I can see that I am dealing with non-professionals on this forum and so, allow me to educate you guys and gals of the internet. It is not about documenting every fact or detail. It is about getting the message across to the general public.
Ah yes, here's the message:
"We're just going to make a bunch of assertions that reputable archaeologists would find ludicrous, and you can take our word for the fact that these archaeologists are just a bunch of incompetents".
No, no need to document assertions that flatly contradict the findings of the experts in the field. None at all.
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.
why me wrote:I can see that I am dealing with non-professionals on this forum and so, allow me to educate you guys and gals of the internet. It is not about documenting every fact or detail. It is about getting the message across to the general public. And FAIR did a good job. As they pointed out in the video the lighthouse ministries gave a one-sided presentation during their attack on the Book of Mormon. It was not meant for Einsteins either.
When a person is making a video, the question that needs to be asked is: Who is the audience? And such was the case for FAIR. The videos are 6 minute soundbites for the general audience.
When the people are identified as "scholars" on the video, we have every right to expect that there is some actual scholarship behind their claims. Not "I'm just thinking out loud" and making unsupported statements ("we don't know what this means, so I can make up my only baseless theory"). I don't care what the lighthouse ministries did - it has no bearing on whether this propaganda has any validity.
No not really. When one sees scholar next to someone's name, it does lend creditiblity. However, when audience is taken into account and intent, I think that the FAIR videos were right on target. It was not meant for the scientific community nor for the community of scholars. The videos were meant for average people to counter lighthouse ministries.
The videos were basically made to counter the lighthouse ministry videos who also used 'scholars' for their videos. It was tit for tat in this case.
John Larsen wrote:You have to remember who the intended audience is. These guns are aimed squarely at home.
John
And at lighthouse ministries. Members come arcoss the lighthouse ministry video and are led astray by their one-sided propaganda. FAIR has made these video to counter their claim and to turn the tables on them, ie, the Bible by demonstrating that the Bible and the Book of Mormon are based on faith and not necessarily facts.
I can see that I am dealing with non-professionals on this forum and so, allow me to educate you guys and gals of the internet. It is not about documenting every fact or detail. It is about getting the message across to the general public.
Ah yes, here's the message:
"We're just going to make a bunch of assertions that reputable archaeologists would find ludicrous, and you can take our word for the fact that these archaeologists are just a bunch of incompetents".
No, no need to document assertions that flatly contradict the findings of the experts in the field. None at all.
Please be fair about FAIR and take your criticism also to lighthouse ministries about their own videos. FAIR did a good job. They admited the faith angle. In the end, the Book of Mormon will not be proven true by evidence and neither will the Bible. It is all based on faith and that is what FAIR attempted to demonstrate, rather successfully.
Last edited by Guest on Sat Jan 12, 2008 9:11 am, edited 1 time in total.