ashimation
Member
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2005
- Messages
- 88
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- 2006
Hi everyone.
For my project I am looking at Mary Magdalene and the differing perspectives surrounding her..
Anyway this may sound like a really obvious question but:
what exactly is a source?
Is there a criteria for which distinguishes a source from something that is not a source.
With my project specifically I have one historian (Margaret Starbird) and not a whole lot of other historians -- I know they are out there but all I can seem to find are religious groups preaching about how the bible is correct but without much evidence (and obviously they are not historians).
So for a source, you cannot use, say a book written by a historian, right? I mean its not a source is it? It's THEIR interpretation of a source/evidence. A source is the bible, or inscriptions or paintings, or writings etc. Am I correct? Or can historians interpretations be used (I know you can reference them, but then you are not really DOING your own analysis, are you?).
The problem I'm having with the sources is that there are literally HUNDREDS of potential sources, some of which are only marginally relevant.
My project is due on 26th May and I really haven't made a decent start.
I guess I'm just looking for help in defining sources and how I should go about locating these and deciding what is relevant (which is what my brain is for I know).
Please shove me in the right direction! Thanks in advance.
For my project I am looking at Mary Magdalene and the differing perspectives surrounding her..
Anyway this may sound like a really obvious question but:
what exactly is a source?
Is there a criteria for which distinguishes a source from something that is not a source.
With my project specifically I have one historian (Margaret Starbird) and not a whole lot of other historians -- I know they are out there but all I can seem to find are religious groups preaching about how the bible is correct but without much evidence (and obviously they are not historians).
So for a source, you cannot use, say a book written by a historian, right? I mean its not a source is it? It's THEIR interpretation of a source/evidence. A source is the bible, or inscriptions or paintings, or writings etc. Am I correct? Or can historians interpretations be used (I know you can reference them, but then you are not really DOING your own analysis, are you?).
The problem I'm having with the sources is that there are literally HUNDREDS of potential sources, some of which are only marginally relevant.
My project is due on 26th May and I really haven't made a decent start.
I guess I'm just looking for help in defining sources and how I should go about locating these and deciding what is relevant (which is what my brain is for I know).
Please shove me in the right direction! Thanks in advance.