Ray A wrote:what the FARMS Review has been about, not only criticising the critics, but sometimes dragging them through the mud.
Rarely if ever.
I've long sat (and continue to sit) on things that I know about certain critics but will never publish. I have no desire to drag them through the mud, and will never do so -- despite the fact that, at least in two or three cases, I easily could.
Ray A wrote:Korihor's back,
Still one of the funniest lines we've ever published, and I would publish it today. I think it made an important point, which was immediately explained by its author.
Ray A wrote:Dan's previous but now apparently mellowed approach to the Tanners,
Years ago, back in the days before my attitude toward the Tanners had supposedly mellowed, back when my "approach" to them was, apparently, very much harsher, the
Salt Lake Tribune published an article about the Tanners in which I was quoted as having some positive things to say. My BYU department chairman received at least two phone calls from irate members of the Church demanding that I be fired.
Ray A wrote:the constant labelling of Vogel and Metcalfe as anti-Mormons
I did a search of three reviews of items by Dan Vogel, and found no case where the reviewer labeled Vogel an "anti-Mormon" -- although one, by Louis Midgley, did discuss the historian Marvin Hill's description of Vogel as an "anti-Mormon." (Anyone familiar with Marvin Hill's work will instantly recognize that he's anything but a FARMS writer.)
I performed a similar search on five reviews of items by Brent Metcalfe. One, a thirty-page essay by Bill Hamblin, twice obliquely and briefly referred to Brent Metcalfe in a way that might suggest an anti-Mormon agenda on his part. The term
anti-Mormon was entirely absent from three of the reviews. The fifth review implicitly
distinguished Metcalfe from anti-Mormons.
So it isn't at all clear that this alleged "labelling of Vogel and Metcalfe as anti-Mormons" has ever actually been "constant."
Ray A wrote:and "butthead",
Ah, the famous fourteen-year-old unpublished joke.
Ray A wrote:and the Nibleyesque ridicule of even serious critics of Mormonism.
As always, I invite people curious about the
FARMS Review to actually
read it:
http://farms.BYU.edu/publications/review/Ray A wrote:This has been demonstrated over and over.
And typically with no more rigor than here.
Ray A wrote:It's as if the critical approach is too ridiculous to be taken seriously, even when done with sophistication.
Again, I invite people to look at the
Review with open minds, and ask themselves whether it takes criticisms seriously:
http://farms.BYU.edu/publications/review/Ray A wrote:It's the total inability to even admit that "we may indeed be wrong on this one".
The
Review doesn't conceal the fact that, overwhelmingly (though not quite entirely) it's the work of believers.
But I invite anybody who might be unfamiliar with it to read a fair sample of its published essays and to judge for himself or herself whether it seriously engages criticisms and mounts serious arguments based on competently marshalled evidence and solid analysis:
http://farms.BYU.edu/publications/review/Ray A wrote:The only thing I don't really understand, is why Dan has to be so rigid and uncompromising when it comes to Mormonism
I'm convinced of my position, I defend it, and I don't do a theological imitation of Hamlet, but I don't think it's fair to describe me as "rigid and uncompromising" simply on that account.
Ray A wrote:No one at the MI ever scratches his/her head and seriously wonders, "could this be a fraud?"
I think everybody at the Maxwell Institute has considered that question seriously. I know I have. Though I do appreciate the long-distance attempt at a relatively sympathetic psychobiography.