Mister Scratch wrote:
Oh, it is? According to whom? You? I would think that those who put in the effort to obtain a Ph.D. do so for reasons beyond mere employment. Relatively speaking, university professors do not make as much money as they would in the private sector. Further, I think you overlook the 'love' factor---I.e., people go into these fields because they genuinely like/love what they are studying, and believe that they can make a contribution to the field, and to humanity's body of knowledge writ-large.
Not to many people have the means to allow themselves to go to school and obtain degrees for fun. We all have to have jobs to support ourselves. Who do you know that can invest $100,000 in pursuit of a degree that would be of no value in looking for a job, post school?
Sure, people love their fields of study. But they have to eat, too. Professors make upwards of $80,000 a year, even in a lower tier school like Portland State. That is not chump change. Beats MacDonald's by a miile.
Mister Scratch wrote: Ideally, people w/ Mormon Studies degrees would be able to hold positions in theology departments across the country, if not the world. Of course, this would entail LDS scholars branching out into the larger world, rather than hiding behind the aegis of FARMS/FAIR. Their embarrassment is holding them back.
You have got to be kidding! With the predjucice against Mormons? My daughter couldn't even get a job as a psychiatric aide in a Baptist hospital. She had more years of experience in the job than any other applicant, but the personnel director explained that most of the staff in the hospital "wouldn't be comfortable" working with a Mormon. How did he know she was LDS? Her degree was from BYU.
So you think our well educated Book of Mormon scholars are going to take their degrees in Book of Mormon and be hired to teach theology anywhere except in Utah? Would you be interested in some ocean view property near Phoenix, AZ?