Trevor wrote:As it stands, it is consistent with almost everything I have ever read or observed about Boyd K. Packer, and I do not believe he is a bad person.
I agree that Boyd K. Packer is not a bad person.
I don't think that Mike Quinn is a bad person, either.
Ray A wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote:Sorry, Ray. I think that's nonsense.
Mind reading, Dan?
?????
Reading what you wrote.
Trevor wrote:What makes you think it's "nonsense"?
My conviction that it's grossly false.
Doctor Scratch wrote:Did the $20,000 you were paid as FARMS Chair come out of your BYU salary, as you have claimed in the past? Or, was it an additional payment made on top of your BYU salary?
We've been over this a hundred and one times or so.
You're welcome to re-read my prior responses on the subject if you've really forgotten what I've said previously.
Ray A wrote:There were also Mormon scholars praising his work.
A dwindling tribe, as the years passed.
Ray A wrote:In a very real sense Quinn's book is an academic version of the Hofmann forgeries.
With that extreme statement his credibility as a historian lies exactly where Quinn said it did: subverted by faith.
One sentence (that you may or may not have understood in the sense it was intended -- I personally think it's strong, but not beyond the pale -- out of a 170-page-long review-essay.
Incidentally, for those who would like to view this horrifying document in its native habitat, it's on line at
http://mi.BYU.edu/publications/review/? ... m=2&id=364And here's another one, on the same topic:
posting.php?mode=quote&f=1&p=246673Ray A wrote:I believe it was a broad combination of factors. It's difficult to say how much influence FARMS would have had, since the Review only got going in 1989. I think that by that time Quinn was already "dead meat".
Careful. Scratchite orthodoxy holds the
FARMS Review responsible for Quinn's woes.
harmony wrote:I'm sure there are hundreds of junior colleges throughout the country who would be delighted to have a professor of Quinn's caliber on their staff... should he actually want to work. A PhD in History is nothing to sneeze at, even if his publishing is mainly LDS history.
I would tend to agree. So the fact that Dr. Quinn has actually failed to get a teaching position in history strikes me as quite mysterious. I have no idea why it's so. But I'm reasonably confident that Elder Packer and I control the hiring decisions at no more than 40% of America's hundreds if not thousands of colleges and universities.
Trevor wrote:It is moments like that one and the Tvedtnes-Murphy incident that pretty much obviate the existence of Scratchoscopy. Hopefully incidents like that one are in the past for the Maxwell Institute.
In what way is the Maxwell Institute responsible for John Tvedtnes's action? Was it done on the orders or with the encouragement of the Maxwell Institute? You or Scratch may certainly be in a better position to know, but, so far as I'm aware, it was not.