As usual, unscholar manages to get most everything in his post wrong, and as usual, demonstrates a nearly absolute lack of reading comprehension, largely brought on by his dishonesty.
Poor, dumb, unscholar. You wrote:
: Thiele's criticism of Watchtower chronology and the source of your posted quotation of Thiele is probably in an earlier article of Ministry which is a SDA journal sent to all pastors. I have several letters by Thiele written to prominent SDA pastors in Australia but I could source this particular quote.
Your lack of reading comprehension is ridiculous. Between two previous posts, I gave the source: the 1972 book Jehovah's Witnesses and Prophetic Speculation by Edmund C. Gruss, 2nd edition of 1975, 7th printing.
Next, you demonstrate a total lack of understanding of what VM44 quoted from me, which again shows how blindly stupid you are:
: However, Thiele was quite wrong in his criticism of the Aid book quoting him in regard to his summation of Ptolemy's Canon. . . The quotation in the Aid book is not out of context . . . It is impossible to misquote Thiele on this point . . .
No one -- not me, not Thiele and not Gruss -- has said anything about the Aid book taking Thiele's words "out of context" or "misquoting" him. What Thiele said, with regard to the Society's use of his comment (which appeared on page 327 of Aid and page 90 of the Feb. 1, 1969 Watchtower), was that "it is misleading and unscrupulous." And I wrote: "So it is clear that The Watchtower and Aid misrepresented the views of a bible scholar to support the Society's chronology." There is a big difference between simple quoting out of context or simple misquoting, and actively misrepresenting an authority's views so as unscrupulously to mislead an audience. So, unscholar, you've once again given readers a simple choice of how to view you: as simply too stupid to engage in these discussions, or as thoroughly dishonest. I'm convinced it's the latter.
Now let's take a look at your other dishonest and stupid comments:
: However, Thiele was quite wrong in his criticism of the Aid book quoting him in regard to his summation of Ptolemy's Canon.
No, he was entirely correct, as my essay that VM44 quote proved, and which I will expand upon here. The Aid book (and the Feb. 1, 1969 Watchtower article) was discussing the viability of Ptolemy's Canon as a reliable source of historical information on the lengths of reigns of Neo-Babylonian kings. On page 327, the first paragraph under the subheading "Ptolemy's canon" falsely claimed that "modern historians base their chronology for the Neo-Babylonian Empire largely upon what is known as the canon of Ptolemy." It then set up to give some arguments as to why Ptolemy's Canon is unreliable, and stated: "In addition to the evidence already presented on the weaknesses manifest in the non-Biblical records, the following may be noted:" So the whole point of the subheading was to present weaknesses in Ptolemy's Canon, by whatever means was available.
The next paragraph begins by giving Ptolemy himself a negative slant, so as to discredit him as a credible witness to the historical information on Babylonian kings given in his Canon: "Ptolemy was not a historian and is known primarily for his works on astronomy and geography." It then supports this negative slant with the quotation from Thiele: "As E. R. Thiele states: 'Ptolemy's canon was prepared primarily for astronomical, not historical, purposes. It did not pretend to give a complete list of all the rulers of either Babylon or Persia, nor the exact month or day of the beginning of their reigns, but it was a device which made possible the correct allocation into a broad chronological scheme of certain astronomical date which were then available.' " The writer's use of "as" shows that the quotation was made in support of his overall thesis: that Ptolemy is not to be trusted.
The next paragraph continued the negative slant on Ptolemy with the following comment, which partly amounts to damning with faint praise: "Even though Ptolemy's geocentric theory (that is, that the earth is the center point around which the stars and planets revolve) was proved false by Copernicus' time, modern historians generally credit Ptolemy with accuracy in his astronomical computations relating to certain historical dates."
The rest of the Aid article continues trying to discredit parts of Ptolemy's Canon.
So, what Thiele and Gruss and I objected to was not the Society's misquoting Thiele in Mysterious Numbers, but misusing that quotation to support a claim that Thiele would never have supported. Such misuse is simply dishonest, because it misrepresents an authority so as to give credence to a view to which he would object.
And object to such misrepresentation is exactly what Thiele himself did. In the above-mentioned book, Edmond Gruss describes his correspondence with the Watchtower Society about chronology in several 1968 letters. The Society wrote him a letter, about which he writes:
The letter from the Watchtower Society made reference to some articles which would appear in Watchtower issues on the subject of chronology. The one dealing with Babylonian chronology was published for February 1, 1969, under the title, "Babylonian Chronology -- How Reliable?" Much of the article is a rehash of what has been published elsewhere by the Witnesses. On page 90 of the article the Witness writer began his attack on Ptolemy and in the process quoted from Thiele's, The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings. This writer felt that the treatment on Ptolemy and the quotation would be of interest to Dr. Thiele. A letter was sent along with the article asking for his reaction to the discussion of the Canon and the use of the quotation from his book. His answer, in part, dated January 21, 1971, follows:
In regard to your request for my comment on the use of my quotation in the WATCHTOWER concerning Ptolemy's Canon, I will say that it is misleading and unscrupulous. It is misleading in that it would give an entirely different impression concerning this important canon of Ptolemy htan I hold. It is unscrupulous, because a procedure of this type is not honest.
If the writer of this article had been honest -- or informed -- he would have known that I use Ptolemy's Canon in an entirely different way than he would have it used.
I have the utmost respect for the Canon, and find myself almost standing in awe of its detailed historical accuracy. The man who wrote it must have had at his finger tips an amazing amount of detail concerning early near Eastern history, and an astonishing amount of astronomical information fitting in at point after point with specific years of the kings. It is accurate and reliable all along the line. Astronomy is one thing upon which we can depend with complete confidence. And when the eclipses of the Canon are so fully in harmony with the years of the kings, we can be certain that the chronology involved is sound. The Canon is right and Jehovah's Witnesses are wrong.
What would I say about the article in general? I would say that such a writer and reader has no business writing about such a subject. He does not know the facts, or if he does, he does not use them in an honest manner. It reminds me of the way an unscrupulous lawyer would deal with facts in order to support a case he knows not to be sound.
Let us be charitable with the man and say that in his reading he does not read as an informed scholar should. In other words, let us accuse him rather of ignorance than dishonesty.
The letter speaks for itself, and seriously questions the motives and qualifications of the writer of the Watchtower article.
Obviously, when an author feels that his words have been used to support a view opposite to his own, his words have been misused. And when such misuse is deliberate, as it is in these Watchtower writings, it is thoroughly dishonest.
Now back to unscholar's dishonest comments:
: The facts are quite clear in this matter
Indeed they are, as I have shown.
: and I am quite surprised that Alan F did not check this matter thoroughly before attacking the Society as shown in his treatment on WT chronology.
Oh, but I did, as the above material proves.
: Thiele made a isolated comment on Ptolemy's Canon BLAH BLAH BLAH
All of this is irrelevant.
: It is impossible to misquote Thiele on this point
The Society didn't misquote him -- it misrepresented him.
: and if he made such a stupid statement then more fool him because that statement coming from such an eminent chronologist, Christendom's finest has and will haunt his memory forever.
Actually, unscholar, your ridiculous and typically dishonest comments here add a little bit to the massive proof, consisting of the rest of your posts on this board, that you're a thoroughly dishonest defender of your disgusting cult.
AlanF