dartagnan wrote:David will never discuss his apologetics or these arguments with "fellow scholars." He is still just a kid who likes too woo his audience with tales about his associations with other Brandeis scholars.
In all his talk about how only objective scholars are good scholars, he has already paved the way for a reputation as an apologist, which is one of the worst things a scholar can be. And it makes him a hypocrite for he will never be objective. Scholars don't enter the field of biblical Hebrew for the sole purpose of trying to pry evidence for a NRM.
Do you think any of them would care about his crazy theories about how th divine council proves Joseph Smith was a prophet?
It would be the death of him as far as his so-called career in academia goes.
But if he ever does make a name for himself in the field of biblical scholarship, he has already written enough nonsense on these forums to destroy whatever future reputation he might have.
Indeed, he is still young, and depending on his eventual goal (a teaching position at BYU?), he will have to temper his argument to fit his goal. My point is that he learn to control his ego (which is altogether too healthy for the strength of his argument at this point) before it consumes his passion. I'd hate to see him turn into a clone of DCP and a few other professors I've known over the years, whose limited experience in the real world only reinforced their lack of empathy for real world problems . And if the field of Biblical scholarship is so unforgiving as to judge him by the arguments he makes so early in his career, then they also need to look to their own pasts, when surely they were not so well established.
He needs to bounce his arguments off well-versed non-scholars, because eventually, no matter where his career options take him, he will need to be able to reach that audience. I see him as still teachable. Perhaps it is these rose colored glasses I wear that I see the man behind the ego, the student behind the argument. And I think it would help him if he was able to see his argument through your eyes, or Fort's or CK's.