First, DCP mentions the many amateur Mopologists, such as those who operate FAIR and SHIELDS, thus helping to establish a kind of hierarchy of Mopologists:
Daniel Peterson wrote:The overwhelming number of those who participate in apologetics receive no financial compensation whatever, so far as I know. Writers for the FARMS Review, on the other hand, receive a free copy of the book that they're reviewing (if they're reviewing a book and if they don't already own it) and a free copy of the Review in which their piece appears.
What he's describing here is pretty much standard practice in academic publishing. Next, he goes on to describe the remuneration he is given for editing the FARMS Review:
DCP wrote: For the past few years -- five or six, I think -- I have received a small token payment when an issue of the Review comes from the press. This is supposed to reward me for my editorial services, though I'm not sure, when it's apportioned by hour of effort, that it even rises to the level of the minimum wage. That's it.
This is where the question of payment for Mopologetics gets more complicated.
(emphasis added)DCP wrote: I receive no salary for apologetics. (I've never, despite your allegation, said that I receive absolutely no compensation whatever. I realize that you would love to catch me in a lie, but you haven't.) My salary is for teaching and, over the past decade or so, especially for directing and editing the Middle Eastern Texts Initiative and performing certain other administrative duties at BYU.
I wondered if these "administrative duties" had anything to do with apologetics, and so I asked.
Mister Scratch wrote:Do part of these "administrative duties" relate to apologetics?
And his reply:
(emphasis added)DCP wrote:On the whole, no. And very seldom directly. They relate to personnel issues, editorial discussions, financial questions, dealings with the Dead Sea Scrolls Foundation and the Vatican Apostolic Library, and the like. Not a penny of my salary rewards me for writing a single word of apologetics; my salary would be unchanged if I never wrote a single line of apologetic materials.
I think that these bolded portions are very important, since DCP has strenuously attempted to argue that "none---not a dime" of his salary related to apologetics. He is now saying "on the whole" that it does not. That's fair enough, of course, but is he now admitting that, in fact, it can legitimately be said that some of his salary comes from being an LDS apologist?
Not that I think him getting compensated is in any way wrong, of course! I just wish there were a bit more transparency here from the Church, and that Mopologists would simply say, "Yes, we are being paid to defend the Church."
Later, DCP went on to elaborate a bit about what his "editorial duties" entail:
DCP wrote: Strictly speaking, the small token payments have come from editorial work. Correcting punctuation, rephrasing sentences, etc., is not really apologetics; the process is the same whether I'm editing Mark Ashurst-McGee responding to Dan Vogel or a translation of Fakhr al-Din al-Razi.
Here was my reply:
Oh? Is that what it says on the paycheck---"for correcting typos and spelling errors"? I think you're trying a bit to hard to distance yourself from the real truth, which is that you get paid to do apologetics. In your capacity as editor, you also cull through the slush pile, right? Oh, wait---that's right. Unlike normal academic journals, FARMS Review doesn't really have a slush pile, as nearly all of the pieces are commissioned. In that case, I assume that part of your remuneration stems for your function as a "selector" of authors, and of peer reviewers.
Come to think of it, doesn't that finally drive the last nail in the coffin for your claim that peer review for FARMS Review is a-okay? I mean, isn't it the truth that you both commission articles, and select the peer reviewers? It seems to me that that would compromise the process significantly. Certainly, it marks a very big departure from normative peer review practices. Doesn't it?
Perhaps the most interesting tidbit that surfaced was this:
Daniel Peterson wrote:Editors of books published by the Maxwell Institute have, over the past few years, begun to receive similarly token compensation for their efforts, and contributors to anthologies have generally received a check in the $50-100 range for their contributions. Authors of FARMS books originally received no royalties (the money was plowed back into the Foundation), but, lately, we've revisited that policy in an effort to make publishing with us roughly comparable, financially speaking, with publishing elsewhere in the Mormon market.
What does this mean? As far as I can tell, DCP is stating that they are in the midst of trying to improve their finances so that they can attract more and more people into the Mopologetic fold. Amateur Mopologetics, as exemplified by the folks at FAIR, and people such as juliann, Scott Gordon, and Kerry Shirts, apparently leave something to be desired. It seems clear to me that the Maxwell Institute wants to get better apologists, and this seems to be acknowledgment that they will need more cash to do it.
So, in summary:
---LDS apologists are paid. Their payment might be rather small, but plans are in the works to change this.
---Part of DCP's salary seems to related to apologetics, contrary to his many denials on this issue. (It's worth noting that he fled the scene after this was revealed).
---It remains unclear whether apologetics is a part of the salaries of other "high-end" apologists such as Bill Hamblin and John Gee.
---On a sidenote, DCP admitted that he both commissions and selects the peer reviewers for FARMS Review, meaning that the objectivity one strives for in normal peer review is a virtual impossibility.
All in all, it is nice to lay this very old Mopologetic myth to rest. This has long been comparable, in my opinion, to the TBM faith-promoting belief that the Brethren don't---or didn't---profit from their status in the Church.