Another Hamblin/Jenkins fix

Another Hamblin/Jenkins fix June 30, 2015

 

Ben Hur poster
Ancient monumental stone inscriptions such as this one, which apparently stands, thirty-five stories tall, somewhere near Hollywood, California, are comparatively rare in Mesoamerica and even less common in the Great Lakes region.

 

This is your one-stop shop for all your Hamblin-Jenkins needs:

 

Jenkins 11

 

Hamblin 19:  Why Methodology?

 

Jenkins 12:  Still No Evidence

 

Hamblin 18:  Why No Inscriptions?

 

Jenkins 13:  Short Comments

 

Jenkins 14:  On Faith

 

Jenkins 15

 

Hamblin 19:  Place Names (Emblem Glyphs)

 

Just for the record:  I’m more and more unimpressed with Professor Jenkins, both as regards his snarky tone and as regards substance, where he’s clearly out of his element.

 

It seems to me painfully obvious that, before one attempts to evaluate the state of the evidence regarding the claimed antiquity of the Book of Mormon, one first needs to establish the standards against which proposed relevant evidence should be evaluated.

 

“Measure twice, cut once,” as it were.

 

The “practical man,” impatient with those who want to think things through before undertaking a big task, often launches himself headlong into misconceived catastrophes.  In scholarship no less frequently than in other areas.

 

Professor Hamblin is precisely right in seeking methodological clarity and the establishment of relevant benchmarks.  To do otherwise would be to try to generate reliable data with uncalibrated instruments.  To weigh oneself on a scale with an uncertain zero-balance.  (“Wow!  I’ve lost fifteen pounds since yesterday!“)

 

 Posted from Newport Beach, California

 

 


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