Which is a completely absurd statement. What you really mean to say is that you disagree with the opinions of thse who are pursuing knowledge dispassionately and thus have to turn to pseudo scholarship to support your opinions.
If you think people who apologize for Islam are not passionate in their apologetics, then you are out of touch with them. I see more passion from the apologists than I do with Kramer, Cook, Pipes or Spencer. Passion, usually in the form of political fanaticism (i.e. anti-Israel), is what drives the most "reputable" scholars; those favored by Muslims, like Juan Cole, Edward Said, John Esposito, and of course, Karen Armstrong.
My opinion has been and will contnue to be developed by critically analyzing both sides and reaching a conclusion based on the evidence. There are learned professors who argue point A and there are a ton who argue point B. The point A crowd wins my mind, not because I had my mind already made up as you like to believe, but because the point B crowd never debates the issues. Instead they offer fluffy apologetic nonsense that is repeatedly refuted by the A crowd.
Take for instance the absurd notion that
jihad only refers to warfare when it is
defensive. Only two types of people would make this statement: 1) a complete idiot or 2) an apologist for Islam. This is what's being passed around as gospel by the BYU Islam experts. I can cite a dozen or so experts who refute this assertion, which I have in the past.
Take another example. Bill Hamblin said that the people under Islamic rule "could do whatever they wanted." This is a direct quotation and it is available on mp3 for download. He denied saying it apparently because he is blinded by his own apologetic tendency and can't keep up with his own knee-jerk apologetics.
They could do whatever they wanted huh? This is the type of "expertise" people are being fed about Islam over in Utah. But hey, that's just good business, because in the field of MES, you pretty much
have to take this obsequent approach if reputation has to come before precision. Otherwise you're going to be in danger of social homicide from the academic crowd. In MES political correctness comes first, while truth and accuracy is just a nuisance.
Now if you can make an argument that these two assertions are in fact historically accurate, I promise to abandon the A crowd and accept whatever else you say about the subject. But we both know you won't, mainly because you can't.
By contrast, please illustrate just two points where, oh let's say, Robert Spencer wrote inaccurately about Islam. Just two. He is considered the least educated and most polemical of group A, so this should be an easy task for you.
How odd. Which books of Armstrong (who I like as an author) has Oxford published?
I didn't said it did, only that it would. Daniel Pipes offered a blistering assessment of an Oxford Encyclopedia on Islam that was merely an apologetic tome in and of itself.
Also how hypocritical, you criticize and ex-Catholic as having an axe to grind against Catholicism, but cannot see yourself as an ex-Mormon with an axe to grind against Mormonism.
If I were an ex-Mormon you might have something to work with there, but only if I were an ex-Mormon who was also writing a book that sings praises for Evangelical Christainity, would you even begin to establish a point of hypocrisy.
“All knowledge of reality starts from experience and ends in it...Propositions arrived at by purely logical means are completely empty as regards reality." - Albert Einstein