Minimalist wrote:seeker wrote:Why would they want to marry their animals?
If we allow for planning and say that they were taking their time transferring them there then again we can say anyone put them there.
Why is it so important that Essenes put them there, Ish?
I said above that they "could have", Ish (you're being dense again) but it seems decidedly silly for them to do so.
Please don't call me 'dense', Min. There is no need to be insulting just because we disagree. I'm not Arch.
You may say that 'they could have" - but you have another scenario in mind that is equally plausible, except you are pushing that idea as if it is more plausible - and it isn't.
Minimalist wrote:
Why would someone sitting in Ein Gedi suddenly decide that Titus was going to wear out horses coming to attack them? It is not a major military target whereas Jerusalem was the seat of the rebellion. Surely, you can't be equating the two in military terms?
Who said anything about a military attack? There are many reasons for burying documents. The ones that were buried at Nag Hammadi were done so after Bishop Athanasius condemned the uncritical use of non-canonical books in his Festal Letter of 367 AD, for instance. But that's just one instance ... there are many others.
Is it because you are stuck on the fort? But the fort is not as old as some of the documents that were found in caves, some 1000 meters from the fort. Someone could have thought to themselves:
"I know. I'll bury these scrolls in those caves, those really remote ones that we used to like to go and meditate in because they are so remote. No-one ever goes there, and so the scrolls will never be found there. On top of that, being near the Dead Sea, the enviroment will be very salty, and salt is a great preservative. So that's the ideal place."
But then a few decades after they'd buried them,
"Oh drat. They've just built a fort there!".
The Copper Scroll tells us that there are scrolls buried all over Israel. The Nag Hammadi location also seems to have been chosen for its remoteness and there was no fort there.
The fort could well be a red herring.
Minimalist wrote:
We have reason to believe that there would have been something resembling a library in Herod's temple.
Hmmm, "we have reason to believe..". Sounds like it's not definite then. Whereas we know the Essenes definitely had many sacred books because Josephus tells us so.
Minimalist wrote:
Davies does a whole chapter on the uses of literacy in ancient societies. Try to put yourself in the role of the custodian of that library. You could sit on your ass and do nothing...allowing them to be destroyed when the Romans take the city or, you could look to evacuate them and you would be of a sufficient rank to organize such an expedition. Either possibility is plausible. A librarian might feel that his responsibility to the books was such that he had to risk the wrath of the zealots by moving them to safety. He might just as well think that it would be considered defeatist or treasonous to move them to safety and would be in fear of his life if the zealots found out. The only real facts we have are that these are texts, the latest of which date to the early first century AD, which are Jewish and which someone successfully hid in the caves of Qumran. That's all we know. Everything else is conjecture.
Of course that is plausible. But so are many other scenarios. We know the Essenes had a library too, and thus probably an equally conscientious librarian - and they lived a lot nearer to the caves at Qumran.
Minimalist wrote:
The only real facts we have are that these are texts, the latest of which date to the early first century AD, which are Jewish and which someone successfully hid in the caves of Qumran. That's all we know. Everything else is conjecture.
Exactly, and that's my only point. Anyone could have buried these scrolls and that 'anyone' includes the Essenes.
By the way, you said earlier that if the Essenes had brought the scrolls by ox-cart along the 20 miles of unmade-up roads, it would have taken about five days. Min, you have obviously never travelled in an ox-cart. I have, along unmade up roads in southern India, and I can tell you that 20 miles along unmade-up roads by ox-cart takes considerably less than a day.
Minimalist wrote:
If we actually had any evidence that the Qumran collection belonged to the Essenes it would be different. But all we have is de Vaux's scenario which Magen and Peleg have trashed.
We have much more than de Vaux's scenario which you keep racing back to, but which no-one here is referring to. You have also yet to show here how Magen and Peleg have trashed anything. They say nothing spiritual could have gone on there, because whoever lived also made pots? Please...