I listened to Carrier's entire lecture found at the
link a few posts above (as well as some of his other lectures). I'm not that impressed that his specific arguments for the "
euhemerization" of Jesus would be very convincing for audiences other than atheists. In the linked vid above he says he's addressing atheists, and the composition of the audience almost certainly has an effect on how one presents a lecture. In addition, Carrier did not specifically mention by name a well-known competing concept, which is
apotheosis. IMHO, Carrier ought to have carefully compared his proposal of
euhemerization to the concept of
apotheosis in order to make his argument convincing to any degree, and in the lecture he did not. Moreover, Carrier was asked a particularly pertinent question derived from the epistles of Paul, and his answer was not adequate at all, but you'd have to know the epistle in question and some Greek. Most people don't know that much about either. In my case, growing up a non-theist and despite not knowing anything about religion, then having an unsought "Jesus visitation" at a certain point in life which was quite confusing at the time, there seems to be a lot more to this question of the historicity of Jesus than the arguments that Carrier raises would show.