moksha wrote:Yahoo Bot wrote:An audiologist is not a credible historian. He's never had to defend a dissertation or challenge dissertations. (Umm -- Hales and Greg Smith suffer from the same defects.) This whole field suffers from a dearth of credentialed historians.
Wouldn't you agree that the authoring of hit pieces on history articles requires much less credentialing, since saying "uh uh" is a FAIRly simple task?
I say nothing of the sort. Van Wagoner's book had a number of problems. The one thing I recall after all these decades is that he based some of his more salacious factual statements solely upon uncorroborated claims of anti-Mormon newspapers along the Mississippi during the Nauvoo period. He didn't qualify it or warn the reader.
An unqualified historian tends, in my opinion, to array his note cards developed in research to write his book -- as we all learned in high school -- without any discrimination or qualification as to the credibility or value of the sources. I've commented in writing upon Will Bagley's issues with that.
When a historian has to defend a dissertation, the committee routinely challenges the sources.
I don't believe that Van Wagoner's book was peer-reviewed.