Since the Nephite polity was Judeo-Christian, that means that the Judeo-Christian ideology would have spread throughout Mesoamerica.
That's a serious stretch loaded with assumptions.
Since the Nephite polity was Judeo-Christian, that means that the Judeo-Christian ideology would have spread throughout Mesoamerica.
That's a serious stretch loaded with assumptions.
This contradicts the assertions of MAD folks whom I think of as the “know nuttin’s”, who assert that due to the fact that the Spaniards destroyed the vast amount of Maya literature, that we “can’t really know” anything about ancient Mesoamerica with any degree of certainty. Other than the fact that this ignores the fact that the written word is not necessarily the most reliable transmitter of reliable historical information, and that “dirt information” provides quite a bit of information to those who know how to read it, it also ignores what experts like Coe say: we do know quite a bit about ancient Mesoamerica.
You say this because you are ignorant of Mesoamerican history.
Other than the fact that this ignores the fact that the written word is not necessarily the most reliable transmitter of reliable historical information, and that “dirt information” provides quite a bit of information to those who know how to read it, it also ignores what experts like Coe say: we do know quite a bit about ancient Mesoamerica.
Archaeologists have always stressed the much vaster importance of written documents over mere artifacts from ancient civilizations for understanding their beliefs, fears, hopes, prayers, etc.
Finally, the “revisionists,” for all their insistence on the Bible as literature, have a curiously simplistic sense of literary theory, particularly in their notions of literary production. For them, the Hebrew Bible must be either reliable history (which it is clearly not), or blatant propaganda. They see no middle ground. They do not appreciate the fact that all literature in effect is fundamentally “propaganda”, that is, self-conscious expression of a worldview, usually in the advocacy of a cause. That the Hebrew Bible is in that sense “propaganda” is not in dispute among responsible scholars; the only question is whether or not such propaganda reflects anything of the real world of the time. And it inevitably does, otherwise it would not have been credible for those to whom it was originally addressed. Propaganda characteristically and deliberately exaggerates and distorts; but it does not freely invent. Even a caricature is an accurate, recognizable portrait in some respects, or otherwise it would have no impact. The task of the real historian is to get at the “history behind the history” in the Hebrew Bible, as we shall attempt in the following. The inability of the revisionists to separate fact from fiction in the ancient texts at their disposal, biblical or other, as discriminating commentators must do, is one of their more conspicuous failures.
If the postprocessualists have set us back again upon the right rack in studying the past – assaying to write history based on archaeological data- we must confront once again questions raised earlier. What kind of history do we want? How do artifacts constitute data, and are such data primary or secondary? Here we may take a clue from the postprocessualists themselves. One of their persistent themes is “reading” the artifacts, not unlike reading texts. In fact, artifacts are texts, and similarly informative when skillfully and sympathetically interpreted. (Won’t that be news to the revisionists?)
We might begin to move beyond this impasse by developing a tentative outline of a “grammar” of texts, based on what I would argue are parallels between artifacts and texts. Here, in chart form, is what we must know in order to “read” or interpret texts and artifacts, both as “objects” in themselves and as “signs”.
(Note - due to format problem, I'm altering the chart format)
Texts compared to Artifacts:
Text – writing system Artifact – “language” of material culture
Text- vocabulary Artifact – artifacts of all types
Text – grammar Artifact – formation process
Text – syntax Artifact – ecological, socio-cultural context
Text – author, composition, date Artifact – date, technology
Text – cultural context Artifact – overall historical setting
Text – intent Artifact – “mental template” of makers
Text – later transmission, interpretation Artifact – natural-cultural transformation
Text – what the text “symbolizes” Artifact – what the artifact “symbolizes”
Text - how its “meaning” is relevant today Artifact – how its “meaning” is relevant today
J. Eric Thompson also knew a helluva lot more than all the other Mesoamericanists combined and he absolutely dominated the field of Mesoamerica for over 35 years. And he had it all wrong, but make no mistake about it, he knew. Baby he knew! And none other than Coe exposed him for his vast arrogance and for keeping Maya studies behind by decades, literally decades. We may actualy know a lot about the Maya, which I have no reason to doubt. This hardly means we can make final conclusions on much of anything however.
Did your crystal ball reveal this to you? You know I am ignorant of Mesoamerican history exactly how? Oh! Silly me, I should have known...... you have an "inside informant" just like Mr. Scratch does, and he toldja! That sneaky lil devil!
Since the Nephite polity was Judeo-Christian, that means that the Judeo-Christian ideology would have spread throughout Mesoamerica.
You overstate your own ability to know what Daniel Peterson can and cannot do, of course........
The hypothesis that the continents once formed a single landmass, broke up, and drifted to their present locations was fully elaborated by Alfred Wegener in 1912. [2] Although Wegener's theory was formed independently and was more complete than those of his predecessors, Wegener would later credit a number of past authors with similar ideas: [3] [4] Franklin Coxworthy (between 1848 and 1890), [5] Roberto Mantovani (between 1889 and 1909), William Henry Pickering (1907) [6] and Frank Bursley Taylor (1908).
The notion that continents have not always been at their present positions was suggested as early as 1596 by the Dutch map maker Abraham Ortelius in the third edition of his work Thesaurus Geographicus. Ortelius suggested that the Americas, Eurasia and Africa were once joined and have since drifted apart "by earthquakes and floods", creating the modern Atlantic Ocean. For evidence, he wrote: "The vestiges of the rupture reveal themselves, if someone brings forward a map of the world and considers carefully the coasts of the three continents." Francis Bacon commented on Ortelius' idea in 1620, as did Benjamin Franklin and Alexander von Humboldt in later centuries.
Even before MENDEL, it was already known that plants have a sexuality. It was also understood that both parents contribute equally to the procreation of their offspring. Experiments with hybrids became common around the turn of the 19th century and led to several new insights. In the 20th century, genetics developed into one of the fastest growing fields of modern biology. In the second half of this century, the molecular approach to genetics gained an enormous importance.
Consequently mother and father contribute equally and specifically to the procreation of the bastard. KÖLREUTER did also cultivate bastards of species of the genera Dianthus, Matthiola, Hyoscyamus, Verbascum, Hibiscus, Datura, Cucurbita, Aquilegia, Cheiranthus etc. But his studies left many questions unanswered. Cross-breedings were performed at the end of the 18th and the beginning of the 19th century with a whole range of more or less related plant species by a number of researchers with different success and not always clearly evaluable results. Most cultivators had practical aims. They were, for example, interested in a new colour of a certain ornamental plant, but took hardly any interest in the underlying processes.
A short notice of the French researcher and farmer M. SAGERET (1763-1851) deals with cross-breeding in the family of Curcubitaceae. For the first time in the history of plant hybrids the characters of the parental generation were grouped into opposing pairs. He found thus, when crossing two melon races of the species Curcumis melo L. the following segregation of characters: (see link)
This is the basis of the second major problem: her complete lack of any historical analysis. There is no sense that traditions change and develop over time and that different contexts will provide different interpretations of the past and the present. She doesn’t seem to have any critical evaluation of why these religious elements were changed, or why they were “preserved.” Instead, the narrative theme of the changes is that of apostasy from a pure, original, true worship. While this theme will sound familiar to LDS readers, it represents an unsophisticated view of historical developments. A more responsible historical approach would be to see the multiplicity of claims to authority and authenticity, and that there were more than two views of the temple which survive from ancient Israel. This problem I think is repeated frequently in her historical method, which can best be described as parallelomania combined with vivid imagination. At best, she is simply uncritically repeating the historical imaginations of pious ancient Christians and Jews. At worst, she is producing her own pious imaginations and attempting to attribute them to early Christians and ancient Jews.
The missing link in her evaluation is that the information that she actually surveys really tells you how early Christians, Muslims, second temple Jews, and 20th century missionaries appealed to First Temple Judaism and to ancient Israelite religion as a basis for legitimacy and authenticity. There is no reason to suspect that what they actually said about that has any historical basis whatsoever. In the same way, Barker and many LDS thinkers are engaged in the same kind of project, to appeal to pure “origins” of Israelite religion in order to produce authenticity about contemporary beliefs and practices. Such an approach is necessarily partial and selective. Instead of learning about ancient Israel, we learn about those who are attempting to recount its history. If Barker’s work has any value, it is in the exposure of this theme in various religious traditions up until today.
Trevor wrote:Thanks for that post Ray. That was very helpful. I especially was interested in the critique of Margaret Barker. Would you mind sharing the source?
Other Mormon scholars have been less willing to trowel over these apparent inconsistencies. In at least one public forum, BYU archaeologist Ray Matheny has been surprisingly blunt about the serious dilemmas posed by these rather glaring holes in the archaeological record. "I'd say this is a fairly king-sized problem," Matheny observed at a tape-recorded symposium in 1984 in Salt Lake City. "Mormons, in particular, have been grasping at straws for a very long time, trying to thread together all of these little esoteric finds that are out of context. If I were doing it cold, I would say in reviewuating the Book of Mormon that it had no place in the New World whatsoever. It just doesn't seem to fit anything that I have been taught in my discipline in anthropology. It seems like these are anachronisms:' Matheny concluded his talk with a sockdolager: "As an archaeologist," he said, "what [can] I say . . . that might be positive for the Book of Mormon? Well, really very little." Several Mormon archaeologists told me that Matheny's remarks caused considerable stir within church circles and came close to costing him his tenured position at BYU. Matheny has since carefully refrained from further public commentary on this subject, and he declined to be interviewed for this story.