JustMe wrote:I will never forget when a virulent anti-Mormon started critiquing one of my essays online.
Where can I read your essays online?
JustMe wrote:I will never forget when a virulent anti-Mormon started critiquing one of my essays online.
JustMe wrote:solamarinasHave you seen FAIR buddies ever contradict each-other?
Where can I read your essays online?
Good luck on getting an answer. I've already tried, to no avail. One thing is already becoming clear about justme - he's a font of excuses for why he won't engage in discussions about actual substance.
Have you seen FAIR buddies ever contradict each-other?
Ummmmmmm ,lessee.......... oh I know a name is percolating up.......
Jeeeess, ooomiiigoshh...Is that name percolating from your Postum?
Please enlighten us........
solomarineris wrote:
Jeeeess, ooomiiigoshh...Is that name percolating from your Postum?
Please enlighten us........
Joey wrote:It can be very useful. At a minimum, it should be offered to objective "qualified" peers. If it is not even offered up for peers to review, it is probably suspect to begin with. It should also have enough credibility to attract qualified "peers". If it can't even attract the interest of professional peers, it is probably lacking credibility to start with.
Those who argue that such works "are ignored" to defend their credibility obviously don't have the confidence in such works to request a review from objective, qualified peers in the first place. It is much safer to leave them on the shelves of obscurity than to promote and/or request professional peers to give their opinions.
Of course if such qualified peers continue to ignore such works, even after the author's or proponents request, it is telling of the work from the start.
Hence we have the works of Clark and Sorenson on Book of Mormon historicity still being, per Peterson, completely ignored. And no effort on the part of the authors or proponents to request or submit for peer review.
Great question. Obvious answer.
JustMe wrote:Message boards are for fun and games, not serious learning.
As a critic once asked me - "If you really believed you had something significant why are you hesitating to publish it after peer review and prove you have faith in what you write?"
It would be a shame to spend all the time writing whatever it was you wrote and not have anyone see it, wouldn't it?