Rollo Tomasi wrote:That might seem reasonable if Quinn had not been invited to present, but he was on the program and only removed after BYU's antics.
Excellent point, Rollo. DCP is being quite slippery about this.
Rollo Tomasi wrote:That might seem reasonable if Quinn had not been invited to present, but he was on the program and only removed after BYU's antics.
Daniel Peterson wrote:As I've already said, Mike Quinn was not included on the program because his participation on the program was deemed essential by nobody and potentially negative by some. His social-historical approach did not seem a "must-include," and some thought that the price of including him was too high. It was a matter of cost-benefit analysis.
Daniel Peterson wrote:If you want to spin that into a sinister and intellectually contemptible thing, your spin will say at least as much about you as about the Yale conference.
DCP wrote:That a man who has been trained in the period in question
DCP wrote:Or that my paper on Mormonism and social Trinitarianism was an amateur historian's approach to events in Carbon County, Utah, in 1915?
DCP wrote:As I've pointed out, neither Tom Alexander nor Jim Allen nor Davis Bitton nor Dean Jessee nor Richard Bennett nor most of the other Mormon historians who have "written volumes on the subject of Mormon history" participated on the conference program. None of them even attended, so far as I recall.
DCP wrote:Incidentally, I spent this morning at the opening sessions of the international conference on pre-Socratic philosophy being held this week at BYU. I saw a number of members of the Society for Mormon Philosophy and Theology there, and several who were at Yale, but, apart from myself, I saw not a single member of the Mormon History Association.
Trevor wrote:I don't need to "patronize" you, Trevor. These continual attempts to minimize the seminal achievement of Blake Ostler in Mormon philosophical theology simply leave those who make them looking ignorant and absurd.
DCP wrote:If you're clueless about what's going on in a field, it's wisest to withhold public comment on it.
cksalmon wrote:It bears some vague resemblance to an academic conference, I'm sure.
Trevor wrote:Excellent point, Rollo. DCP is being quite slippery about this.
Trevor wrote:A cost-benefit analysis that would not have been undertaken had your associates not initiated it based on their dubious fears about Quinn. Don't try to pass it off as a process that occurred primarily because he was a bad fit. That doesn't work, and you know it.
cksalmon wrote:DCP wrote:That a man who has been trained in the period in question
Well, hell, Daniel, he's a lot closer than your training in Medieval Islam, or does that escape you?
cksalmon wrote:Daniel, you spend most of your time here minimizing things.
cksalmon wrote:Maybe you should take your own advice, like when you commented, in print, about Greek and Latin historiography in the FARMS Review.DCP wrote:If you're clueless about what's going on in a field, it's wisest to withhold public comment on it.
Jennifer Lane Assistant Professor, Religion, Brigham Young University--Hawaii;
M.A., Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Brigham Young University;
Ph.D., Religion, Claremont Graduate University.
Research interests include late medieval passion piety and pilgrimage, biblical and early Christian notions of covenant and redemption, and soteriology generally. Recent presentations include, "Divinity and Agency: An Approach to Latter-day Saint Christology," at Yale Divinity School (2003), and "Come, Follow Me": The Imitation of Christ in the Later Middle Ages" at the 2004 Sperry Symposium
guy sajer wrote:I imagine, however, that you all must have had some idea of what Quinn might have said, otherwise why the evident fear of giving him a platform?
guy sajer wrote:Wouldn't it have been sufficient to merely make it plain to him that he stay on topic, as opposed to outright blackballing him?
Daniel Peterson wrote:..... I've been saying forever, it seems, that Mike Quinn's participation in the conference worried some at what is now the Maxwell Institute, that they were worried because of his problematic relationship with the Church, that they objected strongly to his participation .....
alex71va@yahoo.com wrote:What problematic relationship? The fact that he was excommunicated from the church? Or something else?
alex71va@yahoo.com wrote:My point is that in the court of global academic opinion that this smells bad for the Maxwell Institute's reputation as an academic organization.
alex71va@yahoo.com wrote:The only reputable defense for objecting to Quinn would've been on some sort of academic grounds
alex71va@yahoo.com wrote:Considering Quinn's credentials it's a hard case to make in defending the actions of Reynolds and the now-called-Maxwell-Institute.
alex71va@yahoo.com wrote:They successfully kept Quinn from presenting any paper/lecture at this forum. But at what cost?
alex71va@yahoo.com wrote:Plenty more scrutiny in their involvement in organizing/sponsoring any future symposiums of this nature at non-LDS-controlled academic institutions.
Daniel Peterson wrote:Incidentally, I have a degree in classics.
Daniel Peterson wrote:You'll see that specialiazation in nineteenth century Mormon history or even nineteenth century Mormonism generally was not a requirement for participation on the program.
Daniel Peterson wrote:I appreciate it. I've repeated them so often and yet with such dismal results that I was beginning to despair that anybody here would ever understand them.