Mister Scratch wrote:
Sure. Would you please supply text from the Prince book in which it's asserted that the BYU spy ring was "student-instigated"?
I'd say the story starts in detail at page 175; Wilkinson claims it was started by a student; student cracks under pressure and names a BYU administrator involved in the ring; three people, including my grandfather, appointed to ferret out the truth. I can't tell where the truth really lies today, but it appears students were the soldiers and in on its formation, the instigators. But, again, it doesn't matter. Admin was involved and they were to blame.
Actually, it does, since you have claimed repeatedly that this was "instigated" entirely by the students. This is important, since this claim is clearly meant to absolve the Church of any wrongdoing. But is it true? Please provide text from the Prince book, Bob.
I mentioned it once in passing and then again only as you brought it up. I know it as history because my family was involved and I have heard the story many times. I have interviewed professors involved. (They tell a different story than Prince.) But, the mention of student involvement has nothing to do with offering to absolve anybody of anything. The truth is that once the Church figured out what was going on it brought down the hammer. So please stop making an argument I have never made, and if you think I have argued that student instigation implies that somebody or something should be absolved, I retract any such argument.
He also had good reason to lie. Tell me, Bob---how well does his account square with others'?
Umm, as I have indicated, I think he did lie. But you can't study history to determine the truth without studying the words of the person most intimately involved. At least I read the books I cite, rather than do as you do, cite sources you don't have.
How do you know it did not receive any kind of editorial or peer review, Bob? Or are you just guessing? Quinn's list of "thank yous" is mighty indeed, and it seems clear that significant portions of these texts were reviewed by Leonard Arrington, Jan Shipps, Dan Vogel, and others.
I think this proves a point I have made several times. You are not an academic and do not know a thing about academic publications by this very comment of yours. Not that I think that one has to be an academic to say something intelligent, but when it comes to the concept of understanding and explaining what it means to be peer reviewed, you are out of your league. And, yes, his books were not peer reviewed. It has been an oft-repeated criticism of his work that there was insufficient editorial control. (I have never said or implied that he didn't have an editor.) by the way, regarding FARMS Review, I was delighted so see that FARMS does indeed, contrary to your oft-repeated screed, publish alternative points of view. There's a great EV article in 17/1 criticizing DCP's analysis of Psalm 82. I found the article quite educational and fascinating, and agreed with parts.