Nevo wrote:Doctor Scratch wrote:Hi there, Nevo.
Actually, the phrase Bagley used to describe Welch was "dark, menacing presence." And that's a real bummer that he criticized your work. Hopefully he was nicer to you than Gee apparently was with Mike Reed.
Well, I was there the year after Bagley's terrifying ordeal in the bowels of the Knight Mangum Building, in 1999. At Richard Bushman's invitation, John Welch stopped by and addressed the seminar. I thought he had a kind of gravitas or solemnity about him, but I wouldn't say he was "menacing." He seemed genuinely interested in what we were working on and made a point of coming out to the symposium (which, in those days at least, was a rather small, obscure affair).
I wasn't surprised that Welch singled out my paper for comment because it more or less endorsed Dan Vogel's conclusions regarding the presence of anti-Universalist rhetoric in the Book of Mormon. Welch said he found my conclusion unpersuasive and pointed out that one of Vogel's proof-texts was embedded in a complex chiasm (something I had acknowledged in a footnote but not in the paper itself). I didn't mind the criticism. If anything, I was a bit awe-struck by the exchange (Welch was then and still is one of my favorite scholars in the Church). At the conclusion of the seminar, Welch arranged to have all of the fellows receive a free year's subscription to
BYU Studies. So, yes, he was pretty nice to me.
That's really interesting, Nevo--thanks for sharing. As I'm sure you know, I love stories about the apologists. And I think your account here has quite a lot in common with Will Bagley's description of Welch. You describe Welch as having "a kind of gravitas or solemnity about him" and you said that you were "awe-struck" by him, which meshes perfectly with the way Bagley described the deference that was paid to Welch. Further, it's extremely interesting that you received a dressing-down from Welch on account of your "endorsement" of work by Dan Vogel. *That* is striking.
Dr. Peterson is over on MDD trying very hard to convince everyone that the attack on Mike Reed was in no way a coordinated effort on the part of the Maxwell Institute, which in and of itself is intriguing. (He tends to only put in this level of effort when something's at stake. Think of his denials/exaggerations, etc. w/r/t the 2nd Watson Letter.) So my question here is this: Did Jack Welch "order" the harassment of Mike Reed? We already know the following:
--Jack Welch was a founder of FARMS.
--Quite a bit of negative prose has been devoted to attacking Dan Vogel in the pages of the
FARMS Review.
--Nevo relied on Vogel and was criticized by Welch such that he was left "awe-struck."
--Mike Reed was personally criticized by Jack Welch.
--Mike Reed used some of Vogel's scholarship for his presentation, and--lo and behold--he's criticized on precisely those grounds.
--Both Roper and Gee exhibited odd behavior in the wake of their aggressive questions.
Sure: it's possible that all of this is pure coincidence. Nevertheless, I'll go ahead and borrow from Dr. Gee in suggesting that, perhaps
unknowingly, the apologists coordinated an effort to sandbag Mike Reed's presentation.
"[I]f, while hoping that everybody else will be honest and so forth, I can personally prosper through unethical and immoral acts without being detected and without risk, why should I not?." --Daniel Peterson, 6/4/14