antishock8 wrote:When you start acting like one, kindly let us know.
As I said, Trevor, tallest building in Tooele.
antishock8 wrote:When you start acting like one, kindly let us know.
Trev wrote:I started out by talking about "deep doctrine" and I maintain, in the face of criticism, that a number of apologists were interested in deep doctrine (mysteries of the Gospel) and saw in Nibley et al.'s work a place to explore it.
Mister Scratch wrote:I am more interested in examining the more rancid, vicious, and dishonest parts of the "defense." That is: Why would Bill Hamblin erupt in an epithet-laced outburst on RfM? Why would DCP ask James White if his "arrogance meter" was broken? Why would Lou Midgley verbally harass Sandra Tanner at her bookstore?
Mr. Scratch wrote:It's just that you are talking about something that isn't strictly Mopologetic. See what I mean? You can call us "myopic," but it seems to me that you are just insisting that we discuss a somewhat separate topic. On the other hand, it is fair to say that we (or I, in any case) have tried to focus the discussion and categorization on a pretty strict set of behaviors. The kind of good-natured and inquisitive scholarship you're describing doesn't really fit within that, though.
Daniel Peterson wrote:antishock8 wrote:When you start acting like one, kindly let us know.
As I said, Trevor, tallest building in Tooele.
Trevor wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:I am more interested in examining the more rancid, vicious, and dishonest parts of the "defense." That is: Why would Bill Hamblin erupt in an epithet-laced outburst on RfM? Why would DCP ask James White if his "arrogance meter" was broken? Why would Lou Midgley verbally harass Sandra Tanner at her bookstore?
In other words, you grant that this defense is more than the sum of the worst parts you see in it, but it is the worst parts that you are most interested in.
That would seem to me to be quite a revealing statement. I imagine it would be possible for you to observe a film of my life, pick all of the worst things out of it, and then construct a campaign to beat me into the ground by incessantly publicizing the worst of me. How I hope no one chooses to take me up on this. The results would not be pretty.
Don't get me wrong, Scratch. I do not have faith in Mormonism. I had a pretty negative experience as a member of the LDS Church. And, I do not necessarily condone some of the things you see as the worst in Mopologetics, but for myself I am concerned about the corrosive effects on my own psyche of constantly seeing the worst in everything and both constructing and publicizing an image of others based almost exclusively on the negatives.
If now you want to exercise greater care in how we criticize Mormon scholars and apologetics, I wish you all the best of luck. Frankly, I don't see it happening, but I could be proven wrong. I see nothing wrong with trying to form categories to help us understand apologists, but I think those categories ought to be more balanced and not simply based on behaviors, beliefs, and attitudes we find risible.
My "student of the mysteries" category was an attempt to do this, as imperfect as it may have been. I bear you no ill will, Scratch, and I see nothing wrong in principle with your project of trying to understand apologetics better. The real question is in your motivation for doing so, and I am not entirely surprised that there is a good deal of skepticism among apologists here concerning that.
Trevor wrote: I would bet that, predictably, the reason why our categories seem so appealing to us is that they reflect our own journeys out of Mormonism better than they reflect a solid understanding of those who stay strong in the faith.
Mister Scratch wrote:For the sake of this thread, yes.
Mister Scratch wrote:We are not talking about anybody's "life." We are talking about Mopologetics. (I have often pointed out that I never criticize DCP's job as an Arabist.) Unless I am misunderstanding you, it seems that your complaint here is a variation on, "You guys should be nice to the Mopologists! You are being too mean!"
Mister Scratch wrote:Well, Trevor, feel free to praise the Mopologists to your heart's content. You will be welcomed with open arms on the MADboard. You would have had a gay ol' time at the Yale conference, where many of the LDS scholars shot themselves in the foot by playing "back-slapping bros" with each other.
Mister Scratch wrote:I don't really think that they are. The Righteous Warrior of the 2nd Kind, for example, takes into account the "gentler" (or "humble"?) apologists such as R. Bushman. There is a category set aside purely for faith-based reasons as well.
Mister Scratch wrote:I bet. They have always had a problem with accepting a dose of their own medicine.
http://www.bycommonconsent.com/2006/11/ ... ormonisms/
Do you feel the same way about these sorts of categorizations, Trevor?
Trevor wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:We are not talking about anybody's "life." We are talking about Mopologetics. (I have often pointed out that I never criticize DCP's job as an Arabist.) Unless I am misunderstanding you, it seems that your complaint here is a variation on, "You guys should be nice to the Mopologists! You are being too mean!"
LOL. You know, I am about to say something you might think is facetious, but I mean it. I find discussing this subject with you to be quite fun. I was using my life as an example, but I think it applies to the group of people who engage in Mopologetics. To read your posts about DCP, one would think that he ought to be roundly condemned for his Mopologetics alone.
This is because your focus exclusively on the negative amounts to a caricature of the person. I don't think one has to play "nice," necessarily, in order to steer clear of such distortions.