Posted on 06/19/2007 9:15:11 PM PDT by Dajjal
It sounds to me like Spengler is unnecessarily disgruntled. Perhaps he could do more good by attempting to collaborate with Spencer. Spengler complains that Pope Benedict threw fat on the fire, then “backed off.” I don’t consider what the Pope did to be a “backing off.” He said what he said, then ventured to Turkey even though there were assassination threats. What did Spengler want him to do? Carry a sword with him? As my good-natured adversary here at FR says in his tagline - “history takes time.”
Good post. Good point.
By their fruits you shall know them.
My own interest in the above essay was mostly Spengler's (again) suggesting the theory that textual criticism might reveal that the Qur'an is an 8th or 9th cent. concoction, spliced together from various works to justify a pre-existing Arab rule. Plus his insight, via Rosenzweig, that jihad is a Muslim sacrament.
I have my own gripe against Spencer (and Spengler, and dozens of others, too, for that matter) for ignoring the role of Muslim End-Time beliefs in the jihad. But I wasn't intending to "take a side" in this feud.
Have you read her book "The Bible - an autobiography?" I'm reading it and it seems that she believes that the Bible should be read as poetry or myth, that there is no literal truth in it. I think she is play good cop/bad cop with the atheists. It's that or she's attempting to create a meta world religion based on the golden rule. I have read other accounts that say she is playing with history like putty, shaping and twisting it to her own ends. And I do agree with you that she has a strong bias: politically left of center for all her snipping at Bush, at Christian fundamentalists and apologizing to Islam. I'm curious to know what you think of her.
I have not read “the Bible - an autobiography”. Frankly, I now try to avoid her and her work. I do agree with you that she “plays” with history. I find her use of sources more selective than is reasonable (all history has some use of selective sources, due to topic/page constraints if nothing else) and she only chooses sources she can manipulate.
The biggest problem with modern historiography is those who write inflammatory or appeasing politically correct popular history are often considered “great scholars” even when their work is sub-par.
I am not saying all widely respected scholars are bad historians (I love Carolyn Walker Bynum, for example), but there are many poor historians who are considered “great” just because of their biases, not their work. I put Armstrong into this category.
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