why me wrote:Blixa wrote:
You know why me, you keep throwing around references to Don Bradley's essay in The Persistence of Polygamy, but clearly you haven't read it or you wouldn't be asking incredibly banal questions like these...
I don't care what you believe, what experiences you had in the 70's in NYC, nor the thread count you prefer in your cotton. But I wish you would be a little bit more honest about things you claim to have read.
And your comments have been proof that you read have it? This is an internet board that is hostile toward Mormonism not an academic forum where academic literature can be dissected and discussed. The tone does not support such discussion on this board.
I'll leave you to use the search feature to find reference to my reading of the essay, owning the book it is published in and commentary on it. And strangely enough, Don and I were talking about this very essay on the phone just last night!
But frankly, that is neither here nor there in relation to your consistently threadbare assertions.
This is not an internet board hostile to Mormonism and devoid of academic discussion. This is a board dedicated to discussions of Mormonism with an unusually open level of moderation. Because of that, the signal-to-noise ratio can be quite high: there are posters who make absurdly ridiculous criticisms of Mormonism and posters who make equally absurd and ridiculous defenses of it.
But that is easily filtered out by anyone desiring a richer discourse. Are you unaware of the unusually high number of academics who regularly post here? People across a number of disciplines as well as those working on issues related to Religion and Mormon Studies? Apparently you've missed a great deal of Don's earlier posting (before he was in grad school), Mike Reed's discussions, Chris Smith's commentary and George Miller's threads. You seem to have no comprehension of Ms.Jack's scholarly expertise (your persistent nastiness toward her is shameful), Mr. Stak's consistently serious discussions of Philosophy and Religious Studies, nor even Aristotle Smith's command of Bible history and literature. The opportunities to learn are astonishing. While I don't currently discuss my own ongoing work in Western Americana and Mormon Studies here because I'm working on original material, when I eventually publish the book born from this research, Sethbag will get a large thank you in the acknowledgments because of information I learned from him here on Mormon Discussions.
Too bad you can't see the intellectual forest for the trees of the three witnesses...