Daniel Peterson wrote:What can I say? I'm crushed.
The illustrious Guy Sajer, Arabist and polymath, has carefully evaluated my work on medieval Islamic philosophy, sifted through my efforts in Qur’anic studies, and subjected my writings on the biography of Muhammad to rigorous analysis -- I wonder if his verdict takes into account the article on early legends about Muhammad's pre-existence, of which I sent out the final draft on Friday? -- and he has found it wanting.
Just to clarify, for the illustrious Guy Sajer: I never said that presenting at the AAR/SBL represents the acme of academic life. Neither, however, is it the kind of thing that, say, any random boy from Brazil can participate in after simply walking in off the street. I offered it as an easily accessible illustration of the fact that John Gee is an active scholar whose work is not summarily rejected by his giggling peers. John is perhaps one of the most actively-presenting scholars that I know, in North America, Europe, and the Middle East. (I'm guessing that he offers papers at about eight conferences annually.) And his work is published. But then, the illustrious Guy Sajer undoubtedly monitors all of that, and already knows it.
Jesus Horatio Christ, Dan, you have such a flair for distorting and obfuscating what people say. Show me one thing I've ever said that suggests that I think I am an expert in medieval Islamic philosophy. I am, however, speaking to a topic that I know intimately, and that is how academics in general works.
I say to you, if you are the expert you claim to be, show us your peer-reviewed publications that demonstrate this fact. Anyone can be an expert in his own mind, but the best test of expertise is whether your peers concur, and in academics, peer reviewed publications is the principal method by which peers acknowledge one's expertise.
I have no doubt that Gee is an active scholar, I've concede as much. I'm simply saying that presentating at academic conferences means squat, and I am calling you out on this so as to blunt your transparent appeal to authority and let people know its real significant, lest they be tempted to rely on your obviously misrepresentative (and curiously ignorant) word. Whether Gee received his degree from Yale, is absolutely, totally irrelevant as to the quality of his apologetic arguments. Trying to prove Mormonism true is the religious equivalent of alchemy; no one, not even someone with a Ph.D. from Yale can transform base metals into gold, nor for that matter, transform horse s*** into fillet mignon.