William Schryver wrote:Not likely.
Perhaps this is an appropriate level of confidence, given the likelihood that your work will mean much of anything. Still, I am open to being persuaded otherwise.
William Schryver wrote:The most recent episode with Chap and the length of the scroll of Horos is just the latest example. And, if you were paying attention, you will have noticed how sincerely I thanked Chap for his help. Without the motivation he provided, I wouldn’t have come to realize that there was confirmation of the Hoffmann formula (and Gee’s application of it) hiding in plain sight in the form of professional measurements of papyrus thicknesses. You see, I’m sure Chap instantly recognized that knowing the thickness of papyrus, in conjunction with his calculations, serves to confirm Gee’s arguments concerning a considerable quantity of missing scroll. But will you now acknowledge this and admit your dismissiveness was not only premature, but wrong? Of course not!
What is the actual thickness of the JSP? In the end, however, the fact that the papyri could have been cut, and that a fellow touring around to sell bits of aegyptiaca is exactly the kind of person one would expect to do so, suggests to me that the debate is far from over. I would be glad to admit that the celebration over Gee's failure was perhaps premature, but we are still some way off from proving that Gee was, in fact, right all along. I have noticed that the question of the thickness of the
umbilicus has completely dropped from the discussion. I would think that could make a difference too.
William Schryver wrote:And it matters not in the least. It will be demonstrated in the places that matter most, the naysayers in this little corner of cyberspace notwithstanding.
There goes Schryver, taking himself oh so seriously yet again. We will see whether his self-adulation is justified in the end. Why he imagines that a group of people who discuss Mormonism for the fun of it should be wounded by his pronouncements concerning our insignificance remains mysterious. It must be that ego of his again.
What matters most? I'll tell you what. The Egyptological significance of the JSP as perhaps the earliest example of that genre of Egyptian funereal text.
That is significant. Joseph Smith's authorship of scripture as a 19th century religious genius is a significant field of study. How to rescue the religious belief in Joseph Smith's having possessed an actual papyrus with an ancient Book of Abraham on it minus our possession of the physical document to examine is about the least significant academic endeavor I can imagine. Not to say that there aren't plenty of scholars who pontificate about absent evidence. Heck, some people try to recreate entire inscriptions based on a few surviving letters. I and many others are always happy to shake our heads in amusement every time we witness such things.
William Schryver wrote:Not so much as your delusions of relevance.
Make that your illusion of my delusion of relevance. I have never aspired to relevance when it comes to my participation on this board. I am here for entertainment purposes alone. I'll leave it to you to take your farcical nonsense seriously. You obviously excel at it.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist