malkie wrote:Equality wrote:Mostly what I think we can expect from the MI folks
is a whole lot of hand-waving and smoke-spewing that we
know is their specialty. I imagine any response from them will involve some complicated but
entertaining mental gymnastics that would make
Reason stare. I mean,
even if they had some kind of argument, we know they prefer to simply
evade the obvious and focus on tangential irrelevancies. It's the mopologetic way:
deflect, devalue, denounce, decry, and then, as they showed at the conference, disappear.
It's the same thing with every issue: the critics use reason, interpreting evidence from
scholarly sources and the mopologists mimic the tools of science to construct
apologetic "arguments," the purpose of which is to make unsuspecting
believers feel more comfortable about exercising faith in nonsense.
Under no circumstances would I expect the apologists to
take on the issues head on.
That would go completely against their standard m.o. No, they need to dazzle the
faithful with something that appears clever, even if upon a closer examination
all the flaws in their argument become apparent. For that reason, I think they will
consider trying to be "funny" in whatever they print in response to Mike. Something
eerily similar to this post, perhaps.
What a pity, Equality - with a little more effort you could have got "head" (;=)
You know, I've always thought it fishy that Hamblin claimed that he had the cartoon character Butt-head in mind when he did this. It seems like such a strange insult. I think it's much more likely that he meant to encrypt the much more natural-sounding "Metcalf is a butthead" in his paper and he just screwed up and left out the "a." It's a common enough mistake--Neil Armstrong did the same thing. Turned out to be a lucky break for Hamblin though, because it allowed him to concoct the
apology that he only meant to compare Metcalf with a cartoon character who happened to have a name that sounds like an insult. Peterson et al. immediately took up the cause to illuminate the wide chasm between the two--had Hamblin called Metcalf a butthead, that would be beyond reproach, of course. But what he actually did was no worse than comparing him to Elmer Fudd or Porky Pig, which as we all know is just harmless ribbing among scholars.
Besides, if he meant the character Butt-head, don't you think he would have foreseen the confusion? If calling someone a butthead is so much worse than calling him Butt-head, wouldn't he have chose a funnier, better-known character whose name didn't sound like an insult? Especially since Butt-head the character is actually hyphenated and doesn't lend itself well to an acrostic.
I'm trying to think of another character he could have used, but the exercise is only making it more clear to me how unlikely it is that his intent was to compare him to any cartoon character in the first place.