Daniel Peterson wrote:Wow. This is getting fairly personal. Would anybody like to inspect my journal, read my letters to my missionary son, study my contract, or tape-record my meetings with my department chairman?
My question was directed at any LDS academic who participates in LDS apologetics. You happened to be available, so I dragged the question over to a thread where you had posted in the hopes that you would reply. There was really nothing intentionally 'personal' about it, as an answer from any such person was welcome. You were also free, of course, not to respond. Thanks for your response, by the way.
Daniel Peterson wrote:Obviously, I included nothing about posting on message boards, etc. That's a private hobby.
I would have figured as much.
Daniel Peterson wrote:I did include a number of apologetic lectures and popular writings as well as my administrative responsibilities and editorial activities with what has become the Maxwell Institute under the "citizenship" category (which is the third of three categories in BYU's reporting structure, after "Teaching" and "Scholarship"). But that category also included numerous popular lectures and short writings on Islam and the Arabs, too. Substantive pieces on Mormon studies (e.g., book reviews in non-LDS scholarly journals and an article in BYU Studies on exemplar historiography that, co-written with a Sinologist colleague, drew on classical Greek, Chinese, and Islamic historical writing to make a point about Old and New Mormon History were included among my publications, but segregated from my Arabic- and Islam-related publications. As I understand it, the rank advancement committee weighted them less heavily than the Islamic material, but apparently did give them at least some weight.
Then, I would say that it is technically you are employed by the LDS Church, at least in part, for your contributions to apologetic scholarship. I don't think this is a big deal, but it is more significant than pocket change.
Daniel Peterson wrote:For the record, I view myself not solely as an Islamicist, but as an intellectual historian -- and, first and foremost, as a historian of religion and a historian of philosophical theology.
I was only interested in whether any of your apologetic efforts were included in the dossier that you presented the university to receive BYU's version of tenure. I know you engage in other, more purely scholarly work.
You have indicated that you did include your apologetic efforts in two categories of "citizenship" and "scholarship." The citizenship part is also interesting, because the inclusion of your apologetic efforts there likely indicates the degree to which the LDS Church has incorporated apologetics into its premiere academic institution. If it didn't fit, you would not put it there.
Both citizenship and scholarship are crucial to obtaining continuing status at BYU, and BYU, like many teaching institutions (those institutions whose missions aren't
primarily research oriented), often weighs citizenship and teaching more heavily than scholarship (when compared to research institutions). For this reason, the inclusion of your apologetic work in the "citizenship" category is more significant than it appears on first glance. Apologetic work is a significant part of your academic career and a substantive part of your job at BYU. You are a paid teacher, scholar, and apologist. And, I would probably weigh the roles in that order (first being most important), but that's just my guess.
Again, I don't consider this a big deal, or a cause for concern. I am simply surprised that this conclusion has been avoided for so long.
“I was hooked from the start,” Snoop Dogg said. “We talked about the purpose of life, played Mousetrap, and ate brownies. The kids thought it was off the hook, for real.”