Runtu wrote:I thought Brown's paper was interesting in that it thoroughly situates the KEP in 19th-century thought, particularly within the evolving LDS doctrines of "pure" language, genealogy, and the return of Eden's "paradisaical glory." For the purposes of his paper, the KEP's not being an Egyptian grammar is indeed beside the point. That he even acknowledges this suggests that his work is not apologetic.
I effectively said in my post that "the KEP's not being an Egyptian grammar is indeed beside the point" that Brown wants to make.
However my experience of this kind of expression, used in such contexts, is that "beside the point" is often used not just to mean "beside my particular point", but "beside
all points", i.e. a matter of no real interest. It's a sort of "don't go there" tactic that makes me want to ask "Why not?"
And it seems to me that in order to place the KEP in the context of 19th C. American religious thought, it is essential to take account of its origins, which lie in either delusion or deliberate deception. It makes a big difference to the way one would think of the relevant strands of American religious life if their origins could be traced back to palpable fraud, or a blatant error, does it not?
I would have to read Brown's paper more carefully than I have to decide whether he actually shows that the KEP really is the product of the features of 19th C. American life mentioned in the paper. At the moment I only have the impression of someone who has decided to talk about the KEP on the assumption that it
does belong in the context of 'doctrines of "pure" language, genealogy, and the return of Eden's "paradisaical glory." ' - some people might call that 'situating' but I am not sure whether it is enough. But that first impression may be quite wrong.