I have been gone a bit and returned to following this thread through 14 pages. It would almost seem that it would be a total derailment of this thread to reference the OP at this point. But derail I must.
Below I have referenced a portion of Mr. Scratch's OP and a sample of Charity's response. I have only chose a couple, one each and then I have comment.
From Mr. Scratch's OP
Mister Scratch wrote:A bit later, Yme forces DCP to lay it on the line:
Yme wrote:Would you, or any other LDS scholar, be willing to put your academic credibility on the line for the acceptance of the Book of Mormon historicity with our secualr academic community merely on this argument? If not, what is your point???
Daniel Peterson wrote:I would not and do not hesitate to publicly describe the witnesses testimonies as evidence for the authenticity of the Book of Mormon. I would not hesitate to do eso in an academic gathering. Not even slightly. And, in fact, I've probably done so on a few occasions. (I'll have to think about it. I've done many academic presentations to non-LDS scholars, mostly on Islamic topics but some on Mormon topics.)
(emphasis added)
Wait a sec... He's
"probably done so"??? Or he actually has? Is it---or should it be--striking that he
cannot recall the last time he testified of his faith in front of "an academic gathering"? There is something extremely fishy and dodgy about his remarks here. What, after all, would be more damning for Mopologetics, academically speaking, then for the chief Mopologist to admit that he's embarrassed to discuss his views in a mainstream, secular academic setting? Ultimately, what we are seeing here is tantamount to an admission on DCP's part that he
fears that his beliefs may compromise his academic standing.
Charity's response on page 1
Charity wrote:1. Dr. Peterson has made so many presentations before so many groups, I am sure he couldn't remember every single one without going back to a schedule, if he had kept one. Pretty easy to criticize here. How often do you make presentations before academic groups, Mr. Scratch? Or any kind of group? And do you recall every topic of every presentation and which group you gave it to?
2. How many committees or groups have you sat on where possible topics of research were discussed? I have sat in on quite a few, during graduate school. I can tell you that in the case of psycholgoy that there are topoics whch would be career killers. A non-LDS scholar could not possibly take on the Book of Mormon. When he/she reported any confirming evidence of the Book of Mn message board.
You have got to be joking here! So every time a faithful LDS goes into a meeting with non-LDS scholars and academics, he is supposed to bear his testimony? Where is your vaunted separation of faith and science? This has got to be one of the most astounding demands by critics I have seen on any anti-Mormon, then suddenly the angels, visions, etc. are in play.
I have to agree with Charity to the point that her arguments seems very logical. But if it is so logical and simple, why couldn't a smart educated man like Dr. Peterson come with something as logical and simple? What I found most disturbing was that this smart educated man couldn't even remember if he did something that would have been so "out of the ordinary" or as Charity put it, something that would be considered a joke or laughable in that setting. It would seem that if he ever did something similar to "bearing his testimony" or something that different in an academic setting that he would at least remember it.
Bottom line, the thing that I find most disturbing about this whole thread (when it was about Dr. Peterson) is all of his himing, heming and hawing rather than a straight answer. To me the hesitation by Dr. Peterson and the simplistic though logical answers by Charity show that this is an embarrassment to them and thus threatens their creditability.
Just my $.22 = my pair of dimes and my $.02 opinion
Edited to try to "unsuccessfully" mess with the quote function, I succeed in being unsuccessful.