18 points
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The crucifixion and “rebirth” of Jesus. I’m not religious, but I’d be curious what actually happened.

It’s probably one of the most influential events in modern human history and while the truth of it is probably very boring, I’d still like to know.

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0 points

Question was about historical events…

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6 points

It is a historical event. Jesus was a real person, and there are a lot of sources - outside the bible - about him as a person and his crucifixion.

That’s my entire point. I’d like to know the truth behind the religion. I find it absolutely fascinating how historical events get warped over time to become a religion that billions of people still believe in today.

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7 points

Sadly there are not a lot of extra-biblical sources on Jesus and his life actually.

There is one, a single one. And it’s pretty bad. Josephus. He basically mentions “James, the brother of Jesus they call Christ”, in the middle of a text not about Jesus at all.

And that’s it.

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1 point

I guess then you’d see more if you could witness Paul’s … event. But then again there’s probably no single historical event that explains Christianity. Maybe the 2nd council?

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12 points

Sure as fuck not the fuck-ton of them that have gone on in the last 8 years.

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12 points
2 points
4 points
2 points

I would need a drone with me, capture the moment and then post it in the Fediverse…

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1 point

@chairman While looking up what ancient fauna I’d be eaten by while distracted with a fpv headset I found another event I wish I could have seen.
https://pubs.aip.org/physicstoday/article/55/5/19/1016361/Recent-Nearby-Supernovae-May-Have-Left-Their-Marks

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1 point
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I thought I was the only one fascinated by the Bonneville flood. What a scene that must’ve been.

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11 points
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The astroid impact that wiped out the dinosaurs. Would be cool to see a world ending event as the sky lights on fire, oceans evaporate, and a super tsunami.

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10 points

I have a few since I’m a historian:

The revolutions of 1848 Europe, particularly Berlin or Paris. The atmosphere in that year was confusing, conflicting, and explosive. People wanted generally better lives, and put their own on the line to see it happen in numbers that shock us today.

The fall of the T’ang dynasty and the early Song dynasty. I’d love to see if the Naito Hypothesis holds up as a viewer of that time and space.

The Atlantic Revolutions between 1770s to 1800. So American, Haitian, French, etc. The birth of nationhood (in Europe), a new consciousness found its footing, and what it meant to have liberty, to be human, and to be unfree were changing.

And Japan in the 1930’s. How fascism developed in the country. It’s a question that’s big in Japanese history, and not so clear today.

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3 points

I’m going to guess you’ve already listened to the Revolutions podcast?

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1 point

you’d witness a lot of gore 😬

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