- Feb 24, 2002
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This could have massive implications. Imagine all the new literature. And what if they find a text that contradicts or disproves the Bible? Crazy discovery!
I hope this isn't a repost. I know it's been on P&N, but I haven't seen it on ATOT.
EDIT: If this kind of stuff interests you, I found some more interesting links being discussed on Slashdot. Here is Apocrypha on Wikipedia and here is the Lost Gospel of Thomas. Pretty interesting stuff in there.
This could have massive implications. Imagine all the new literature. And what if they find a text that contradicts or disproves the Bible? Crazy discovery!
For more than a century, it has caused excitement and frustration in equal measure - a collection of Greek and Roman writings so vast it could redraw the map of classical civilisation. If only it was legible.
Now, in a breakthrough described as the classical equivalent of finding the holy grail, Oxford University scientists have employed infra-red technology to open up the hoard, known as the Oxyrhynchus Papyri, and with it the prospect that hundreds of lost Greek comedies, tragedies and epic poems will soon be revealed.
In the past four days alone, Oxford's classicists have used it to make a series of astonishing discoveries, including writing by Sophocles, Euripides, Hesiod and other literary giants of the ancient world, lost for millennia. They even believe they are likely to find lost Christian gospels, the originals of which were written around the time of the earliest books of the New Testament.
I hope this isn't a repost. I know it's been on P&N, but I haven't seen it on ATOT.
EDIT: If this kind of stuff interests you, I found some more interesting links being discussed on Slashdot. Here is Apocrypha on Wikipedia and here is the Lost Gospel of Thomas. Pretty interesting stuff in there.