Non-Lds Scholars Debunk Meldrum
#1
Posted 26 April 2012 - 09:39 PM
http://www.csicop.or...an_alternate_re
http://www.csicop.or..._false_messages
http://www.csicop.or...e_real_messages
They said in part "Each of us was interviewed for this film. None of us was asked directly for our opinion on what turned out to be its underlying claim; that Old World civilizations played an active role in the development of Native American cultures, especially the mound builders. Instead, we were asked general questions about Native American societies, their remarkable technological achievements, genetic histories, and we were also asked to comment on the biases of many nineteenth-century historians and archaeologists concerning the abilities of the native people of North America. We fear that the context of our general remarks as they currently appear in the film might lead viewers to conclude that our words on these subjects provide support for the film’s claims. That would be a mistake. In fact, our remarks, if presented in an unedited form, show clearly that we reject the assertions made in the finished documentary concerning a non-native source for the complex cultures of Native America."
http://petra-archaeo...merica-dvd.html
You can also read more of their thoughts on the heartland model on these websites:
http://reports.ncse....icle/view/23/14
http://www.dispatch....gical-spat.html
http://ohio-archaeol...zations-of.html
#2
Posted 26 April 2012 - 10:58 PM
anyone?
Thanks livey111us for the links. I have been in contact off and on with both Dr. Lepper and Dr. Feder. I am hoping to get Dr. Feder to write an intro to my paper, that is if I ever get around to writing it.
but life keeps on happening.
#3
Posted 26 April 2012 - 11:24 PM
livy111us, on 26 April 2012 - 09:39 PM, said:
Well, I have a generally poor opinion of the NCSE, but this one takes some cake.
http://www.fairlds.o...rian-Stubbs.pdf
If their languages were there, they were there, and if they were there, their cultures were there. The cocaine mummies are just icing on that cake.
Edited by Log, 26 April 2012 - 11:39 PM.
If my mental processes are determined wholly by the motions of atoms in my brain, I have no reason to suppose my beliefs are true ... and hence I have no reason for supposing my brain to be composed of atoms. - J. B. S. Haldane
#4
Posted 27 April 2012 - 05:16 PM
Quote
To make Book of Mormon archaeology at all kind of believable, my friend .... has gone this route: He has compared, in a general way, the civilizations of Mexico and Mesoamerica with the civilizations of the western part of the Old World, and he has made a study of how diffusion happens, really very good diffusion studies. He's tried to build a reasonable picture that these two civilizations weren't all that different from each other. Well, this is true of all civilizations, actually; there's nothing new under the sun.
So he has built up what he hopes is a convincing background in which you can put Book of Mormon archaeology, and he's a very serious, bright guy. But I'm sorry to say that I don't really buy more than a part of this. I don't really think you can argue, no matter how bright you are, that what's said in the Book of Mormon applies to the peoples that we study in Mexico and Central America. That's one way of doing it -- to build up a kind of convincing background, a kind of stage set to this -- but there's no actors. That's the problem.
---//---
How do they cope with this? I'll be the first to admit I don't know; I really don't. I don't really know how my friends that are Mormon archaeologists cope with this non-evidence, the fact that the evidence really hasn't shown up -- how they make the jump from the data to faith or from faith back to the data, because the data and the faith are two different worlds. There's simply no way to bring them together.
It appears more than just Brother Meldrum has problems with their geography theories. You know who Dr. Michael Coe is?
#5
Posted 28 April 2012 - 03:00 AM
Log, on 26 April 2012 - 11:24 PM, said:
Stubbs not only has poor English skills but he also emphatically states in his presentation that: "The critics of the Book of the Mormon say that no one has shown evidence of any American Indian language being descended from Hebrew or Egyptian, discounting the Book of Mormon, or no one has shown that to the satisfactory of the linguistic community."
And he concludes with: "So when the critics say there is no language evidence for the Book of Mormon that has been accepted by the linguistic community, they are correct, there is nothing *yet* that has been accepted by the linguistic community,"
'Yet' is a pretty big word in semantics. It means that every single thing Stubbs states is supposition, a link between languages that only he and a few others see. I don't find his evidence compelling. The links are tenuous and are derived from his preconceived ideas regarding LDS scripture.
When linguist scholars find a language link between Native American languages to Hebrew or Egyptian they will publish regardless of whether they are Mormon or not. Until such time I guess "no language evidence" means "no language evidence".
#6
Posted 28 April 2012 - 03:20 AM
Log, on 26 April 2012 - 11:24 PM, said:
Two attempts to replicate Balbanova's finds of cocaine failed, suggesting "that either Balabanova and her associates are misinterpreting their results or that the samples of mummies tested by them have been mysteriously exposed to cocaine."[26] http://en.wikipedia....oceanic_contact
As one might expect, the papers were greeted with disbelief, as if they'd announced that in the days of the pharaohs the sun rose in the west but didn't acknowledge that there was anything odd about this. Although the criticisms were politely phrased, the subtext was unmistakable: Listen, you morons, if you're going to present results that fly in the face of everything we know about ancient trade, botany, etc., you're going to need more than seven paragraphs and a chart to convince us. Among the possibilities suggested: (1) The samples were contaminated. (2) The mummies were fakes. (3) The analytical techniques were faulty. (4) Related Old World alkaloids might have been misidentified.
The Germans replied: We have no explanation; further research is needed. You can almost hear the eyeballs roll.
http://www.straightd...cocaine-mummies
Do you have any evidence that studies done by someone else, other than the German team, have independently verified any of these substances in any mummies skin (not hair samples which can be, relatively easily, contaminated)?
#7
Posted 28 April 2012 - 08:43 PM
#8
Posted 28 April 2012 - 08:45 PM
bcuzbcuz, on 28 April 2012 - 03:00 AM, said:
Stubbs not only has poor English skills but he also emphatically states in his presentation that: "The critics of the Book of the Mormon say that no one has shown evidence of any American Indian language being descended from Hebrew or Egyptian, discounting the Book of Mormon, or no one has shown that to the satisfactory of the linguistic community."
And he concludes with: "So when the critics say there is no language evidence for the Book of Mormon that has been accepted by the linguistic community, they are correct, there is nothing *yet* that has been accepted by the linguistic community,"
'Yet' is a pretty big word in semantics. It means that every single thing Stubbs states is supposition, a link between languages that only he and a few others see. I don't find his evidence compelling. The links are tenuous and are derived from his preconceived ideas regarding LDS scripture.
When linguist scholars find a language link between Native American languages to Hebrew or Egyptian they will publish regardless of whether they are Mormon or not. Until such time I guess "no language evidence" means "no language evidence".
You may also recall that he said every linguist he has shown his research to has agreed with his conclusions. He is not isolated in his beliefs.
#9
Posted 28 April 2012 - 08:47 PM
Jeff Holt, on 26 April 2012 - 10:58 PM, said:
anyone?
Thanks livey111us for the links. I have been in contact off and on with both Dr. Lepper and Dr. Feder. I am hoping to get Dr. Feder to write an intro to my paper, that is if I ever get around to writing it.
but life keeps on happening.
I am anxiously awaiting your publication. I am sure it will be excellent.
#10
Posted 28 April 2012 - 09:34 PM
#11
Posted 28 April 2012 - 09:35 PM
livy111us, on 28 April 2012 - 08:43 PM, said:
The Christ in America video?
#12
Posted 29 April 2012 - 07:56 PM
#13
Posted 29 April 2012 - 08:17 PM
Tepui, on 27 April 2012 - 05:16 PM, said:
Knowing livy111us personally, I'm quite confident that he is intimately familiar with Dr. Coe's various analyses of the Book of Mormon.
There are also several LDS scholars who have a very high opinion of Dr. Coe as a Mayanist, but who nevertheless disagree with his conclusions about the Book of Mormon, primarily because they don't believe he has taken a very serious look at it. Perhaps that's my own conclusion, but it has been what I've generally observed.
Kevin Christensen - a frequent poster here - offers the following rebuttal to Coe's treatment of Mormon Mesoamericanists in the FARMS Review.
http://maxwellinstit...22&num=2&id=810
Quote
The rather interesting discovery made just a few years back was that I, and many other Mesoamericanists, had simply made some incorrect assumptions about the [Book of Mormon] text. The attempts of LDS archaeological apologetics [were] for years focused on finding the Christian or the Hebrew—or who knows what—in Mesoamerican archaeology.
The difference came when I started looking for Mesoamerica in the Book of Mormon instead of the Book of Mormon in Mesoamerica. Oddly enough, there is a huge difference, and the nature and the quality of the correlations [have] changed with that single shift in perspective.
When people ask for one thing that is the most important correlation, I have a hard time coming up with one, because it isn't a single thing. It is that the entire text of the Book of Mormon works better in a Mesoamerican context. Speeches suddenly have a context that makes them relevant instead of just preachy. The pressures leading to wars are understandable. The wars themselves have an explanation for their peculiar features. All of those things happen with a single interpretive framework that is in the right place at the right time. Even the demise of the Nephites happens at "the right time."
Against Sorenson's correlations, Coe raises questions about horses, metal, scripts, and the disappointments of Thomas Ferguson. He claims that there is a stage but no actors for the Book of Mormon story. Yet that conclusion seems to be based on the same kind of assumptions that led to Ferguson's disillusionment, and not on those held by Latter-day Saint archaeologists whose fieldwork Coe praises. While Latter-day Saint archaeologists produce archaeology that Coe respects, yet they see their findings in a different relation to the Book of Mormon text than Coe does—because they have different expectations of the text than he does.
Science historian and philosopher Thomas Kuhn observed that paradigm choice always involves deciding which problems are more significant to have solved. Suppose that in the ongoing Book of Mormon historicity debate we could swap currently plausible solutions for current problems. That is, suppose we had better evidence for metals and horses, a scrap of recognizably reformed Egyptian script, and even some profoundly unlikely DNA that somehow pointed directly to 600 BC Jerusalem. At the same time, suppose we did not have a unique fit for the river Sidon, nor an archaeologically suitable Cumorah, nor the rise and fall of major cultures at the right time (Olmec and Preclassic), nor a Zarahemla candidate that explained various circumstances in the text (physical, geographic, and linguistic), nor evidence of a major volcanic eruption at the right time, nor fortifications of the right kind, nor a candidate for the Waters of Mormon complete with a submerged city, nor a good candidate for the Gadianton movement, nor the other abundant cultural details that Sorenson, Gardner, Clark, and others have detailed. Suppose that Clark had demonstrated that the trend for Book of Mormon criticisms was moving consistently away from resolution of questions rather than toward it. And then for good measure, toss out all of the ancient Near Eastern correlations from Jerusalem through the Arabian desert to Nahom and Bountiful as well. Given that exchange of current solutions for current puzzles, would the present case for New World Book of Mormon historicity be stronger or weaker?
Edited by kolipoki09, 29 April 2012 - 08:20 PM.
"Morman [scholars] is just a bunch of white men trying to figure out how to better hide all there wives. and make it legal for you ppl to be able to vote legally without being jailed." - Ernie Tschikof
#14
Posted 29 April 2012 - 08:20 PM
Quote
#15
Posted 29 April 2012 - 09:16 PM
calmoriah, on 29 April 2012 - 08:20 PM, said:
And, in all fairness, that is the same language Meldrum used when he responded to Daniel Peterson's criticisms of the Heartlanders about a month ago.
In it, Meldrum refers to an (confidential?) e-mail where Peterson alludes to not paying much attention to Meldrum or his research.
[Note mods: If I'm violating a board policy here by summarizing an e-mail that was published elsewhere, I apologize. If you feel it necessary to remove this, I understand.]
However, I do think that the Maxwell Institute as a whole has - by comparison - done a much better job addressing Meldrum et al. than Coe has with LDS Mesoamericanists.
Edited by kolipoki09, 29 April 2012 - 09:21 PM.
"Morman [scholars] is just a bunch of white men trying to figure out how to better hide all there wives. and make it legal for you ppl to be able to vote legally without being jailed." - Ernie Tschikof
#16
Posted 29 April 2012 - 09:19 PM
kolipoki09, on 29 April 2012 - 09:16 PM, said:
And, in all fairness, that is the same language Meldrum used when he responded to Daniel Peterson's criticisms of the Heartlanders about a month ago.
In it, Meldrum refers to an (confidential?) e-mail where Peterson alludes to not paying much attention to Meldrum or his research.
[Note mods: If I'm violating a board policy here by summarizing an e-mail that was published elsewhere, I apologize. If you feel it necessary to remove this, I understand.]
How did a confidential email get public?
#17
Posted 29 April 2012 - 09:39 PM
#18
Posted 29 April 2012 - 09:39 PM
ERayR, on 29 April 2012 - 09:19 PM, said:
How did a confidential email get public?
Meldrum posted it on his website. Meldrum's own e-mails warn of legal action if any information is shared with anyone other than the specified recipient, unless otherwise authorized.
I don't know if the content of Peterson's e-mail was privileged, I'm only speculating (and cautious of possibly violating board policy by linking to it).
Edited by kolipoki09, 29 April 2012 - 09:40 PM.
"Morman [scholars] is just a bunch of white men trying to figure out how to better hide all there wives. and make it legal for you ppl to be able to vote legally without being jailed." - Ernie Tschikof
#19
Posted 29 April 2012 - 10:12 PM
livy111us, on 29 April 2012 - 09:39 PM, said:
#20
Posted 30 April 2012 - 09:46 AM
Edited by Jeff Holt, 30 April 2012 - 09:47 AM.
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