guy sajer wrote:I cannot help but wonder how many of your colleagues had an open mind about, say, "An Insider's View . . . ?"
One way of trying to determine that would be to read their reviews carefully, to see if they handle the data in a responsible way. I think they do.
My own serious engagement with the Palmer book -- I read the whole thing, but only meticulously examined this one portion -- concentrated on his attempt to link the Moroni story with E. T. A. Hoffmann's
Der goldne Topf, which, in my judgment, was demonstrably ridiculous and is wholly without merit.
guy sajer wrote:I also wonder how many 'anti-Mormon' books FARMS has reviewed favorably.
The answer to that question would not be enough, in and of itself, to demonstrate that FARMS reviewers have been unfair or fatally biased in their responses. The only way of demonstrating such unfairness or crippling bias on their part would be -- dare I say it? -- by
actually examining their reviews on a case by case basis, evaluating their use of evidence and inspecting their logic. If their logic is sound and their evidence reasonably representative and well-used, there remains no substantial ground on which to dismiss their responses as representing mere prejudice.
guy sajer wrote:I also wonder many books written by FARMS and other in the apologetic community reach conclusions reasonably perceived as damaging to Mormonism's truth claims?
Once again, the answer to that question would not be enough, in and of itself, simplistically, to demonstrate that FARMS writers have been unfair or fatally biased in what they've written. The only way of demonstrating such unfairness or crippling bias on their part would be -- I'm going to say it again -- by
actually examining these works on a case by case basis, evaluating their use of evidence and inspecting their logic. If their logic is sound and their evidence reasonably representative and well-used, there remains no substantial ground on which to dismiss their writing as representing mere prejudice.
guy sajer wrote:I suspect, but am willing to be shown to be wrong, that your (I think largely truthful) principle is one of convenience that you use to strike at critics but which you sheath when you're among your colleagues.
I don't know any way I could possibly allay your suspicions. So far as I'm aware, our editorial conference room is not bugged, and no tapes of our conversations exist.
guy sajer wrote:I would further argue that much apologetic work is in fact 'pseudo-scholarship' in the sense that one can predict well ahead of almost any effort the types of conclusions likely to be reached.
The same can be said, of course, of neo-Darwinist responses to intelligent design theorists, of intelligent design critiques of neo-Darwinism, of monetarist responses to Keynesians, of Keynesian responses to monetarists, of Edward Said's critiques of Bernard Lewis, of Lewis's critiques of Said, and so on and so forth.
guy sajer wrote:As a general rule, I don't consider scholarship to consist of starting with the conclusion and working backward, while stuffing and fitting all the evidence into a pre-determined box.
Then you will have to reject a very great deal of scholarship that, in fact, consists
precisely of defending paradigms and views against criticism. (And, as Thomas Kuhn showed many years ago, this is also common in the history of
science.)
You seem, incidentally, to be laboring under the illusion that the conclusion reached by most if not all FARMS (or, more properly, Maxwell Institute) publications is simply "The Book of Mormon is true!" But this is not at all the case, as I point out in my Editor's Introduction to
FARMS Review 18/2 (2006), entitled "The Witchcraft Paradigm: On Claims to 'Second Sight' by People Who Say It Doesn't Exist":
http://farms.BYU.edu/publications/revie ... m=2&id=621