Sure. If you don't have any axioms, then you can't have any conclusions.Daniel Peterson wrote:Thanks for pointing out the dogmatic/axiomatic quality of your position. You saved me the effort.
Are you open to this mode being "generating spontaneously from the imagination of mortals"? Why not?JohnStuartMill wrote:I'm not sure that they had access to the complete scrolls. (That is disputed, however certain a few here may be on the subject.) And I'm not sure that the Egyptologists of several generations ago were infallible. But I don't even require that the text was present on the scrolls at all. Maybe it was. Maybe it wasn't. I don't much care. I'm open to various possible modes of its deliverance.
Of course you are. You weren't interested in the scholarship regarding the Brighamite miscegenation penalty either, because apologists aren't interested in fights that they suspect they can't win. That's why FAIR's methodology is so boring: any system, no matter how blatantly false, could use it to its benefit.I'm much more interested in what the Book of Abraham has to say. And, thus far, although it's never been a major focus of my attention, I've published twice on that topic:
* With John Gee and William Hamblin. “‘And I Saw the Stars’: The Book of Abraham and Ancient Geocentric Astronomy.” In John Gee and Brian M. Hauglid, eds. Astronomy, Papyrus, and Covenant (Provo: FARMS, 2005), 1-16.
* “News from Antiquity [‘Evidence supporting the book of Abraham continues to turn up in a wide variety of sources’].” The Ensign 24/1 (January 1994): 16-21.
If Scientology could set up something with the same methodology as FAIR, then FAIR's enterprise cannot be of great value.