To: Petronski
"Making a fetish out of discrediting it is, however, psychologically revealing." My faith in Christ is by no means contingent on the authenticity of the shroud. My doubts in the assertions of the skeptics is contingent on their inability thus far to replicate it.
31 posted on
12/14/2008 7:16:25 PM PST by
Joe 6-pack
(Que me amat, amet et canem meum)
To: Joe 6-pack
Dr. Zugibe was the Medical Examiner in my county. Heis family is very prominent in the town in which i live. His son (the one you see in this film) is now the DA. Unfortunately he’s a Dem.
32 posted on
12/14/2008 7:22:22 PM PST by
CaptRon
(Perdicaris alive or Raisuli dead)
To: Joe 6-pack
If it is a hoax it is a very strange hoax. I don't know whether it is or not. I can see why some Christians might be invested in the issue. I am less clear on why skeptics would be so interested in debating it.
My initial web research yielded a seemingly irreconcilable jumble of findings. McCrone says that microscopy proves the image is made of red ochre, not blood. (In a trial, I would not use a microscopist to provide that sort of evidence as to bodily fluids, but a serologist, or, perhaps someone with a GCMS, which ought to resolve the paint issue.) There's either evidence of bodily fluids or not.
This rebuttal would be more valuable if we knew the provenance of the enumerated claims.
If it is a hoax, its replication would be a fascinating experiment, and ought to be an easy matter with modern technology.
33 posted on
12/14/2008 7:33:14 PM PST by
SalukiLawyer
(Sitting on the oogedy-boogety branch since 1975)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson