Gadianton wrote:Tell me this Charity and Ray, psychology is a real established science, right? (Charity is one, that's why I picked it) Is there a discipline within psychology that you'd consider very scholarly, yet that no institution on the planet offers a formal course offering in relation to? No possibility of a masters or phd? I find it incredible that not even the Lord's university offers formal coursework in Book of Mormon and Book of Abraham studies. Why wouldn't they? Every other professional institution on the planet has an established way to archive and pass down the knowledge to the next generation. Is BYU scared that if it ever granted a phd for evidences of the historical reality of the Book of Abraham or Book of Mormon that it would be really, really laughed at? Who knows. "The Maxwell Institute is, then, a hobby horse and vanity press and its contributions are mere apologetics, not scholarship.
When I was at university one thing I learned (if nothing else) is that "opinion" was often more important than facts. Everyone, without exception, has some bias. The professors in the more "exact" sciences always considered psychology a "pseudo-science". I have an LDS friend doing a degree in psychology, and even she says it's a "dodgy subject" with lots of open ends. I, however, am not familiar with psychology, nor the related subjects which are more "reality based", if you like. My studies were in history (mainly Australian and European, including Nazism), and also philosophy as a minor, which is as controversial as psychology.
I'm afraid I don't know much about BYU courses, but from Runtu's post it seems they offer courses in things like narrative and literary style, with the historical focus being more on Old and New Testaments. The Book of Mormon itself does not claim to focus mainly on history, and Nephi states this in the beginning, so I don't see how there can be in-depth courses on Book of Mormon history. Even Books like Mark D. Thomas' Digging in Cumorah: Reclaiming Book of Mormon Narratives don't go into history, but narrative, obviously, because it's short on history, which is also why FARMS has a battle on its hands. Internal evidences can only point to possible history, they cannot establish it.
Gadianton wrote:Let me begin by pointing out that Ray is open to a lot of fringe ideas, UFOs, OBE's
I'm not the only one into "fringe ideas":
Scott C. Dunn discusses the historical significance of "automatic writing" and raises questions about the manner in which one set of such writings might be more or less acceptable than another.
http://www.signaturebooks.com/reviews/apocrypha.htm
I have quite strong reasons for taking UFOs and NDEs seriously (OBEs are a subset of NDE studies), and so did Dr. Susan Blackmore, who is a now retired skeptic. http://www.susanblackmore.co.uk/
The theory of memes is no less controversial than NDE studies, and less grounded, and less popular, than UFO studies. Blackmore took "fringe ideas" quite seriously, and her Ph. D is in, guess what?:
PhD in Parapsychology, University of Surrey, 1980
Thesis entitled "Extrasensory Perception as a Cognitive Process"