Daniel Peterson wrote:Not one dime of my salary comes from doing apologetics.
You are absolutely correct: not one dime. Actually, it's 200,000 dimes (check my math -- it should equal $20,000).
Daniel Peterson wrote:Not one dime of my salary comes from doing apologetics.
Rollo Tomasi wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote:Not one dime of my salary comes from doing apologetics.
You are absolutely correct: not one dime. Actually, it's 200,000 dimes (check my math -- it should equal $20,000).
Ray A wrote:I get the picture. Ira Fulton doesn't want Quinn anywhere near a university he sponsors because Quinn's historical writing is offensive to him. The point is not whether Quinn's account of, for example, post-Manifesto polygamy, is the truth (as explained by his stake president), but whether it "denigrates faith".
Big bucks and wealthy sponsors Trump the search for historical truth.
Ray A wrote:Fulton must have well absorbed Packer's admonition that "some truths are not very useful". Every one who reads this should now understand the genesis of Quinn's excommunication. Money is more important than truth.
Daniel Peterson wrote:You're assuming that Arizona State should have, and otherwise would have, hired Mike Quinn.
Based on the usual situation in the academic marketplace, though, I'm guessing that Arizona State had fifty to a hundred applicants for that position -- maybe more -- and I would be mightily surprised if Mike Quinn was the only one among them who seeks historical truth.
Lots of factors -- training, background, publication record, personality, area of expertise, focus of research, quality of teaching, fit with a department's peculiar needs and/or strengths, etc., etc. -- go into hiring a professor. I know; I've been involved in this process a number of times for my own department. Do we know for certain that Mike Quinn was the absolutely objectively obviously best candidate for the Arizona State position, and the best fit for the department and its curriculum?
I don't.
Daniel Peterson wrote:I don't see how you can deduce that from anything you've posted here.
Ray A wrote:But we also know Fulton's view of Quinn. The point isn't whether he was the best candidate of fifty or a hundred. The point is that because of Fulton's view of Quinn he was "unhireable".
Ray A wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote:I don't see how you can deduce that from anything you've posted here.
It's very obvious. Quinn was threatened with punishment for his 1985 article on post-Manifesto polygamy, an article that you said, if I correctly recall, was good (though you feel that his later work was not as good).
Ray A wrote:So the message is very clear: The Church leaders do not want the truth if they feel it will threaten faith. And they are prepared to excommunicate any historian who crosses boundaries they have set.
The same thing happened to David Wright. Nothing he wrote from a biblical scholar's point of view was objectionable, but once again it threatened faith.
The message is very clear: The Church has engaged in modern inquisitions of it scholars who "step out of line" with "The Brethren".
Daniel Peterson wrote:Why has Mike Quinn not been hired by one of the several hundred (if not thousand) other history departments in the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, or the UK?
Daniel Peterson wrote:I don't know. But I can pretty well guarantee you that it wasn't because of Ira Fulton, because of me, because of FARMS, because of Elder Packer, or because of the insidious, demonic SCMC.
When I was admitted to the faculty of Brigham Young University, I had the same kind of interview that all prospective faculty members have, and that is that a General Authority of the LDS Church meets with the prospective faculty member. ... The person who interviewed me was apostle Boyd K. Packer. We were together about 45 minutes, and almost all of that was a lecture. He began by asking me what position I was going to be hired in or was being considered for, and I said it was as a professor in the history department. The very next words out of his mouth were -- and I'm not exaggerating; these were seared into my memory -- Elder Packer said, "I have a hard time with historians, because historians idolize the truth." I almost sunk into my chair. I mean, that statement just bowled me over.
Then he went on to say, quoting him as accurately as I can ...: "The truth is not uplifting. The truth destroys. And historians should tell only that part of the truth that is uplifting, and if it's religious history, that's faith-promoting." And he said, "Historians don't like doing that, and that's why I have a hard time with historians."
Daniel Peterson wrote:That's Mike Quinn's claim. I don't know whether it's true or not.
Daniel Peterson wrote:I don't believe that there's anything wrong with a church determining the acceptable boundaries of opinion that are consistent with membership in it.
I also don't see anything even remotely like an "inquisition."
Ray A wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote:Why has Mike Quinn not been hired by one of the several hundred (if not thousand) other history departments in the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, or the UK?
Maybe because his area of expertise is Mormon history?
Ray A wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote:I don't know. But I can pretty well guarantee you that it wasn't because of Ira Fulton, because of me, because of FARMS, because of Elder Packer, or because of the insidious, demonic SCMC.
Quinn's reputation as a scholar was gradually affected by what "faithful Mormon scholars" were saying and writing about him over the years. Yet many non-Mormon scholars praised his work. That's because there was a belief-bias at work - Quinn wasn't writing "faithful history".
When I was admitted to the faculty of Brigham Young University, I had the same kind of interview that all prospective faculty members have, and that is that a General Authority of the LDS Church meets with the prospective faculty member. ... The person who interviewed me was apostle Boyd K. Packer. We were together about 45 minutes, and almost all of that was a lecture. He began by asking me what position I was going to be hired in or was being considered for, and I said it was as a professor in the history department. The very next words out of his mouth were -- and I'm not exaggerating; these were seared into my memory -- Elder Packer said, "I have a hard time with historians, because historians idolize the truth." I almost sunk into my chair. I mean, that statement just bowled me over.
Then he went on to say, quoting him as accurately as I can ...: "The truth is not uplifting. The truth destroys. And historians should tell only that part of the truth that is uplifting, and if it's religious history, that's faith-promoting." And he said, "Historians don't like doing that, and that's why I have a hard time with historians."
Ray A wrote:Your claim is that you never received $20,000. I guess no one really knows if it's true or not.
Ray A wrote:Now you know one reason I'm no longer a member. I went willingly because I could fully see that truth and the Church were strangers.
Daniel Peterson wrote:When Mike Quinn speaks, the thinking has been done.
Daniel Peterson wrote:Sorry, Ray. I think that's nonsense.
I also intensely dislike the strong anti-intellectual trend that has been and still is gaining great momentum within the church. I do not necessarily lay blame upon individuals for this condition, but see it as a reflection of a church dedicated to rigid conformity, which I view as destructive to the creativity and true freedom of the individual.
After studying Mormon history over the last several years I am alarmed and disturbed at inconsistencies which I find irreconcilable, many of which destroy the bases of contemporary Mormon practices and beliefs and which church authorities have taken great measures to prevent average members access to such information (despite recent protestations to the contrary) for fear that such information may damage the faith of simplistic Mormons.