charity wrote:I have said here or on another thread, I do not claim to represent the Church, BYU, FAIR, or anyone else but myself. I can read and evaluate information.
That's super, charity, and if I had actually made such a claim, I would be relieved to hear it. What I said was that you claim to represent the LDS position! If you believe you are actually representing the evangelical, Community of Christ, skeptic, or atheist position, we need to have a chat.
charity wrote:What I read of the Cowdry/Davis/Vannick book, they are sloppy researchers and under the best of interpretations, gullible historians. They don't look at inconsistencies, and they don't even try to reconsile conflicting accounts. Some of the conflicting accounts aren't mentioned. Which doesn't say much for their research. From what I have read of their work, it looks as though they are as rabid as Hurlburt. He wanted so badly to discredit the Book of Mormon he was driven even to fabricating evidence. I don't say that they fabricate anything. But it looks like they parked their discriminating abilities in the garage when they went to work.
Well, charity, pardon me if I am completely unimpressed with the results of your skimming. You admit that you were skimming, and then accuse them of being sloppy. Did you really come to this conclusion yourself, by skimming the book, or should I go look at Roper's review to see whether or not you are parroting his conclusions?
As for your contention that they are as rabid as Hurlbut-- this is utterly laughable. Obviously you didn't read very closely, or you have a very difficult time judging the tone of the authors' prose. Are they very committed to their position? Are they criticial of the traditional LDS defenses against the Spalding theory? Are they even obsessive? I would say yes to all of the above, but I don't see their book as libelous or dripping with hatred.
Finally, sloppy is different from being biased, selective, etc. They may be guilty of the latter, but they are trying to build their case, not yours, and theirs involved painstaking research to locate new evidence, which succeeded in providing a real basis for arguing Rigdon's early presence in Pittsburgh and the existence of a second Spalding manuscript. These are real achievements. So, even if they have stretched too far in their conclusions, and even if they are wrong about Spalding and the Book of Mormon, they have done some valuable research, which all Mormon historians should be grateful for.
charity wrote:
Uncle Dale has reasons behind his position. He has word print studies, which I think are overdrawn, but they are real. And he isn't just trying to grasp at straws to bolster his position. I respect Uncle Dale.
Guess who wrote the introduction to the C/D/V book? Uncle Dale doesn't agree with all of their conclusions, but he respects what these guys achieved. I would say that even a Mormon apologist ought to be able to muster that. You guys seem often to be incapable of respecting what is of value in a book that draws conclusions unfavorable to your faith position. This is, of course, because you are not interested in real inquiry so much as protecting what you believe.
I don't have a problem with this, except when you start in on other researchers for being "sloppy," even though your methdological blind spots are so huge you could drive a truck through them.
charity wrote:I think many of us LDS apologists draw a line between "critics" and "anti-Mormons." A person can question doctrine, history, people, and not be trying to tear them down and destroy them. That is the difference. There can be dialogue between people on different sides of an issue. There really can't be dialogue between yourself and someone trying to kill you, literally or figuratively.
And there is yet another category that is consistently elided by you and other apologists--the non-believing scholar. Uncle Dale, I believe, has earned that description in spades. I have watched him on FAIR and MA&D for years. He is a non-believer who is pursuing a hypothesis through careful research. He deserves neither the name anti-Mormon nor even critic. He wishes you well in your belief. He simply disagrees with your historical vision of the birth of Mormonism. You and others are so locked in your persecution mode that any scholar who disagrees with the Mormon party line must at the very least be a 'critic,' which is, in Mormon-speak, a loaded and denigrating term. One can be a non-believing scholar who simply reaches different conclusions with the evidence.