Gee's latest article is just six pages and half of it consists of footnotes, photos and graphs, so there really isn't much content provided by Gee, just apologetic assertions with inane dismissals and put-downs of anything Cook and Smith said. Here is an interesting note on page one from the editor:
From the Editor:
One of the questions that swirls around the Book of Abraham is the role that the papyrus scrolls played in the translation process. A corollary to that question is, was one or more of the scrolls long enough to contain the Book of Abraham as we now have it? The extant fragments certainly are not long enough to have contained the current text. But how long were the scrolls originally? John Gee has tackled this relative question with objectivity and precision.
How in the world would this editor know that John Gee applied "objectivity and precision" when no one in the apologetic world seems to grasp any of this stuff? John Gee doesn't get his apologetics peer reviewed by people capable of correcting him; every time I try to get Dan to address this topic he defers to John Gee as if he were the only authority that mattered. But to say Gee is objective is just ludicrous, but I suppose par for the course when it comes to the kind of "scholarship" we've come to expect from these FARMS types. Gee has been trying to salvage his failed theory for more than a decade now and he has ignored refutation after refutation, from his manipulation of the KEP photos to his last FAIR presentation which tried to say there was no sequence to the KEP characters. At every turn Gee has come out looking like an absolute fool, and so he has spent a great deal of time trying to salvage an argument that has ruined his credibility even with his former professor at Yale. So to say Gee is objective, as if he has no dog in this fight, is just dishonest.
Here is an excerpt from Gee's article. Notice that he callously describes Smith as a "former Unitarian ministerial student" which, is not only false, but perhaps the dumbest way to describe him:
Two different formulas have been published estimating the original length of a scroll, given the length of each winding of the preserved intact exterior portions. One has been proposed by the Egyptologist Friedhelm Hoffmann and one by Andrew Cook (a theoretical physicist) and Christopher Smith (a former Unitarian ministerial student). The two formulas are similar, differeing primarily in minor details. Cook and Smith use the thickness of the papyri (which they did not measure but only estimated) as an indication of the change in diameter to calculate the difference between the lengths of successive windings in the scroll...While Cook and Smith's formula predicts a highly inaccurate length, Hoffman's formula provides a rough approximation....although the Cook and Smith method of determining scroll length is anything but accurate, even if it had been successful it would have created other problems. Cook and Smith fail to establish which was the long roll because they applied their formula only to the Horos scroll; they did not apply it to any of the other extant scrolls and thus fail to meet another of the necessary conditions. They measured only the Horos scroll because they assumed it to be the source of the Book of Abraham. Yet the eyewitnesses identify the long roll as the source. Bent on proving that the Horos scroll was not the long roll, they overlooked the implications of such a view. If the scroll of Horos is not the long roll, it simply cannot be the source of the text of the Book of Abraham (according to the accounts of the eyewitnesses). By endeavoring to prove that the Horus scroll was not the long roll, they would have undermined their own case, which depended on the Horos scroll being the proposed source of the text of the Book of Abraham.
Cook and Smith would like to minimize the length of the Horos scroll because they believe that finding would eliminate the possibility that the Book of Abraham was translated from a scroll that we so not currently have.
Emphasis mine.
As I said, Andrew is preparing a detailed response to Gee's numerous lies and misrepresentations regarding their method and Gee's sophomorphic understanding of the formula. What I would like to tackle is his repeated claim that the historical acounts based on the eye-witnesses point to a "long roll" as the source of the Book of Abraham. According to Gee, 19th century eye-witnesses recalled:
a. some papyri "preserved under glass." describes as "a number of glazed slides like picture frames, containing sheets of papyrus, with Egyptian inscriptions and hieroglyphics";
b. "a long roll of manuscript";
c. "another roll"; and
d. "two or three other small pieces of papyrus with astronomical calculators, epitaphes,etc."
First of all, Gee would have us believe these are the only historical accounts describing the papyri collection, when he very well knows that this is just a fraction of the accounts and those he ignores point to the Horos scroll as the source. If the Horos scroll isn't the source, then why is Gee trying to claim it is now more than 60 feet in length? Everyone from past LDS leaders to the Book of Abraham itself, alludes to this scroll as the source. But Gee wants to pretend Cook/Smith had no reason to assume this aside from some evil attempt to support an anti-Mormon agenda.
The reason Gee isolates these few comments is because he is desperately trying to paint this picture as if there is no evidence supporting the view that the source must have been the Horos scroll. What's worse, Gee constantly refers to "multiple" accounts that attest to a "long roll" but the footnotes for examples b and c above, point to the same exact source. A few sentences down he refers to "log roll" again and the footnote refers to the same Blanchard source used by Schryver years ago, which is merely the Haven account again. So he is trying to stretch a single comment about a long" roll, into three independent eye-witness accounts!
As I showed back in 2009, the Blanchard reference, which neither Gee nor Schryver ever bother to cite in context, says nothing about the Book of Abraham coming from a "long roll." This is just another example of the kinds of deceptions John Gee engages. He wants to be able to manipulate the evidence to suit his apologetic theories, and he just expects his audience to accept it without doing their (and his) homework.
Some of you may recall that three years ago William Schryver tried to prepare a publication arguing these same things, which was essentially a cut and paste job from Gee's previous FARMS "reviews":
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=9323
I hammered Schryver for not only copying Gee, but for also failing to understand that one account referring to a "long" roll doesn't tell us the length of that roll. Long doesn't give us length any more than tall gives us height. Nor can this single account be used to support "multiple" eye witness accounts that simply do not exist. Gee engaged in this sort of pseudo-scholarship years ago, Schryver parroted Gee verbatim and I refuted it thoroughly. Then he scraped his so-called article that he was preparing for publication. And now, several years later Gee is again repeating the same nonsense as if this is some kind of ground-breaking revelation, when it fact it is just the same regurgitated nonsense that has been refuted for years. The fact of the matter is their entire apologetic about a long roll rests on the one isolated comment by Charlotte Haven, and as LDS scholar Jay Todd once noted, "One wonders if Charlotte is reporting accurately. Until more evidence is gathered, the sum and value of Charlotte's report remains clouded on several issues." (The Saga of the Book of Abraham, by Jay M. Todd, page 249) If this is how historians describes a source used by anti-Mormons to support an anti-Mormon claim, the apologist would reject it out of hand as unreliable.
But Gee/Schryver are certain her use of the word "long" must be dead accurate to support their baseless assumption that her perception of long has to be more than several feet. In reality, for all we know, she used the word "long" because this particular manuscript was long by comparison to the other fragments, in which case it describes the Horos scroll perfectly.
But it seems more likely that the papyri slides or sheets were laid out on the table back to back, appearing as one long roll. It is unrealistic to think Granny Smith would be constantly "rolling" and "unrolling" an eroding ancient document that was to be shown to strangers on a regular basis. The whole idea was to keep the collection preserved, and they were cut and glued to slides for that purpose.
The reason apologetic versions of the Haven account never include the context probably has something to do with the fact that what Haven describes is clearly part of the extant material. This completely undermines any attempts to prove she was referencing missing material. These anecdotes throw cold water on apologetic hopes of establishing a missing source for the Book of Abraham, because she claims to be looking right at it!
Read the link above for a detailed refutation of this argument.