J Green wrote:I followed the thread dedicated to these types of issues in FARMS through the first three or four pages and found the net to be rather widely cast. Many of the issues dealt with quality or accuracy of footnotes or other issues that focused not on the tone of FARMS reviews (which was supposed to be the thesis) but rather the quality of its scholarship. I suspect that if you took your skills to hone the thesis statement and its supporting evidence in that thread you would focus on a small group of cases that could be evaluated. But when the scope of problem shrinks then the overarching motif of a FARMS "tendency" starts to become problematic.
Kind of easy to say when you've only read 3 pages out of a thread that's still a work in progress, eh? Plus, as has been pointed out to you before, you don't have to take our word for it: the same "tendency" has been criticized by people like Richard Bushman and Eugene England. Or you can read that great article on apologetics by John-Charles Duffy which assembled quite a lot of evidence in its own right.
Also not explored to any extent in the portion I read is the idea of variations in reviews on the same work, where one review may be more critical than another. Has an adequate comparative analysis been done on reviews of the same work?
I believe I made at least a passing comment on the fact that, in one of these cases, one of the reviews was better in terms of its tone. (If I recall correctly, the "better" review was written by David P. Wright.)
Can we detect anything from it? What does it mean in terms of a monolithic FARMS voice? Is there one?
Who is saying that there's a "monolithic voice"? You are trying to paste an absolutist claim onto an argument that's more nuanced. There is a difference between noting an overarching tendency versus making an argument about a "monolithic voice."
Can we really speak of tendencies and trends
Yes, since these trends span the entirety of the
Review's existence, and there has been a consistency in the editorial point of view.
or are different voices given freedom to articulate their views as they see fit within the realm of their subject matter expertise?
Sort of, but that doesn't mean that trends aren't apparent. You could argue that the talking heads on FOX News are "given freedom to articulate their views as they see fit," but that doesn't mean that one cannot make observations about the general qualities or trends that characterize FOX News.
If the latter, what does this mean in terms of perceptions about relationships to Church Headquarters, etc.?
I'm not sure how or why this is relevant.... I guess it's because Kish said that the apologists are covering the GAs' butts? Per what's been said by Steve Benson, and what was implied by Dallin H. Oaks himself (in reference to advice/tips that he solicited from Jack Welch)?
"[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