This should be entertaining for those of us who enjoy making scholar pretendus squirm. [removed]
Scholar pretendus, like his Mommy the Watchtower Society, often engages in the ad hominem to discredit opponents. Often these ad hominems, like their arguments generally, are extreme examples of grasping at the tiniest straws they think might help to discredit someone.
Sometimes these ad hominems backfire, such as when they criticize an opponent for holding a view that they themselves hold, but are too stupid to realize it, or to realize that they've contradicted themselves. Often they've told so many lies that they can't keep them straight, and they get all mixed up in trying to sort them out.
Here I'll show how scholar pretendus shoots down his Mommy.
In a post on this thread, dated "13-Apr-05 13:16", scholar pretendus had said to Alleymom:
: I am rather flattered that the prominent posters on this board consider me very dangerous because I vigorouslty defend Watchtower chronology.
I replied:
: Well don't flatter yourself too much. The eminent astronomer Carl Sagan wrote an entire book debunking the crazy but extremely popular notions of Immanuel Velikovsky (first book, Worlds In Collision, ca. 1950), who skeptic author Martin Gardener called "the very model of a crank".
: You're a crank, and even cranks can sell millions of books and get a huge following from the ignorant. That's how Russell and his followers got so far.
scholar pretendus replied:
: Yes Jonsson is in good company with Velikosky because Jonsson is a contributor to that whacky, pseudo-scientific Catastrophism journal.
I replied:
: Just what do you think Jonsson contributed to "that whacky, pseudo-scientific Catastrophism journal", scholar pretendus?
: Another thing, scholar pretendus: I take it you agree with me that Velikovsky was a crank, and even with Martin Gardener that he was "the very model of a crank".
Hearing nothing back from [removed], a couple of weeks later I said:
: What's the matter there, scholar pretendus? Afraid to answer my questions?
: Here they are again:
: Just what do you think Jonsson contributed to "that whacky, pseudo-scientific Catastrophism journal"?
: Do you agree that Velikovsky was a crank, and even with Martin Gardener that he was "the very model of a crank"?
: It's obvious that you're afraid to answer because you know that as soon as you do, I'm going to kick your sorry little ass once again.
Now that scholar pretendus has reappeared, only to have his ass kicked yet again by Leolaia, Narkissos and Alleymom, it's time to kick his ass about his remark implying that Carl Olof Jonsson is as whacky as Immanuel Velikovsky because Jonsson contributed to a journal that supports Velikovsky's whacky ideas.
Now, at first I was a bit surprised that a man as astute as Jonsson would contribute to such a journal. But a bit of investigation showed that Jonsson's contributions were actually debunkings of certain of the claims of Velikovskyism. So as usual, scholar pretendus has engaged in misrepresentation, proving once again his mental disease as a pathological liar.
The proof comes from an online index of articles in the (what I consider pseudo-scientific) journal Chronology and Catastrophism Review (see http://www.catastrophism.com/intro/index.php ). Because one has to pay a significant sum of money to get the complete articles, I didn't obtain them and will show only the titles, some abstracts, and some related comments about articles that Jonsson wrote or contributed to.
The two most important indexed articles are:
Carl Olof Jonsson: "Nebuchadrezzar and Neriglissar", SISR III: 4, pp. 93-7.
C. Jonsson's "The Foundations of the Assyro-Babylonian Chronology", Chronology and Catastrophism Review, Vol.IX (UK, 1987), 16.
"SIS" stands for the "Society for Interdisciplinary Studies" (cf. http://www.knowledge.co.uk/sis/resource.htm ) and "SISR" is their journal "SIS Review". The two journals are somehow related, but I don't care what the relationship is.
What were these articles about? One website commented ( http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/669255/posts ):
5.2 The Formation of ISIS.
By 1976, the SIS was firmly established as the first British forum for the further study of Velikovskian Catastrophism. By 1984, James and Rohl recognised that history revisionism would benefit from an increasing and specialist input from academics and researchers. Together they initiated the establishment of a separate Institute for the Study of Interdisciplinary Sciences, divorced from both Velikovsky and catastrophism. This was intended to provide an academic branch organisation under whose auspices funds could be raised to sponsor the necessary research studies, and premises acquired in which to house a revisionist's library. ISIS was founded in 1985, and went on between 1987 and 1995 to produce seven exceptionally well-produced Journals, entitled The Journal of the Ancient Chronology Forum, JACF. Volume 8, to the same high standard, was issued in late 1999. ISIS now has its own web site, www.nunki.net/isis/ where more information is available.
. . .
Carl Olof Jonsson contributed two very important papers to the chronology debate. One, in SISR:4 1979, related in part to Velikovsky's inappropriate use of archaeological evidence from the Palace of Esagila at Babylon to support his suggested altered order of Neo-Babylonian kings. The other, in C&CR IX, 1987, set out in detail the several independent lines of supporting evidence, including many thousands of business documents, underpinning the conventional Mesopotamian chronology back to around 930BC. Revisionists ignore this evidence at their peril.
The C&CR Index contains, among others, the following entry on the first article:
Nebuchadrezzar and Neriglissar [SIS C&C Review $ ]
. . . Nebuchadrezzar and Neriglissar From: SIS Review Vol III No 4 (Spring 1979) Home|Issue Contents Nebuchadrezzar and Neriglissar A Critique of the Revision of the Neo-Babylonian Succession Carl Olof Jonsson The author, an Advocate Member of the Society, lives in Aamaal, Sweden, and has pursued extensive studies of Mesopotamian history. Velikovsky's identification of the Hittite and Chaldaean empires in his reconstruction of the period of Ramesses II demands a fundamental re-ordering of the sequence of Neo-Babylonian rulers. This study of the question complements Peter James'discussion in SISR . . .
Jonsson's website ( http://user.tninet.se/~oof408u/fkf/english/newtpol.htm ) contains the following commments on the second article:
Correspondence with R. R. Newton
In 1978, the year after The Crime of Claudius Ptolemy had been published, I had some correspondence with Professor Newton. In a letter dated June 27, 1978, I sent him a shorter study I had prepared in which the so-called ?Ptolemy?s Canon? was compared with earlier cuneiform sources. This study briefly demostrated that all the reigns of the Babylonian kings given in the Canon, from Nabonassar (747-734 BC) to Nabonidus (555-539 BC), were in complete agreement with these older sources. (This study was later expanded and published in a British journal for interdisciplinarty studies, the British forum for the discussion of the catastrophe theories of Immanuel Velikovsky and others: Chronology & Catastrophism Review, Vol. IX, 1987, pp. 14-23.)
Jonsson also contributed several other articles debunking some of Velikovsky's claims about ancient chronology:
The Annals of Sennacherib-Anstey was Mistaken, Carl Olof Jonsson The Harran Inscription of Nabonidus, Carl Olof Jonsson (Rejoinder to James J. Schlecker) by CARL OLOF JONSSON Answer to Jonsson.
The Harran Inscription of Nabonidus [Catastrophism & Ancient History Journal $ ]
... The Harran Inscription of Nabonidus From: Catastrophism and Ancient History X: 1 (Jan 1988) Home|Issue Contents The Harran Inscription of Nabonidus Carl Olof JonssonSIS Silver Jubilee Conference: Abstracts [SIS Internet Digest $ ]
... Chavasse, Michael Reade, Dale Murphie (c) More Radical Revisionists-The Shishak Equation redefined: Emmett Sweeney, Eric Aitchison, Jesse Lasken, Herbert Illig and Formenko (d) Significant Others: Phillip Clapham, Carl Olof Jonsson
Clearly, scholar pretendus failed to do his homework, and like his Mommy's greatest founding idiot J. F. Rutherford, has again made as ass out of himself.
But this isn't the best part. The best part is that good old Mommy Watchtower actually supports the whacky claims of Immanuel Velikovsky.
In the only reference to Velikovsky's writings that I can find in all of Watchtower literature, in the May 8, 1950 Awake!, the Society actually enthused about the 'scientific' support given to the Bible by Velikovsky in his very first book, Worlds in Collision. Note the bloated arrogance of tone:
It has long been a custom among those claiming superior intelligence to reject the account of the past as given in the Bible, to mock at what they do not understand, and to scorn those who are willing to accept inspired truth. When, therefore, an eminent scientist, historian and author like Dr. Immanuel Velikovsky digs deep into the scientific fields of archaeology, geology, paleontology, anthropology, astronomy, physics and psychology, and from these brings forth a great mass of evidence proving authenticity of the Bible account -- that in itself is big news! This is what Dr. Velikovsky has done in his recent book Worlds in Collision, a monumental work of scholarly research.
In this book the author sets forth the novel theory that millenniums ago a sky-roving comet the size of the earth was cast out from Jupiter's molten mass; that this comet almost collided with the earth and Mars on several occasions; that finally this wandering offspring of Jupiter found an orbit of its own around the sun and has since been known as the planet Venus. Throughout the book the attempt is made to prove that when this comet passed within the vicinity of the earth it caused the great catastrophes that befell this globe in times past. Out of the ancient folklore of Arabia, India, China, Tibet, North and South America, and Scandinavia, from accounts found on ancient Egyptian papyri and Babylonian tablets of clay, as well as the record contained in the Bible, links of circumstantial and direct evidence are connected together to make a binding chain for supporting the theory.
See the following links for complete scans of the Awake! article:
http://home.comcast.net/~alanf00/images/g_8_may_1950_p27_web.jpg
http://home.comcast.net/~alanf00/images/g_8_may_1950_p28_web.jpg
Obviously, the Society's author was too scientifically incompetent to realize the complete physical impossibility of Velikovsky's claims, or even the fact that they actually contradict the Bible's account. When I was a JW lad of about 15, I was an avid science fiction reader. I had found a book called When Worlds Collide in the school library's science fiction section, and it was a good 1950s-style SF romp. Then I found Velikovsky's book Worlds in Collision, thinking it could be another good SF yarn. Afer reading a few dozen pages I realized not only that it was serious, but that it contradicted physics and the Bible, and I quit reading it because it was also deadly boring.
Now, scholar pretendus might object that the Society no longer supports Velikovsky's claims. But we all know that unless "new light" is presented that contradicts "old light" taught by the Watchtower Society, the Society's teaching is that the "old light" remains "the truth", since all such "light" is presented as "spiritual food in due season" from "Jehovah's table" and through Jehovah's spirit-anointed, spirit-directed "faithful and discreet slave class".
Talk about shooting yourself in the ass!
AlanF