I certainly did not jump to any conclusions. In fact I had another person on these forums get upset because I refused to draw any conclusions before even the documentary had come out.
If you had read the book, you would know that the authors do NOT claim or assert that Jesus from the text of John Chapter 19 was speaking to Mary Magdalene as you falsely say they do. They give both the traditional consensus that he was speaking to Maria and offer ONLY for consideration the one that you claim that they make as an assertion.
I said up front that I had not read the book. The documentary most certainly does make that assertion as if it were a fact.
On Edit: It just occurred to me... why are they even offering an alternative when it cannot possibly mean that? See that is the the exact kind of thing that I am talking about. If the Greek makes it sparkling clear then there is no need to offer an alternative. Are they claiming the text has been changed?
How do you KNOW that the "ossuary thus contained the bones of at least two different women". How can you KNOW what the authors' write when you haven't even read their words?
Because the writing tells us so! Did you read the article that I linked to? There are 2 different styles of script present. One semi-cursive (the second half) one not. The semi-cursive looks just like other extant semi-cursive script. Once that is realized (by scientific inquiry and examination of the script) It becomes clear that the text does not say what the people who wrote the book said it did.
You already have a conclusion that fits you and you refuse to look at other alternatives that contradict what you want to believe. Not very scientific. Newton would say, "tsk, tsk"
What are you babbling about? As I pointed out above, I made no pre conceived conclusions. In fact I really could not care either way. I am not a Christian and a Jesus who never ascended would be a boon to my point of view. I waited until the peer review process started in order to see what other experts had to say. Of course, the book writer and documentary maker completely skipped that pesky peer review part, making their work completely and wholly unscientific.
Also, if you had read the book you would know that the 1 in 600 statistic was prior to the objective conclusion that the ossuary that was inscribed "James the Brother of Jesus" was made.
I'm not sure what that non-sequitur is even supposed to mean. Did I mention something about the James box?
I somewhat share in your surprise in that there were people on here who immediately , and without any information at all "knew" it was a hoax. In particular there was one person who was quite upset and I suspect it was because he is beholden to a mythical beginning for Christianity. I , however, was not one of those people. I watched the documentary, I read articles, I listened to a few podcasts with expert guests, and I read some more articles once they became available. Then I came to a preliminary opinion. Which was basically agnosticism leaning toward it being incorrect. When the article about the mis translation of one of the scripts came to my attention (through a podcast I listen to) it led me to my current conclusion. That the whole thing was a bunch of shoddy scholarship and with a bunch of hype mixed in for good measure.
Let's get one thing clear though. What these people did was NOT science. They skipped the most important part and that is peer review. If they had bothered to go through that process they would have discovered what the expert I linked to did. That the "mariamne mara" ossuary did not say what the original archaeologists thought it said.
I won't be reading the book. There is enough information out there at this point to show pretty clearly it is a shoddy piece of garbage "scholarship". There is no need to waste time on something I have put in enough effort to know is simply bad work.