Hi Blixa,
Blixa wrote: Leaving aside Nibley (though that is hard to do, no? While I appreciate his criticisms of what could be called, but would never have been termed as such by Nibley, the reification of Mormonism, I find myself often nonplussed by some of his vaunted scholarly range. I don't doubt that he was an intellectual, I don't doubt that much of his intellect and emotional well being was broken upon the demands placed on him by the brethern, what I do find myself struggling with is how little I see of a keen conceptual ability despite a great deal of reading and study)
Kent Jackson is among the very few Mormon scholars who've criticised Nibley (at least in publication):
In 1989 I published a review of one of Nibley's books in which I pointed out what I felt were major problems in his scholarship, particularly in the book I was reviewing. It may be the most critical review of Nibley ever written by a believing Latter-day Saint.... Among my critiques was that Nibley often generalized excessively, saw "things in the sources that simply don't seem to be there," let his "predetermined conclusions set the agenda for the evidence," and misinterpreted authors he cited. Others, including some of Nibley's greatest admirers, have found the same problems in his scholarship. But the academic transgressions committed by Nibley (hardly unique to him) were the products of carelessness and wishful thinking, not of fraud and deception. Nibley's greatest skill as a scholar was his ability to see the big picture, not his ability to finesse the fine details. Nowhere in my own examination of his research and writing did I find any hint of his making up sources for fictional references. I do not believe it happened.
Your observation is much like Jackson's. Before David Wright discarded his view of the Book of Mormon as history he went through all of Nibley's works (just to be sure) and said they did nothing to change his mind. Many moons ago I also went through most of Nibley's books, starting with
Since Cumorah. What I noted over a number of years is that is that Alma's formula must apply: "Ye must desire to believe." Nibley has been of
far more interest to me as a social and Church critic. I can think of no one inside apologetic circles today who does this the way he did. And I wonder why.
Blixa wrote: For myself, I see the history of the split of "professionalist" discourses as less grounded in a history of ideas stretching back to classical definition and more as a result of the specialization and compartmentalization of knowledge that results from the capitalist division of labor. An interesting text on this would be
Intellectual and Manual Labour: A Critique of Epistemology by Alfred Sohn-Rethel. You can find some extracts from it on Ralph Dumain's excellent and always useful website, "The Autodidact Project"
http://www.autodidactproject.org/index.html
Thanks for that link. In this regard I think of Eric Hoffer, who was a longshoreman. The link is very interesting, and I note
C.L.R James among the people of interest (a former fellow countryman). I'll be going through that in detail later. Another author who has long interested me is
V.S. Naipaul, another social critic and also an observer of Islam (
Among The Believers).
But I digress. What to make of apologia today? I don't see any real deep introspection or questioning, and as I previously noted the approached seems to be "asked and answered". Where are the B.H. Roberts-type of scholars, who are really prepared to dig into the Book of Mormon and give it some serious critical scrutiny, instead of offering the "asked and answered" approach? I've already noted David Wright. I know of no serious apologetic reply to the problems Wright has raised, and I see no serious attempt to even concede the possibility that the Book of Mormon could even be religious fiction. To do that, I suppose, is to cross from apologist to critic, but for me that's what I find somewhat superficial about apologetics. "Ye must desire to believe." Apologetics is the last stronghold of the member struggling with serious questions, and the long held aim of arms like the Maxwell Institute is to make it "professional". Interestingly, Wright pursued biblical studies to boost his faith, initially, to "become another Hugh Nibley", but his "findings" put him at odds with apologia. The "divide" I mention is that, in my opinion, much of apologetics has become as Inc. noted, "are you trained for the ministry?" It can be viewed as the "owning" (TM) of apologetics in some sense. Almost everything has been "asked and answered", so "do we really have to go over all this again?" Also note Loap's comment that there are "smarter people than me who still believe". Own a brain, get your Ph.D in Egyptology, and the believers will be impressed. Display erudition along with the letters. That's modern apologia, or what it has become. When basic faith and the Prophets fail - turn to the Scholars.