Trevor wrote:And perhaps especially Metcalfe, as he is in the process of writing a book about this mess.
Oh yeah, I'd forgotten about that. Poor Gee must be sweating bullets over the day when that finally hits the shelves!
Trevor wrote:And perhaps especially Metcalfe, as he is in the process of writing a book about this mess.
Those who wish to work with the originals will have to find ways to distance themselves from those efforts and the individuals involved in them
Whatever short-term tactical gains for anti-Mormonism these Egyptologists may have made, the net result is a long-term loss for a serious Egyptological examination of the material.
If you decide you want to enter the debate, you ought to do some real homework.
About one-third think that there is or was no connection between the Book of Abraham and any papyrus fragments.
Perhaps I'm giving guilty of giving Gee the benefit of the doubt, but I figured he was quoting this in an ironic way.
moksha wrote:I think Dr. Gee's position, that the smoking papyri has been lost on the grassy knoll, is rather ingenious. This lost scroll can hold all the proof and all that other stuff therefore needs no defending. Besides which, only .03% of the members disagree with this analysis.
moksha wrote:I am pretty certain that no one ever claimed, in a conference talk, that the truthfulness of the Church hinged on the Book of Abraham.
CaliforniaKid wrote:If only Gee had taken his own advice before publishing his essay on the missing papyrus, he'd have saved us all a lot of trouble!
Mister Scratch wrote:All in all, I found this piece by Gee to be an exercise in futility. He failed to deal with any of the more pertinent issues, and ultimately, the article functions primarily in the arena of rhetoric (rather than Egyptological scholarship). He is sitting here warning people that they had better back off, or else! The whole article seems like a long winded variation on that old childhood thread: "You better be nice, or I'm taking my ball home!"
Mister Scratch wrote:LifeOnaPlate wrote:You cite this quote:If you decide you want to enter the debate, you ought to do some real homework. There is a large bibliography, and there are dozens of theories to master, not to mention a large body of evidence. Many mistakes would not have been made had Egyptologists only known the literature better.
I think the quote should go without saying, although it often doesn't.
The trouble is, this is often used to try and discredit bonafide experts, such as Brent Metcalfe. (Hence my mention of juliann, who also used this argument when her interpretation of Bromley's cult/apostasy book was challenged.)
LifeOnaPlate wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:LifeOnaPlate wrote:You cite this quote:If you decide you want to enter the debate, you ought to do some real homework. There is a large bibliography, and there are dozens of theories to master, not to mention a large body of evidence. Many mistakes would not have been made had Egyptologists only known the literature better.
I think the quote should go without saying, although it often doesn't.
The trouble is, this is often used to try and discredit bonafide experts, such as Brent Metcalfe. (Hence my mention of juliann, who also used this argument when her interpretation of Bromley's cult/apostasy book was challenged.)
Ah. I see. I do believe, still, the quote is very good advice.