Words, Words, Words: A response to Richard Carrier on Feldman and Eusebius

It’s always nice when my blog posts attract attention. I learned last week that an old post of mine, from 2013, has attracted a response from a professional atheist polemicist named Richard Carrier. In a rather excitable post here on his own blog he roundly denounces my casual remarks, and indeed myself (!), and offers a new theory of his own. A correspondent drew my attention to this, and asked me to comment.

My original post was written after I happened to see an article by the excellent Josephus scholar Louis Feldman. This tentatively endorsed the fringe idea that Eusebius of Caesarea (fl. early 4th century) may have composed the so-called Testimonium Flavianum (TF), the rather odd passage in Josephus Antiquities 18 which mentions Christ.[1] This claim is not one that anybody has previously had much time for, and I didn’t see any purpose in rebutting it. Feldman was only summarising work by others, I felt.

But then I saw something interesting. The article made the claim that, if you search the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae database for a phrase towards the end of the TF, “And the tribe of Christians has not died out even to this day” (eis eti te nuneven/still to this day),[2] then it gives a bunch of hits in Eusebius’ works, and pretty much nowhere else.

I do computer searches. I’m interested in Eusebius. So I did the search for the phrase, but I got only a handful of results. Disappointed, I blogged about it, added some cautions on rushing to conclusions from these kinds of matches, and thought no more about it.

Last week I learned that, after four years, Richard Carrier has written a blog post in which he asserts rather over-enthusiastically that I simply did the search wrong – that instead I should have searched for eis eti nun; the te is just a particle, with the vague sense of “and”, and the two phrases are pretty much the same in meaning. Of course the two are indeed more or less identical in meaning.

Carrier’s search produces splendid results. It gets 94 matches.[3] Of these, 6 are later than Eusebius; one each in six authors. The other 88 are entirely in Eusebius. In other words, practically nobody in all Greek literature ever uses the phrase other than Eusebius, if we can trust this search.  It looks like the claim that Eusebius wrote the TF is proved!

But 88 out of 94 is not just a good result for the theory. It’s a fabulous result! In fact, it’s too good to be true. It’s like a Soviet election result with 99% voting for the official candidate. The number is supposed to produce confidence in the result, and does the opposite. It’s a sign that we need to sanity-check what we are doing.

Doing so produces instant discomfort. Surely “even to this day” is a trivial phrase? Are we really saying that Eusebius invented something as obvious as that? It seems unlikely. Imagine a Greek, complaining about his neighbour, as man has done since time immemorial. Would he not say, “How long has this been a problem?” “Oh it started when we landed, and it has continued even to this day.” How else would you express that idea?[4]

In fact, if we look at little further we find that the idea in rather similar words is indeed kicking around well before Eusebius, six centuries earlier, in the third century BC.   Apollonius Rhodius uses the idea in his Argonautica. He uses it to tie together past and present, in precisely the way that Eusebius does. [5]   The historian Polybius uses it, the poet Callimachus uses it. Nobody in our corpus uses it like Eusebius does; but then nobody is writing quite the kinds of works that Eusebius is.

So why didn’t these authors appear in the results, when we do the search? Because these rely on searching for versions of eiseti nun, which differs only by a word-division and means much the same thing.[6] We can omit te; we can replace it with the stronger equivalent kai; we can run eis and eti together, especially when we know that Greek manuscripts did not feature word division.  Any claim that depends on the presence of a space in the text is a pretty fragile one.

In fact there are quite a number of things we can do to twiddle the search, once we start thinking about it. Let’s just give the numbers from the TLG for a few versions of this search string, all of which mean much the same:

  • eis eti te nun – 4 hits. Josephus (1 hit), Eusebius (3 hits).
  • eiseti te nun – 7 hits. Eusebius (4), Sozomen (2), Oecumenius (1).
  • eis eti nun – 94 hits. 88 are from works of Eusebius, and the other 6 are later: Didymus the Blind (d.398) On Genesis, Procopius of Gaza (5th c.) Commentary on Isaiah, Stobaeus (6th c.), Chronicon Paschale (6th c.) and two 12th century Byzantine writers.
  • eiseti nun – 142 hits. Mostly pre-Eusebius; 7 hits in Apollonius Rhodius (3rd c. BC), Timaeus Historicus (3rd c. BC), Polybius (2nd c. BC), Philo (1st c. AD), Aelius Aristides (2nd c. AD), Lucian (2nd c.), Oppian (2nd c.), Clement of Alexandria (ca. 200), and others.  But Eusebius (63 hits) and Sozomen (41 hits) do appear.
  • eis eti kai nun – 23 hits. 2 hits from Porphyry (3rd c.) from different works. Some from Eusebius, Gregory of Nyssa, Gregory Nazianzen, and then Byzantine writers.
  • eiseti kai nun – 110 hits. Callimachus (3rd c. BC), Herennius Philo (ca. 100 AD), Lucian, the Book of Jubilees (ca. 150 BC), Eusebius (56 hits) – especially in the commentaries on Isaiah and Psalms – Eutropius, Chrysostom, Palladius, and Byzantine writers.  Also an LXX variant reading for Isaiah 9:6 (given by Eusebius).

All of these do show significant use by Eusebius. Some of these show pre-Eusebian use; others don’t.

In fact Carrier is quite well aware of the pre-Eusebian results, which he proceeds to mention briefly in a paragraph that reads as if it was tacked on afterwards.   But it’s terrible stuff. Clement of Alexandria is just a Christian, so he doesn’t count (?!).  Polybius doesn’t count because no other historical writer after him uses this phrase.  In fact Carrier has changed his argument; from “only Eusebius uses this, so it proves that Eusebius forged the TF” – a defensible argument, if wrong – to “Eusebius uses this more than anyone, so that proves that he forged the TF”.  Which, of course, it does not.  Carrier has defeated himself.[7]

Here’s the rub; the success or failure of our search comes to depend on us, on our judgement, on our ingenuity, on our knowledge of Greek.   This subjectivity was precisely why, in my first blog post, I never proceeded beyond the exact match.

There are further possible issues with this method. Only 1% of Greek literature has survived. Much of that is biased towards technical, classical or ecclesiastical writings, those that were useful to copyists in the Dark Ages. The TLG contains only a portion of that 1%. Someone who knew more about computational linguistics than I do could easily point out more problems.

The database itself is not “clean”;[8] it is comprised of texts edited by many different editors, whose choices from the manuscript tradition will reflect their preferences. One example of this may be found in searching outside the TLG for eis eti nun. The TLG gives no hits before Eusebius. But I find that the 1831 R. Klotz edition of Clement of Alexandria, Protrepicus, has three hits for it.[9] In the TLG, based on the GCS edition, eis eti is replaced by eiseti. There is no indication in the apparatus as to why. The results of each database search are therefore a reflection of editorial choices.

Stylistic analysis, whether manual or automated, can be something of a trap. It’s terribly easy to forget how little we really know about the texts before us, the language which none of us speak as a native and which changes considerably over the thousand years before us, the vagaries of editors, the influence of ammanuenses and copyists, and of the non-literary spoken language, which surrounds the literary text like a warm bath at every instant but is almost invisible to us.

To sum up, we saw that a search for the exact phrase does not confirm Carrier’s claim. A search for revised phrases which mean the same does not confirm the claim either.  Attempts to dodge this simply destroy the argument.

*   *   *   *

Now let’s go back to where we started. The argument in Feldman’s article was that the use of this phrase proved that Eusebius wrote the TF.   We don’t want any implicit assumptions here, so let’s lay the argument out explicitly.

The claim is: (1) we have no evidence that eis eti te nun (etc) was used in Greek literature before Eusebius; (2) the search proves that Eusebius uses it extensively; therefore (3) any use of the term proves that Eusebius composed that bit of text; and (4) the TF as found in the Church History of Eusebius does contain it; so (5) Eusebius composed the TF.

The second point is correct. Eusebius does use the eis eti nun phrase extensively, once or twice in every book of the Church History, and elsewhere.

But the first point is dodgy, and so is the third. We have seen that in fact we do have evidence of its use for 6 centuries before Eusebius.

But let us suppose for a moment that the TLG searches did in fact show, as Carrier contended (before he discovered otherwise), that nobody used eis eti nun before Eusebius. The argument still is flawed. For this argument is an argument from silence – that we have no evidence that anyone else … so it must have been him. Arguments from silence are not valid.

The archaeologists never tire of telling us that absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. It is the first thing that we must remember. And we’re searching only a subset of 1% of Greek literature, as we saw.  According to Carrier this means that we don’t have any evidence of use before Eusebius … very well. But even then we don’t have all the evidence. We have only a fraction of it.

In conclusion, the claim that examining the use of eis eti nun proves that Eusebius composed the TF is not correct. The claim itself seems to involve an argument from silence. And the silence itself can only be sustained by ignoring the exact matches, using a related search, and then finding reasons to ignore other related searches.

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  1. [1]There is another brief mention in Ant. 20 which also does so.
  2. [2]I have transliterated the Greek so that general readers can follow along.
  3. [3]This from a search of the TLG-E disk; I am currently unable to access the online system.
  4. [4]In fact it would be rather interesting to know how this was expressed in the classical period, as eis eti nun does not seem to be classical.
  5. [5]M.P. Cuypers, “Apollonius of Rhodes”, In: Irene J. F. De Jong, René Nünlist, Angus M. Bowie, “Narrators, Narratees, and Narratives in Ancient Greek Literature: Studies in Ancient Greek Narrative”, vol. 1. Brill, 2004, p.56 and n.24.
  6. [6]My thanks to Ken Olson for pointing this out in a comment on my original post. Dr O. is clearly no bigot, for he did so despite this information working against the interest of his theory: clearly a gentleman and a scholar.
  7. [7]Full disclosure: I wrote the majority of this post without Carrier’s post before me, so I did not remember his change of mind at this point.
  8. [8]See further M. Eder, “Mind your corpus: systematic errors in authorship attribution”, Literary and Linguistic Computing 28, 2013, 603-14.
  9. [9]Page 9 line 29, p.12  l.17, p.18 l.16. The first of these reads “καταδουλοῦται καὶ αΐκίζεται εἰς ἔτι νῦν τοιὶς άνθρώπους,”

20 thoughts on “Words, Words, Words: A response to Richard Carrier on Feldman and Eusebius

  1. “The archaeologists never tire of telling us that absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.”

    Which archaeologists are these?

  2. I suppose, ignorantly, that in the case of the archaeologists there is a silent addition to the “absence of evidence is not evidence of absence”. Something like “because it just means that you dug your trench in the wrong place, you wally”?

  3. Just one thought: I don’t know about Eusebius, but in other authors that quote older texts there is a wide variation in the extent to which they adhere to the letter. The modern practise (not to say paranoia) of sticking to the ipsissima verba and resorting e.g. to square brackets to indicate that we’re making a change in capitalization is a very recent phenomenon. Very often (and maybe unconsciously) they adopt a turn of phrase more in agreement with their own usage. If Eusebius uses eis eti te nun regularly (which he clearly does), the possibility that he may have substituted it in a passage where an equivalent expression appears should be considered. A more solid answer to the question might be based on an analysis of his actual practise from a close comparison with other texts he quotes and whose original has been preserved in a different tradition.

  4. I agree that we’d have to see what his quotation practice was. He is unusual in ancient authors in quoting by name. I think sometimes his quotes are plainly filled in by an annanuensis as they don’t fit the context. One thinks of the way quotes are adapted by catena authors.

    In a way, all this stuff is speculation on how the words before us came to be written. It’s not really very good.

  5. If the passage in Josephus did not have to do with Jesus, no one would ever have noticed anything non-Josephus about the passage. In fact, if any other passage in Josephus had to do with Jesus even as it stands, it would be considered non-Josephus merely because people cannot admit that Christ was real.
    Judging by the rest of the material he compiled, to think that he made it up is absurd even for a biased scholar.

  6. *If I read my Whealey 2007 correctly, she says (p.101) that the two oldest manuscripts containing Book 18
    of the “Antiquities” read “eis te nun” instead of “eis eti te nun”, that (p.103) at least four independent witnesses
    indicate that the Testimonium originally lacked “eti”, and that (p.105) it is far from clear that “eis eti te nun”
    was the original reading of the Testimonium, as there is also good evidence for “eis te nun”.In fact Josephus
    uses “eis nun” twice in Antiquities 18, strengthening the plausibility that the original Testimonium lacked “eti”.
    Whealey produces evidence (p.104) suggesting that many extant manuscripts of Antiquities which read
    “eis eti te nun” rather than eis te nun do so because they have been contaminated by the reading of the
    Testimony taken from Eusebius’ “Historia Ecclesiastica”.At this stage says Whealey (p.105) it appears that
    variant readings of the Testimonium that include “eti” are more typical of version that have been transmitted
    through Eusebius’ works, rather than through Josephus’ own works, while those lacking “eti” are more often
    found in the relatively few early commentators known to have used Antiquities directly.

  7. If I read my Whealey 2007 correctly, she says that the two oldest manuscripts containing Book 18
    of the Antiquities read “eis te nun” instead of “eis eti te nun”, and that at least four independent witnesses
    indicate that the Testimonium originally lacked “eti”. Whealey says that “eis nun”(“until now”) appears twice
    in Antiquities 18 (vv 266,345), and that this adds to the plausibility of the original Testimonium having lacked
    “eti”.
    *Whealey produces evidence that many extant manuscripts of Antiquities that read “eis eti te nun” rather
    than “eis te nun”, have been contaminated by the reading of the Testimony taken from the “Historia
    Ecclesiastica” of Eusebius, and says that at this stage it appears that the variant readings of the Testimonium
    that include “eti” are more typical of versions that have been transmitted through the works of Eusebius
    rather than taken direct from the works of Josephus, while those readings which lack “eti” are more often
    found in the relatively few early commentators known to have used Antiquities directly.

  8. Whealey says (2007) that the two oldest manuscripts of Antiquities containing Book 18 read “eis te nun” instead of “eis eti te nun”, and that at least four independent witnesses indicate that the Testimonium originally lacked “eti”.

  9. Whealey produces evidence suggesting that many of the extant manuscripts of “Antiquities” that read “eis eti te nun” rather than “eis te nun” have been contaminated by the reading of the Testimony taken from Eusebius’ “Historia Ecclesiastica”.At this stage it appears that Testimonium versions that include “eti” are more typical of versions transmitted through Eusebius’ works, while those lacking “eti” are more often found in those relatively few early commentators known to have used the “Antiquities” directly.

  10. Interesting – thank you. The material is on p.101 ff., I see. I had long forgotten reading that article. The two mss are A and W. The four witnesses that can’t be derived from Eusebius HE, but must derive from a copy of Josephus because they use material from Antiquities that Eusebius doesn’t use, are Isidore of Pelusium, the Excerpta de virtutibus et vitiis of Constantine Porphyrogenitus, the Greek translation of Jerome’s De viris illustribus, and Oecumenius.

    For readers who, like me, have not memorised the bibliography (!), this article is Alice Whealey, “Josephus, Eusebius of Caesarea, and the Testimonium Flavianum“, in: Josephus und das Neue Testament”, Mohr Siebeck 2007, 73-116.

  11. People actually remotely care what Richard Carrier thinks?
    Why waste your time? The man is a charlatan.

  12. The Testimonium Flavianum fascinates me and I find your knowledge and analytical ability exceptional.

    Please answer a question. Wikipedia states that there are 120 extant Greek copies of Josephus going back to the 11th century and 170 Latin copies dating to the 6th century. To my simplistic way of thinking, if Eusebius concocted the TF then all 290 of our extant copies would have to be traced back to a single copy that he doctored.

    In other words, if there were other copies of Josephus circulating then Eusebius couldn’t possibly be the TF author logistically. Does this sound right to you?

    Regards,

    Larry

  13. Ah but there are a couple of other factors to consider.

    First, 99% of all ancient literature is lost. The last copies perished at some unknown point during the dark ages, and no copies have reached us. Most of what does survive in Greek is in very late copies, often 16th century. Analysis of these texts has revealed that mostly they all derive from to a single copy, written sometime in the 9th century, when Greek book hand changed from uncials to minuscule writing.

    We have the famous study of Kroymann on the Italian manuscripts of the works of Tertullian. This showed that the 30-odd copies all went back to a single copy in Florence, written in modern humanist hand in the 15th century. He also showed that this copy was made from a German copy, written in Gothic, which was brought over the Alps and is still in Florence. He showed that not one of the later copies was made from the Gothic text – hard to read! – but each and every one from the “modern” copy. This sort of thing is probably *why* the transmission of texts often passes through a bottleneck, of a single copy. There are texts for which this is not true – some of the massively copied texts like the bible or the works of Chrysostom – but Josephus was always a rare text. I have not checked, but I would be surprised if the second half of Antiquities derives from more than one copy, itself belonging to the 8-9th century.

    Secondly, the TF is transmitted separately. Indeed it appears separately in the works of Eusebius, and many others! It also appears copied in margins of manuscripts. It was a very common text. Josephus is a rare text. So in fact we have evidence that people owning manuscripts of *other* works by Josephus, like the Jewish War, would copy the TF into them. There is a family of manuscripts of the Jewish War which contains the TF, in the body of the text; which is certainly an interpolation there.

    Eusebius could easily have composed the TF. What he could not do, tho, is be sure that anybody would ever copy it. He had no way to know that *his* copy of Josephus would be the one that would be transmitted to the future. This sort of tampering really belongs to the age of printing, where damage can be transmitted to lots of copies, not to the age of hand-copying. It did happen, but there were lots of reasons not to bother! Nor could he know that his reference to the TF would take on a life of its own.

    Eusebius was a very good collector of sources, but much less good at evaluating them. Notoriously he repeated the letters of Jesus and Abgar, which had been forged not that long before, and which came to him from his contacts in the Syriac world. It may be that he was likewise taken in here. We cannot tell. But the attempts to accuse him of forgery are almost certainly based on malice rather than anything else.

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