Gadianton wrote:The implication would be that the matter is an open question and there is no current paradigm. Otherwise, let's say I was a disciple of Gould and my list merely outlined his theory, my work would then be a thinly-veiled attempt to beg the question against other proposals.
I'm not sure these are the only options, but if you must "unpackage" the content of Clark's message in so binary a fashion, wouldn't the latter option be a safer bet? I.e., that the Sorenson model (with which Clark has princiapally agreed for two decades) has been the accepted standard and that Meldrum's recent attacks against that standard have caused Clark's rejoinder that at a minimun, Meldrum's theory must adhere to certain textual criteria?
Gadianton wrote:I think Clark is very much a disciple of Sorenson and I do not believe he "no longer agrees with his original backing of Sorenson", not at all, and I apologize for any confusion on my part here. What I believe he is admitting, is that Sorenson's Mesoamerica theory is not the reigning paradigm and that it's essentially dead.
I don't think we can infer that he is saying Sorenson's paradigm is not the reigning one. A perusal of LDS scholarship (including Clark) over the past decade would appear to contradict that inference, leading me to believe that this is not Clark's point. As I said above, if you have to infer anything, you should infer it the other way -- that he hasn't had to reiterate this position in twenty years because there hasn't been much of a challenge to this consensus, so it may, in fact, be a form of warning to those who are doing so only recently. In other words, he could just as well be laying out a defense of what he does see as the reigning paradigm.
Gadianton wrote: The MI would be ecstatic if there were, they don't want the LGT to be dead, but given it's twenty-two years later and no work has been done on the model and with no rising young scholars studying it, they are extracting some of the elements that they view as uncontroversial and sealing in a time capsule for future generations.
I wouldn't go as far as saying that no work has been done on it. Brant Gardner's multi-volume commentary using that model is very good. Hashbaz, from the other board and some of his colleagues bring us another generation who are speaking of it in a religious setting. How far they go in carrying on the torch remains to be seen.
Cheers