Talk:Shroud of Turin
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The face of Jesus is European
editNone of this WP:FORUM stuff belongs on this page |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
so now that the face of Jesus is reconstructed as European, Greek Like, what will pseudo scientists say about him being middle eastern 2600:1004:B0A7:A529:0:27:7522:E201 (talk) 22:47, 22 August 2024 (UTC)
According to Google, one of these ladies is Italian (European), and one is Palestinian (Asian). Can you tell at a glance which is which? [1] .. [2] Wdford (talk) 20:11, 25 October 2024 (UTC) Firstly, the typing of the blood on the Shroud has been questioned, and it is highly uncertain if it can even be typed accurately. [3] Second, AB blood is found all over the world. According to Wikipedia, it is highest in North Korea, followed by Japan, Bangladesh and Uzbekistan. Israel is also on the upper end, equal with Finland and Poland but behind India and many other nations. This "evidence", assuming it even exists, means nothing. [[4]] Third, the original pollen would have been washed away by the many attempts in medieval times to wash away the image itself. Modern studies of the pollen have found pollens from everywhere, including North America. This has long since been discarded as "evidence" of anything. Wdford (talk) 13:02, 26 October 2024 (UTC)
Is any part of this thread related to improving the article Shroud of Turin? --Hob Gadling (talk) 08:21, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
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UNBALANCED
editThe following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
The description here, although very commendably full of information, is very unbalanced; it's fine - and important - to set out the negatives with solemn intent, but the positives should be given the same level of seriousness and consideration. For example, McCrone is quoted as if his studies were proved, when that's simply not true - if anything, he has been discredited in this respect, as well as in the Vinyards Map studies he did. Again, it's fine to quote what he did, but equal prominence - or even more prominent provision - should be made for the STURP studies which showed (with almost complete agreement) that paint was NOT how the image was created. Many other examples in this piece continue in that vein, which is a shame, because there has been serious work done here to present the issue, the trouble is, the writers should keep their prejudices and beliefs out of it, and simply present the true facts, both positive as well as negative. To do otherwise is to do disservice to Wikipedia as well as the subject.
I could revert the edit again, but I don't see any sense in an edit war, I simply appeal to common sense and good judgement to ask the editors of this piece to think again. Perhaps it was oversight rather than prejudice. I hope so. Matthew.hartington (talk) 13:31, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
- It's a myth, propagated by enthusiasts of "sindonology", that McCrone's work on the Shroud of Turin has been debunked. In fact, for that work be was awarded the American Chemical Society's National Award in Analytical Chemistry in 2000, long after the various critiques of his work by members of STURP (which are, incidentally, mentioned and cited in this article) had been published and discussed. You can see a writeup for that award here (go to the sixth page in the PDF). McCrone is really the only expert on the scientific authentication of ancient artifacts who's been allowed to examine the Shroud in any detail. Note also that in 2021 the authorities of Yale's Beinecke Library, which owns the Vinland Map, declared that that map was a fake, for essentially the same reasons that McCrone had given in 1973: see here. - Eb.hoop2 (talk) 14:34, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks for your concern.
- It sounds like you lack an awareness of how unreasonable the opposition has been around here (Check the archives for this talk page, for example).
- The Shroud of Turin article has recently been the subject of a hostile take-over that labeled all scientific research as 'fringe'.
- If it is not properly maintained, aggressive subversives, who care nothing about a balanced, factual presentation of the data, will start filling the talk page with mockery, uploading warped images that make the body image look elongated, and will continue to defiantly dismiss and defame all scientifically-researched and academically-published data.
- And so, if you have citations you can back-up your information with, then please feel free to continue restoring and improving the article. :)
- As far as McCrone goes, there is such a thing as high-profile researchers who get paid off, especially when evaluating something as significant and controversial as the Shroud of Turin (not that there aren't also those who might skew the evidence pro-Shroud).
- I agree with your statement: "The writers should keep their prejudices and beliefs out of it, and simply present the true facts, both positive as well as negative. To do otherwise is to do disservice to Wikipedia as well as the subject." 2600:8801:CA00:DDD0:5471:5B2B:EE96:24F5 (talk) 22:23, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
- Ah, conspiracy theories plus baseless accusations of corruption. Nice. This helps readers see that the Shroud-is-real crowd is just like all the other pseudoscience subcultures, using the same excuses when the evidence does not go their way. Thank you. --Hob Gadling (talk) 08:24, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
- "the Shroud-is-real crowd is just like all the other pseudoscience subcultures" I thought they were more ridiculous than the average subculture. Dimadick (talk) 11:17, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
- Your sarcastic mockery just proved my point! :)
- I was explaining what just recently happened on here.
- There was an entire thread about the elongated photo, but the problem was corrected. Also, it is an undeniable fact that this article recently had nearly all Shroud research categorized as 'fringe theories'. All of this was documented and can be fact-checked in recent archives and past edits of the article.
- Besides, you guys have been around here for awhile, and so you know that what I'm saying is true.
- Don't you believe that lying and belittling is wrong? 2600:8801:CA00:DDD0:31A9:59FB:5C37:39C2 (talk) 22:10, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
- Nobody knows WP:THETRUTH, so, no, endorsing mainstream science is not lying, even if techically mainstream science could be wrong.
- Also, Wikipedia is built upon mainstream WP:RS, apologetics gets knee-jerk rejected. So, yeah, some sources are considered WP:FRINGE because those are apologetics, and apologetics has a bad name, a very bad name. And some claims about the Shroud (I won't repeat which) are outright heretical. So, yup, Shroudies, by seeking to validate the Shroud, actually give the lie to Christianity. At a certain point, the Pope will ask them to take it easy. tgeorgescu (talk) 00:20, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
- I agree that there does exist some questionable pro-Shroud theories, but not all Shroud proponents believe all pro-Shroud opinions. I myself set out to disprove the Shroud and found the better pro-Shroud research to be quite interesting. Not all skeptics, for example, believe that man has never been to the moon. And within an individual subject, such as the Shroud of Turin, there exists a whole spectrum of views.
- I agree that people professing Christianity are doing a disservice by being naïve. Jesus, who taught a lot about faith, also said not to believe everything, especially when people are making religious claims. The New Testament also teaches to test, or evaluate, all things, retaining only what is proven trustworthy.
- But what I was specifically talking about was what people had done to this specific article and talk page in recent months, not rejecting apologetic claims, but rejecting academically-published, scientifically-evaluated research (By the way, Christian apologetics should be completely honest and accurate).
- Again, to be clear, I'm talking about professional scientific research academically published. Not the fringe stuff. There's a big difference. Do you acknowledge that there's a difference?
- What people seemed to be lying about is acting as if there wasn't recently a complete take-over of this article by skeptics. Do you deny that this was a fact? And if so, is that not lying? What else can one call it? Rhetorical manipulation? It's still lying. 2600:8801:CA00:DDD0:31A9:59FB:5C37:39C2 (talk) 00:32, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
- Wikipedia is biased for mainstream sources. You can't change that, trying is futile. And yup, there have been some papers published by Shroudies in bona fide journals, but those papers actually make very modest claims, and fail to show evidence that the Shroud is Ancient. So, yes, they have published some good papers, but those papers fail to show that the Shroudies are right. So, no, saying that the Shroud is Ancient is not epistemically responsbile. As K.R. Popper would say, the Shroudies are exclusively about ad hoc reasoning, in order to dodge falsification of their theory. The tests which were approved by the Catholic Church showed that the Shroud is not Ancient, and there is not much real scientific research since then. Just papers filled with guessiology, and an otherwise untested dating method. And dating unprovenanced fibers. tgeorgescu (talk) 01:05, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
- Thank you for acknowledging that there have been some good papers on the Shroud.
- Polarization on any subject is wearisome! 2600:8801:CA00:DDD0:E005:3DEF:E6E:A2EC (talk) 17:41, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
- Wikipedia is biased for mainstream sources. You can't change that, trying is futile. And yup, there have been some papers published by Shroudies in bona fide journals, but those papers actually make very modest claims, and fail to show evidence that the Shroud is Ancient. So, yes, they have published some good papers, but those papers fail to show that the Shroudies are right. So, no, saying that the Shroud is Ancient is not epistemically responsbile. As K.R. Popper would say, the Shroudies are exclusively about ad hoc reasoning, in order to dodge falsification of their theory. The tests which were approved by the Catholic Church showed that the Shroud is not Ancient, and there is not much real scientific research since then. Just papers filled with guessiology, and an otherwise untested dating method. And dating unprovenanced fibers. tgeorgescu (talk) 01:05, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
Your sarcastic mockery just proved my point! :)
Yes, I know. If you are a pseudoscience believer, everything that can happen proves your point. --Hob Gadling (talk) 09:23, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
- Ah, conspiracy theories plus baseless accusations of corruption. Nice. This helps readers see that the Shroud-is-real crowd is just like all the other pseudoscience subcultures, using the same excuses when the evidence does not go their way. Thank you. --Hob Gadling (talk) 08:24, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
Socially irresponsible comments really need to stop. They're also against Wikipedia policy.
What I said has absolutely nothing to do with pseudoscience. Perhaps you misunderstood.
You were jokingly saying I was resorting to conspiracy theorizing and baseless accusations, for merely pointing out what was already obvious to everyone who has been around here for awhile, that there had recently been a serious imbalance to this article (documented in past revisions), as well as mockery on this talk page.
By mocking, you actually helped proved my point. That's all I was saying.
Maybe calling the then-prevailing bias a take-over sounded a bit much, but in effect that was what it was. I didn't claim it was some kind of clandestine conspiracy. I've tended to see it as more of a social phenomenon.
Love and peace! :)
- Read WP:FALSEBALANCE. Really. Read it. I will stop feeding you now. --Hob Gadling (talk) 22:15, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
- You're still being rude by saying, 'I'll stop feeding you now.'
- Shouldn't I respond if I'm being challenged?
- False balance is about fringe theories, not scientifically-researched, academically-published papers. There's a difference. The article doesn't need to say that the Shroud is proven true or false, but simply to present the various professional studies and counter-studies.
- I'm not trying to make you look foolish nor to win an argument for argument's sake, so let's just both admit to some misunderstanding of each other's communication and call it quits.
- Fair enough? 2600:8801:CA00:DDD0:98A0:1BD8:4ED4:AB94 (talk) 19:41, 9 November 2024 (UTC)