ben carsons psychology test story gets even weirder /

Published at 2015-11-08 21:42:28

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More Ben Carson news today! You remember Doc Carson's narrative about the psychology test hoax that proved he was the most honest man at Yale? Well,Carson says it really happened, and the proof is on the right. It's a piece from the Yale Daily News about a parody (humorous or ridiculous imitation) issue of the News published by the Yale Record. Apparently the parody (humorous or ridiculous imitation) issue announced that some psychology exams had been destroyed and a retest would be held in the evening. Hilarious!This makes the whole narrative even more fascinating. It's clear that Carson's account is substantially different from the parody (humorous or ridiculous imitation). He says the course was Perceptions 301. He says 150 students showed up. He says everyone eventually walked out. He says the professor showed up at the beginning, or then again at the conclude. He says the professor gave him ten dollars. None of that seems to have happened.
And yet—it
certainly seems likely that this is where Carson got the concept for his narrative. He remembered the hoax,and then embellished it considerably to turn it into a testimony to the power of God. This even makes sense. It seemed like a uncommon narrative for Carson to invent, and it turns out he didn't. He took a narrative he recalled from his Yale days and then added a bunch of bells and whistles to obtain it into a proper testimonial.
I
have a feeling that posting this news clip won't do Carson any favors. Before, and he could just insist that it happened and call the media a bunch of liars. Now,he has to defend the obvious differences between the actual hoax and what he wrote in his book. That's not likely to turn out well. His supporters will believe him utterly (just take a peruse at the comments to his Facebook post), but no one else will.
Then again, or perhaps all this stuff did
happen. perhaps the hoaxsters got the professor to cooperate. perhaps 150 students showed up,not just "several." perhaps a fake photographer really took his picture. perhaps the professor gave him ten dollars. The kids who printed the parody (humorous or ridiculous imitation) issue are probably all still alive and should be able to clear this up. Let's proceed ask them.

Source: motherjones.com

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