.)
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