John Gee's book review and thoughts:
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John Gee's book review and thoughts:
I was reading John Gee's book review. The one thing that disturbed me at the end was his thoughts about athiests and believers: that if athiest's are right then LDS are wrong and no one will be able to tell each other that because everyone will be dead , but if believers (LDS) are right, then they will be the one laughing.
http://farms.BYU.edu/display.php?table=review&id=296
"Larson never deals with one issue that lurks in the background: the cost of renouncing the Latter-day Saint faith for what amounts to atheism. If the atheists are right, and the gospel is not true, there is no resurrection of the dead; when a man is dead, that is the end thereof. If the gospel is true, however, death is not the end. If atheism is true, at death Latter-day Saints suffer the same fate as the atheists, but the atheists will not even be around to gloat about it. Less than twenty years after his death, Ferguson has largely been forgotten by those who study the Book of Mormon or work in Mesoamerican archaeology. Twenty years from now, it seems likely that relatively few people will read Larson's arguments or this review of them. Two hundred years from now, Stan Larson and Thomas Stuart Ferguson will be probably be known only to a handful of academics, if that. Two thousand years from now, who would possibly be interested?
If, however, the gospel is true, all of this changes: Stan Larson will still be around, as will the author of this review and anyone who reads it. We can all laugh ourselves silly (or weep) at the flawed arguments that Larson tries to muster. Only if the gospel is true does any of this mean anything at all. Larson seemingly wants the reader to give up the meaning of life and the weight of eternal glory, and offers nothing in return. Like the mugger who demands one's wallet, and takes the credit cards as well as the cash, those who seek to steal the testimonies of Latter-day Saints never inform their victims of the other things they are taking away. A decent atheist may not believe that life has meaning for himself but he would not take away that which gives joy to others.
Of the many problems and flaws of this book, I have dealt here with only a few. Why should the reader waste time on this book when there are more pleasant, important, and worthwhile ways on which to spend it?"
I actually believe that athiests or those who say they don't know may have a more respect for life since this maybe all they have where others who are so sure of an afterlife are caught up in that thought and may miss the roses on the side of the road.
http://farms.BYU.edu/display.php?table=review&id=296
"Larson never deals with one issue that lurks in the background: the cost of renouncing the Latter-day Saint faith for what amounts to atheism. If the atheists are right, and the gospel is not true, there is no resurrection of the dead; when a man is dead, that is the end thereof. If the gospel is true, however, death is not the end. If atheism is true, at death Latter-day Saints suffer the same fate as the atheists, but the atheists will not even be around to gloat about it. Less than twenty years after his death, Ferguson has largely been forgotten by those who study the Book of Mormon or work in Mesoamerican archaeology. Twenty years from now, it seems likely that relatively few people will read Larson's arguments or this review of them. Two hundred years from now, Stan Larson and Thomas Stuart Ferguson will be probably be known only to a handful of academics, if that. Two thousand years from now, who would possibly be interested?
If, however, the gospel is true, all of this changes: Stan Larson will still be around, as will the author of this review and anyone who reads it. We can all laugh ourselves silly (or weep) at the flawed arguments that Larson tries to muster. Only if the gospel is true does any of this mean anything at all. Larson seemingly wants the reader to give up the meaning of life and the weight of eternal glory, and offers nothing in return. Like the mugger who demands one's wallet, and takes the credit cards as well as the cash, those who seek to steal the testimonies of Latter-day Saints never inform their victims of the other things they are taking away. A decent atheist may not believe that life has meaning for himself but he would not take away that which gives joy to others.
Of the many problems and flaws of this book, I have dealt here with only a few. Why should the reader waste time on this book when there are more pleasant, important, and worthwhile ways on which to spend it?"
I actually believe that athiests or those who say they don't know may have a more respect for life since this maybe all they have where others who are so sure of an afterlife are caught up in that thought and may miss the roses on the side of the road.
Last edited by Guest on Mon Sep 03, 2007 9:36 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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"Of the many problems and flaws of this book, I have dealt here with only a few. Why should the reader waste time on this book when there are more pleasant, important, and worthwhile ways on which to spend it?"
Perhaps he could answer the question himself, since he has wasted no small amount of time on it. Or perhaps it is only for the elite guardians of the LDS Church to examine evidence and arguments for the many valets of the organization, relying on the apologetic heroes to guide them in the right path.
Perhaps he could answer the question himself, since he has wasted no small amount of time on it. Or perhaps it is only for the elite guardians of the LDS Church to examine evidence and arguments for the many valets of the organization, relying on the apologetic heroes to guide them in the right path.
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Is this just another version of Pascal's wager?
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.
Penn & Teller
http://www.mormonmesoamerica.com
Penn & Teller
http://www.mormonmesoamerica.com
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The Land of Punt
I have now read Gee's review of Larson's book, and I have to say that I find it disappointing, to say the least.
Let me point out what seems to be one of the most common errors of Book of Mormon apologia that Gee, for all of his training, indulges in all the same.
In his excursus on the Egyptian archaeological problem of the land of Punt, Gee likens an issue for which there is easily identifiable ancient evidence (there are ancient inscriptions about Punt, after all) to the problem of Book of Mormon archaeology, for which we have no comparable ancient evidence. Since we have no comparable ancient evidence for the Book of Mormon, what makes the Punt case applicable? Gee simply proceeds as though it were without addressing this obvious problem.
Gee then presents one Peters' theory that Punt was in Zimbabwe, and then comments, "if someone, convinced by the flawed arguments of Peters, announced because there was no archaeological evidence of Punt from Zimbabwe that he no longer believed that Hatsepshut inscriptions were historical, one would be inclined to think that person foolish."
Indeed, one would, but that is not just because evidence for Punt might exist elsewhere, it is also because there is ample evidence in favor of the antiquity of these inscriptions and their historical context (Hatshepsut). Sadly, for Mormon apologists and scholars, similar evidence cannot be identified for the Book of Mormon. So the real question about Ferguson is not why he concluded the Book of Mormon to be a 19th century document after failing to find his evidence, but why he took off for Mesoamerica looking for Zarahemla when there was so little to go on in the first place. Obviously, he was not as prudent as the Egyptologists who refused to mount archaeological expeditions to Punt.
Then Gee brings up our lack of archaeological knowledge concerning where his ancestors lived in Kirtland and Nauvoo. Well, we know that Kirtland and Nauvoo existed, and if Gee had no Mormon ancestors, he wouldn't be writing these reviews. The non-existence of Nephites would not have similarly dampened the creative efforts of Joseph Smith to create them.
Well, enough of that. Gee ends with his version of Pascal's wager, which has already been pointed out here. I would like to add one more tidbit on this. I think that indulging in faulty reasoning and believing in things that are not true does have a human cost. When the world is calling out for effective answers to real problems, it strikes me as cavalier to the point of dangerous irresponsibility to claim that dogged adherence to falsehoods, be they erroneous scientific or religious ideas, only means something in the next world. I live in this world, and if Mormonism is not true, I would prefer that people with the IQ of a John Gee devote their attentions to worthwhile problems whose solutions will bear real fruit in the here and now.
Let me point out what seems to be one of the most common errors of Book of Mormon apologia that Gee, for all of his training, indulges in all the same.
In his excursus on the Egyptian archaeological problem of the land of Punt, Gee likens an issue for which there is easily identifiable ancient evidence (there are ancient inscriptions about Punt, after all) to the problem of Book of Mormon archaeology, for which we have no comparable ancient evidence. Since we have no comparable ancient evidence for the Book of Mormon, what makes the Punt case applicable? Gee simply proceeds as though it were without addressing this obvious problem.
Gee then presents one Peters' theory that Punt was in Zimbabwe, and then comments, "if someone, convinced by the flawed arguments of Peters, announced because there was no archaeological evidence of Punt from Zimbabwe that he no longer believed that Hatsepshut inscriptions were historical, one would be inclined to think that person foolish."
Indeed, one would, but that is not just because evidence for Punt might exist elsewhere, it is also because there is ample evidence in favor of the antiquity of these inscriptions and their historical context (Hatshepsut). Sadly, for Mormon apologists and scholars, similar evidence cannot be identified for the Book of Mormon. So the real question about Ferguson is not why he concluded the Book of Mormon to be a 19th century document after failing to find his evidence, but why he took off for Mesoamerica looking for Zarahemla when there was so little to go on in the first place. Obviously, he was not as prudent as the Egyptologists who refused to mount archaeological expeditions to Punt.
Then Gee brings up our lack of archaeological knowledge concerning where his ancestors lived in Kirtland and Nauvoo. Well, we know that Kirtland and Nauvoo existed, and if Gee had no Mormon ancestors, he wouldn't be writing these reviews. The non-existence of Nephites would not have similarly dampened the creative efforts of Joseph Smith to create them.
Well, enough of that. Gee ends with his version of Pascal's wager, which has already been pointed out here. I would like to add one more tidbit on this. I think that indulging in faulty reasoning and believing in things that are not true does have a human cost. When the world is calling out for effective answers to real problems, it strikes me as cavalier to the point of dangerous irresponsibility to claim that dogged adherence to falsehoods, be they erroneous scientific or religious ideas, only means something in the next world. I live in this world, and if Mormonism is not true, I would prefer that people with the IQ of a John Gee devote their attentions to worthwhile problems whose solutions will bear real fruit in the here and now.
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CaliforniaKid wrote:I think the editors of the FARMS Review would do well to be a little more careful about what they accept for publication. I mean really, this guy is embarassing.
Obviously, the editor of the FARMS Review doesn't agree.
He's the same idiot, though, who wrote letters of recommendation when John Gee applied successfully to the graduate program at the University of California at Berkeley and then later to Yale University, both of which, clearly staffed by idiots of similarly degraded caliber, gave Gee graduate degrees. And he's the same idiot who, serving on Gee's rank advancement committee, solicited and received letters from Egyptologists in North America and Europe who, as it turns out, were likewise idiots and praised Gee to the skies. And he's idiotic enough to observe Gee's quite impressive pace of presentations and publications on three continents and to think that it says something about the quality of Gee's work.
If only the University were savvy enough to come to anti-Mormon message boards for its scholarly review procedures!
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So are we to conclude that you, Daniel, actually think Gee's argument here is a good one? Care to defend it?
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.
Penn & Teller
http://www.mormonmesoamerica.com
Penn & Teller
http://www.mormonmesoamerica.com
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Daniel Peterson wrote:CaliforniaKid wrote:I think the editors of the FARMS Review would do well to be a little more careful about what they accept for publication. I mean really, this guy is embarassing.
Obviously, the editor of the FARMS Review doesn't agree.
He's the same idiot, though, who wrote letters of recommendation when John Gee applied successfully to the graduate program at the University of California at Berkeley and then later to Yale University, both of which, clearly staffed by idiots of similarly degraded caliber, gave Gee graduate degrees. And he's the same idiot who, serving on Gee's rank advancement committee, solicited and received letters from Egyptologists in North America and Europe who, as it turns out, were likewise idiots and praised Gee to the skies. And he's idiotic enough to observe Gee's quite impressive pace of presentations and publications on three continents and to think that it says something about the quality of Gee's work.
If only the University were savvy enough to come to anti-Mormon message boards for its scholarly review procedures!
who is the person that recommended John Gee and what has the person published.