Markk wrote:So he can present is a generality... in a historic context to his peers that know better, then twist it, bend it, and erase portions...and lets not forget "mis-remember," until it compliments LDS thought and theology to the uninformed Mormon audience who are grasping for answers...e.g. the book reviews?
You have claimed said a lot of things here, you claimed I called him a fraud and crazy, and now you claim I was discussing the link you pasted...which is not true. My examples here were two, the paste above about his claim of the GA, and the German footnote about the robe and "garments."
What cracks me up is that folks here seem to believe just because someone is a scholar what they say must be true, yet then they spend most their time criticizing scholars they disagree with...what a joke.
There are many men and women with and without degrees that do good things and elevate "life" and learning, and are honest with their work...and likewise there are hacks that twist, bend, cheat, and pursue nonsense. Hunter Biden was talented for sure, but he used his talents as a means to an end to promote a false faith...working backwards with a preconceived interpretation and belief and then forced his research into his preconception.
I look forward in reading your link this weekend if I get some time, and hopefully I can track down his footnotes and then see how it translates into his teaching.
Markk, I don't know which planet you are living on, or which forum you think you are participating in, but I am not feeling the love from every corner of this forum just because my day job involves the study of antiquity. Yes, on occasion I say something that this person or that finds useful and informative, and they thank me for it.
More often, I would say, people argue with me very vigorously because they have their own opinions (see the temple thread, where my friend honorentheos thinks I am not a good scholar because I have not done what he has asked in providing the examples he seeks). I don't see that many non-academics here simply sitting like baby birds waiting for PhDs to feed them and then chirp in delight no matter what it dropped in their mouths.
You have a huge chip on your shoulder. You seem to feel unappreciated as one of the salt of the earth types you talk about. Well, I love salt-of-the-earth people. What I don't love is people who envy and have a chip on their shoulder, and who take it upon themselves to act like bigots and attack things they have very little knowledge about.
I regret that Nibley played fast and loose with his arguments when he was speaking to his own people. In my view, he felt he was speaking with the liberty his faith afforded him. I don't doubt that he felt he was doing a good service in communicating his faith-informed view in language Mormons would appreciate and benefit by, and I think he truly believed in his model of antiquity, which was essentially a literalist LDS view of the Biblical myth beginning with Adam receiving the ordinances from God and passing them on to his heirs.
That said, he seems to have been capable, even a couple of decades out from his PhD program, to do regular academic scholarship that passed professional muster. He was even able to advance theses that were in line with his uniquely LDS perspective in peer-review articles. There is absolutely nothing wrong with that. Scholarship thrives on different assumptions and different perspectives being injected into the ongoing discussion. But there are rules to the game, and mechanisms to maintain the quality, integrity, and mutual intelligibility of that discussion. Nibley was certainly capable of working within that framework. For that reason, I reject the idea that he was a hack.