Kishkumen wrote: ↑Wed Aug 19, 2020 2:42 pm
Too bad, really. I would not denigrate someone else's faith as shallow and superficial. Historically speaking, all of these religions spring from pretty much the same place, so this is just a matter of the snobbery of one group in the same overall tradition looking at others. Manichaeans saw themselves as Christians. Mormons see themselves as Christians. Jehovah's Witnesses see themselves as Christians. Essentially, Cahill is saying that these other versions did not produce Aquinas, so they are crap. I suppose, but the success of one imperial version of Christianity to produce an Aquinas does not make Christianity itself any more or less valuable in any of its manifestations. Not everyone in the world wants to read Aquinas. I suppose those who don't do not count.
I agree with most of this, though at a certain point I do think there is a debate to be had that isn't about snobbery (for another time). Peterson will denigrate all he wants, of course, but I see all of that as an evasion of his obligation he sets for himself in play-acting the role of a Mormon intellectual, because the intellectual value or contribution of a given religious tradition is a relevant question in light of that role. Accepting the premise that a religious tradition relies on an intellectual tradition for longevity and depth, what have Peterson and the FARMS people done about that in the case of Mormonism? What book in the past forty years has come out of their activity that has a had not merely a significant intellectual contribution but has had effects beyond that rarified arena? My god, the guy calls his blog "Sic et Non," presumably a reference to scholasticism, but the value of the scholastics is precisely that their work had significant and long-lasting impact outside of the universities of Paris and Oxford and beyond the high middle ages. What book produced by the FARMSians looks like it might have that kind of impact within Mormonism? Come to think of it, what books have they actually published since Nibley? Sorenson and Skousen are the only ones who come to mind. I find it revealing that Peterson focuses on the Mormon presence in institutions, as if mere membership in a club constitutes intellectual contribution.
The FARMSians seem to take it as a given that Mormonism has intellectual substance merely because of its cosmic claims; their progressive bêtes noires accept the standard academic assumption that the concept of intellectual substance is simply a tool of power. The result from both camps is blithering nonsense. Peterson can disturb this balance of vapidity by publishing his multi-volume Mormon
Summa he promised long ago—any news on a publication date yet?
Daniel Peterson wrote:I would, of course, agree with Mr. Cahill that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints hasn’t yet produced its equivalent of St. Thomas Aquinas’s Summa Theologica. However, mainstream Christianity took twelve centuries to produce St. Thomas — he died in March 1274; it’s not coincidental, by the way, that one of my sons, born on that same date, bears his name — and the Restoration, not yet two centuries old, doesn’t seem to me to be doing dramatically worse on the intellectual front than the early Christians were at roughly AD 218.
He named his son after Thomas Aquinas, so that must be a start. But again, this personality behind the blog called "Sic et Non" seems wholly unaware of the whole Christian tradition going back to the sub-apostolic age. Let's start with that: who is the Mormon equivalent of Justin Martyr—Hugh Nibley, I suppose is more of a Tertullian—and any day now we should get our Aristides of Athens or Athenagoras or Tatian or Quadratus any other number of early Christian parallels. But let's not play that silly game; let's instead recognize that each of these were early parts of a tradition that already produced an Augustine or Maximus the Confessor—let's leave Aquinas or Abelard out of this for now—so where is that Mormon tradition in the making?
Daniel Peterson wrote:Moreover, for various reasons, I’m not convinced that Latter-day Saints should generate their own Summa Theologica. And St. Thomas himself might agree with me on that. The famous story is told of some sort of revelation given to him on 6 December 1273, roughly four months prior to his death, in the Dominican monastery at Naples. Although his works are voluminous, St. Thomas never wrote another line thereafter. He dictated nothing more to his socius, Reginald of Piperno. When Reginald begged him to continue with his work, Thomas replied “Reginald, I cannot, because all that I have written seems like straw to me [mihi videtur ut palea].”
He completely misses the point of this story. It's not that St. Thomas was suddenly struck by a sense that it had all been in vain—thus, there would be no reason for Mormons to engage in this futile process is how Peterson takes it—but that this experience showed St. Thomas (and really, the listeners to this story) that
even St. Thomas had barely scratched the surface of understanding. It is not an illustration of futility, as Peterson takes it, but an admiration of St. Thomas through the paradoxical expression of his humility. It is meant to motivate one to study in humility, not to take refuge in platitudes and evade the hard work of faithful intellection.
Daniel Peterson wrote:Failure to produce a Summa is not, in my judgment, tantamount to shallow superficiality. There is, I’m convinced, great depth in the doctrines of the Restoration — whether or not we’ve done much thus far to explore that depth.
Yes, for example? He's had forty years to feel St. Thomas's scratch marks. Nothing from this entry, or any other on his blog, suggests that he's been convinced this great intellectual depth exists because, as he would have us believe, he has waded into it. We get nothing but splashing in shallow puddles from
Sic et Non. It is a travesty that this blog title appears in Google just beneath the Wikipedia of the real
Sic et Non. It should be many, many pages away from that venerable work.
Daniel Peterson wrote:But the Church and the Gospel aren’t intended solely or even primarily for Thomist philosophers or Hegelians. Our services and Sunday school classes aren’t academic seminars in historiography or systematic theology. Like every other broad demographic group, the Saints are mostly people who don’t spend hours each day worrying about ontology, epistemology, counterfactual conditionals, or Angst in the works of Sartre. And the saving message of the Gospel is for them, every bit as much as it is for intellectuals and artistes.
Again, completely missing the point of what people like St. Thomas accomplished and the point of fostering an intellectual tradition in the first place. And as it turns out, Mormons who think about Mormonism for more than a few minutes and then go online to explore their curious actually are confronted by serious questions of ontology, epistemology, counterfactual conditionals ("what if I had experienced more of life before dropping two years of my life, ten years of tithing, and having three kids with this person..."?) and experience tremendous angst.
Only an intellectual could retreat like this into a soft bed of cheap platitudes, supported by nothing but half-grasped anecdotes: "You commoners don't need to worry about this stuff—trust me, for I named my son after a famous smart person and I am a smart person for a living!—just go to church and be content with what they give you there. Beyond that, it's much too difficult to understand. Just leave that to me."
"As to any slivers of light or any particles of darkness of the past, we forget about them."
—B. Redd McConkie