Buffalo wrote:Pahoran wrote:Okay, so when you whiiiiiined about "ad hominem" and "vox mopologia" etc, what you really meant was that you assumed the article would be laden with such things because you didn't like what someone else had written about Mister Palmer.
(You are wrong, by the way, that those articles are "ad hominem" in any meaningful way. It was Palmer who chose to make himself, his background and his credentials an issue in the debate. The reviewers were examining the claims he made for himself. If he hadn't wanted those claims examined, he shouldn't have made them.)
By contrast, your expressions of anti-FARMS prejudice are classic ad hominem. You dismissed the article, without once engaging any of its arguments, based entirely upon your expectation of what "Mopologists" are likely to write.
Regards,
Pahoran
Two observations about your response:
1) So you're saying when FARMS makes ad hominem attacks, it must be the fault of the target of those attacks. He was ASKING for it, dressing all sexy like that.
No, I'm not. (Cute attempt at poisoning the well, by the way.)
What I'm saying is this: Palmer published a book called An Insider's View of Mormon Origins. He marketed the book on the strength of his standing as an "Insider." If you don't believe he's an Insider, just look at his impressive CES resume. Grant Palmer's an Insider, and he's here to tell you how he and his fellow Insiders, the members of that exclusive club of those who are really in the know, view Mormon origins.
In other words, he put himself forward as an authority.
Therefore, questioning the basis of his claimed "Insider" status -- including, but not limited to, the impressiveness of his CES resume -- is both relevant to his claims and appropriate to a review of his book.
Buffalo wrote:2) Pahoran doesn't know what "ad hominem" means. (Hint: what is the translation of ad hominem?)
It is "to the man." The ad hominem fallacy is the fallacy of dismissing arguments or evidence, not upon their merits, but on the basis of something irrelevant about the person (or group) presenting them.
Examples:
"Sure Professor Longwind says that the economic outlook is poor, but what do you expect? Professor Longwind is a Democrat."
"Senator Goldberg argues for the abolition of the death penalty. Don't be taken in by his sophistries; Senator Goldberg once argued for the relaxation of immigration laws, too."
"FARMS published a review of George D. Smith's Nauvoo Polygamy. Don't bother reading that stuff; it's always just full of ad hominem."
By contrast, Grant Palmer's non-insider status is directly relevant to his claim of insider status. His unimpressive CES resume is directly relevant to his inflated claims about his CES resume. The fact that he was surreptitiously circulating the same anti-Mormon material in the 1980's is directly relevant to his claim to be reporting the latest scholarship being produced in faithful LDS circles. All of these points are relevant to his status as an authority on the views of the "Insiders."
And George D. Smith's misuse of sources is directly relevant to the conclusions he adduces from those sources.
Regards,
Pahoran