Daniel Peterson wrote:By dismissing the book as "irretrievably flawed" apart from any consideration of the evidence adduced in it or the quality of the analysis exhibited in it -- the two fundamental and salient criteria on which to judge a work of history -- and on the basis merely of the authors' religious adherence and employment, you commit the classic logical fallacy of "poisoning the well of discourse" (on which, see the historical background of John Henry Newman's coining of the phrase) and an absolutely classic ad hominem.
Perhaps, but didn't beastie, in
this thread, adequately prove that authorial bias did indeed taint the book beyond any hope of redemption?
If nothing else, after all is said and done, the following blank
still cannot be filled in: "Although the authors of
Massacre at Mountain Meadows had a conflict of interest, it is clear that this conflict didn't compromise the book in any way, because if it had, then they wouldn't have included the part about ________________."
rcrocket wrote:I'm kind of curious as to what kind of person you are in real life, using vuglarities when discussing religion with people of faith? Make sure you make gas oven jokes with the friends of yours who are Jews.
If you find the use of the word "Morgasm" to be on equal footing with the Holocaust, then I respectfully suggest that you're doing the victims a grave disservice by trivializing their memories so.
Brent Metcalfe wrote:At the risk of sounding heretical, I concur with Dan: the Joseph Smith Papers project is the most scholarly endeavor sponsored by the LDS church—at least in my lifetime. (I purchased multiple copies of the first volume for me and my fiancée.) The JSP volumes should be in the library of every serious student of Mormonism.
Perhaps, but did the LDS church allow any items to slip through which reflect in any way negatively on either Joseph Smith or Mormonism in general?
"Finally, for your rather strange idea that miracles are somehow linked to the amount of gay sexual gratification that is taking place would require that primitive Christianity was launched by gay sex, would it not?"
--Louis Midgley