John Larsen wrote:As you well know, he was forced to rewrite it
I don't know that. I know otherwise.
You're wrong.
John Larsen wrote:after--if I recall correctly, he got caught bragging about about it.
You don't recall correctly.
And he wasn't.
John Larsen wrote:You can still see put the pieces together if you look at the rewritten review.
You can speculate. The pieces aren't all there to be "put together."
John Larsen wrote:Another way that apologists ridicule opponents is highlighting trivial errors in their writing—through the apparently malicious use of “sic,” for example,
There's nothing "malicious" about putting [sic] after a quoted error. It's the standard way of indicating that the error existed in the original quoted material.
John Larsen wrote:Finally, apologists have a penchant for describing their work with metaphors of violence: blowing away zombies;
I believe that Bill Hamblin and I are responsible for using the "zombie" image. And I can promise you that it had nothing whatsoever to do with "violence." Our joke about a hypothetical movie entitled Bill and Dan's Excellent Adventure in Anti-Mormon Zombie Hell referred to the fact that certain anti-Mormon arguments (we particularly had in mind fundamentalist Protestant anti-Mormonism) keep coming up over and over and over again no matter how little merit there is in them and no matter how often they've been refuted. The emphasis wasn't on violently "blowing them away," but, precisely, on the fact that they can't be "blown away" because those who advance them are too unaware to know that their arguments have been destroyed. Protestant scholars Paul Owen and Carl Mosser make essentially the same point, more discursively, in their well-known article "Mormon Apologetic Scholarship and Evangelical Neglect: Losing the Battle and Not Knowing It?"
John Larsen wrote:stomping out weeds
Somebody somewhere may have used such an image, but I'm not familiar with it. On the other hand, I used a metaphor once of weeding a garden. Perhaps, in order to support the theme of "violence," that had to be transmogrified a bit?
John Larsen wrote:Apologists implicitly invoke the threat of divine destruction for their enemies when they compare detractors to Book of Mormon apostates Nehor or Korihor, or to New Testament dissemblers Ananias and Sapphira, all of whom met violent ends.
Having edited/published one or two such references, and perhaps used one or two myself, I can say that their "violent ends" never played any role in my mind. (Of course, I'm probably lying. And, really, who should you believe about my internal mental states, my critics or me, a habitual liar?)
John Larsen wrote:although it’s not the same thing to savage a person’s book as it is to kill them with a machine
gun, . . . the nature of the feelings that motivate both acts is qualitatively the same.”
I think that's simply ridiculous.
Regarding John-Charles Duffy, by the way: Though we've even shared the platform at academic meetings (notably at the John Whitmer Historical Association's annual meeting, in Springfield, Illinois, a few years ago), he has gone out of his way to avoid shaking my hand or speaking to me. Which, I suppose, proves that I'm a very hostile person.
One thing I liked about his article, though: The cartoon of me as "Dannibal Lecter." My friend Dan Wotherspoon, then the editor of Sunstone, kindly sent me the original. (This will prove to Master Scartch not that I have a sense of [often self-deprecating] humor, but that I revel in viciousness and cruelty.)