Arc wrote:If Dr. Dale fancies himself a scholar and considers his Interpreter paper a scholarly work, then he should act like a scholar and take responsibility for his nonsense in the real world of scholarship.
Surely taking responsibility would include making sure the Interpreter paper is included on the publication list attached to his resume, as well as being cited on his Google Scholar page.
If the paper really is the blockbuster that K. Magleby claims DCP and his colleagues at the Interpreter believe it to be, who knows, perhaps it could turn the whole discipline of Mesoamerican history on its head.
if it keeps getting promoted with utter blindness to the criticism then it may get stuck one way or another.
how is it possible that this is even happening?
Well, the way I see it, it's easy to side with the truth, assuming the market of ideas is relatively free. Believing something because it's true is like researching the strongest football team and then picking that team to be your favorite team. In terms of in-group loyalty, that's cheating. Real loyalty is demonstrated when backing the unthinkable, as we're seeing with this paper. The comments Tom quoted are so over the top, they go beyond ignorance and shameless promotion, and I think cross into the realm of flat out lying. We've already seen some shilling in the comments section that ironically, the Bayesian fake review software mentioned by the Dales themselves would weed out. There is dishonesty going on there, and also in the way the article is being advertised by certain people who know better. But that's just it -- shameless promotion with knowledge identifies dishonesty, but it also signals commitment to the cause. If you want your stock to go up in the world of Mopologetics, this is the very kind of thing worth your time to stand your ground upon and lie through your teeth about.
When I was a priest, a very careful and anal Bishop used to remind us that sin didn't just cover sins of commission, but also sins of omission. To the extent there really were statisticians who peer-reviewed this paper, that either they haven't got with wyatt or wyatt with them and reconsidered and publicly disclosed, demonstrate there's some serious sin of omission going on here. Of course, it's for the Lord, so if lying for the Lord really is a virtue, then they might get an extra planet out of the in the eternities.
When I was at BYU, the Paul H. Dunn controversy broke out, and my Book of Mormon teacher mentioned it casually as something inappropriate to discuss. He did mention he knew that it had been going on for 10 years. It didn't hit me until later that if he knew, probably a boatload of others did, and for decades nobody did anything about it; let it ride.
I'd say for those sitting on the fence in the world of Mopologetics, now is as good a time ever to switch sides, if honesty is a matter of personal importance to you.