malaise wrote:A Mormon wants to find authorities who can tell him how to think? SHOCKING.
Not even slightly, O Independent Thinker.
You say that laments about the constraints imposed on human expression by concepts of reverence and good manners have gone on for "much of human history," and you cite, as your sole evidence, an eighteenth-century French thinker well known (notorious?) for his resistance to concepts of reverence and his disregard for notions of good manners and conventional behavior. I was hoping that you would be able to supply examples from "much of human history."
malaise wrote:I wasn't trying to say we should just accept whatever Rousseau and other writers from history have to say.
Nor was I saying that you said that.
I was simply curious as to who some of those "other writers from history" might be. "Much of human history" offers you a pretty wide field of potential candidates from which to choose.
***
LOL. Overlooked this one:
Doctor Scratch wrote:It's because DCP wants to sound smart and cultured while at the same time taking a pot-shot at the musical (which, as you rightly point out, he hasn't seen).
Typical Scratchian mind-reading. As accurate as ever.
Doctor Scratch wrote:I'm sure that he is really sorely wanting to take the musical down a peg or two in light of the critical acclaim it's received, along with all those Tony nominations you mentioned. He's probably really steamed about that.
Actually, I don't much care one way or the other. If anything,
as I have said in print, I tend to think the musical might perhaps do us some
good.
Doctor Scratch wrote:Nothing angers a Mopologist more than the thought of an "anti" work being successful. (Dr. Peterson really hated Big Love, too.)
Really? I wasn't aware that I really hated
Big Love. I've seldom thought about it, and feel no particular emotion toward it, positive or negative.
Have I ever expressed my seething hatred of it publicly? If anybody is going to have such a comment on file for ready access, you will. Do share. I honestly can't recall ever having said anything much about it, let alone voicing deep hatred for it.
Doctor Scratch wrote:The funny thing is that a good deal of the criticism in the linked review could easily and aptly be applied to stuff that's appeared in the FARMS Review.
Have you actually, through some mighty miracle, managed to read the allegedly inaccessible review?
If so, please do be specific about the many parallels between the
FARMS Review and
The Book of Mormon, as these can be derived from
The New Criterion.