Canucklehead wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote:Of course, the reason I pointed out that he's a fellow at Stanford who draws on probably considerably more than a hundred peer reviewed academic studies -- I haven't actually counted them -- to support his points was to deflect any charge, by somebody who hasn't even seen the book, that it's merely "dogmatic slop."
It is, as I say, heavily documented, and the breadth of his reading was, to me at least, quite impressive.
Academics can be dogmatic. They can produce well-documented dogmatic work. It's still dogma.
But you haven't even seen the book.
Speaking of . . . um, dogmatism.
Canucklehead wrote:The fact that he allowed his title to suggest that I somehow love my children less because I don't belong to his political camp disgusts me.
I don't suppose that you're familiar with words like average, tendency, and the like?
Canucklehead wrote:I won't be reading a worthless book.
You won't be reading a worthwhile book, either. You won't be reading the book at all.
You haven't even seen it.
This is really pretty funny.
For the record, though, I think the book was very well documented and extensively researched, and that his case will not be overturned by people who haven't seen it calling the book "disgusting," "worthless," and "dogmatic slop."
Those who fear that their ox will be gored by the book will simply stick to their preconceptions, refusing to read it and preening themselves on their resistance to "dogmatism."
It would be hard, even in satirical fiction, to improve on this.