beastlie:
Scientist A has such a degree of conviction that his belief is correct that he is willing to disregard experiments that contradict his belief.
Your analogy breaks down if you cannot demonstrate, to any appreciable degree, that (placing the question explicitly within the context of the present discussion) John Clark and/or Richard Hansen have ever done precisely what you suggest:
disregard experiments that contradict his belief.I am reasonably confident that
neither of them even thinks (consciously or otherwise) along those lines when it comes to the pursuit of his professional work. Hansen, for example, is working in a place that almost certainly was never a Nephite polity. (Some are beginning to see
El Mirador as perhaps the single largest Mayan polity of its time.)
I have seen nothing that would lead me to believe that Hansen believes
El Mirador to be Zarahemla, or any other city mentioned in the Book of Mormon.
He most certainly would acknowledge that the Nephites, if historical, were never a dominant entity if one looks at the whole picture of ancient Mesoamerica during the time frame suggested.
So where is the evidence that he has permitted an LDS bias to infilrate and influence his studies and/or conclusions?
And if there is no such evidence, on what grounds can your assertion above have any relevance whatsoever?
You see, dear beastlie, any remotely objective observer of these things would never see such bias at work in the way you seem to suggest it must. Assuming such an observer was cognizant of his religious convictions, said observer (being a disbeliever in such things) might be mystified by the thought that Hansen apparently believes in the essential historicity of the Book of Mormon, but one would strain in futility to adduce any deleterious influence of those convictions in terms of his scientific achievements.
And yet you are certain that such deleterious influence must exist. Either that, or you must insist that—even in the absence of such deleterious influence—such a scientist must necessarily be accommodating a prodigious load of cognitive dissonance.
Your arrogance is stunning. Absolutely stunning.
You never once mention, nor would you even consider, the possibility that perhaps he has good
scientific reasons to suppose the real plausibility of Nephites.
Nope. beastlie knows all that is necessary to know in order to definitively declare that there could never have been Nephites.