Kicking the tires on Logos 9
As a Logos Connect subscriber, my desktop has updated to Logos 9. I certainly understand how difficult it can be to really categorize commentaries by denominational perspective. I also appreciate that you have started to do this task, and include this as a way of organizing commentaries in the Passage Guide.
In doing a few sample passage guides, it did pick out Luther's exegetical writings and the Augsburg Commentaries - a good start. But it did not pick up Lenski and The Lutheran Commentary on the New Testament passage I tried, and did not pick up K&D and Leupold for the Old Testament passage I tried.
Even worse, it listed Richard D. Nelson's volume on Kings as being a Methodist commentary. He may work at a Methodist school, but is on the ELCA clergy roster.
I understand that this is a new feature, and I expect more tagging will come. But the mistaken tagging is especially concerning.
The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann
L8 Anglican, Lutheran and Orthodox Silver, Reformed Starter, Academic Essentials
L7 Lutheran Gold, Anglican Bronze
Comments
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As a Logos Connect subscriber, my desktop has updated to Logos 9. I certainly understand how difficult it can be to really categorize commentaries by denominational perspective. I also appreciate that you have started to do this task, and include this as a way of organizing commentaries in the Passage Guide.
In doing a few sample passage guides, it did pick out Luther's exegetical writings and the Augsburg Commentaries - a good start. But it did not pick up Lenski and The Lutheran Commentary on the New Testament passage I tried, and did not pick up K&D and Leupold for the Old Testament passage I tried.
Even worse, it listed Richard D. Nelson's volume on Kings as being a Methodist commentary. He may work at a Methodist school, but is on the ELCA clergy roster.
I understand that this is a new feature, and I expect more tagging will come. But the mistaken tagging is especially concerning.
I understand your concern in this situation.
With Logos 8 we got a theology guide that had only a handful of protestant commentaries tagged. Catholic and Orthodox theologies were completely ignored. FL seems to never having the tagging up to scratch when they release these new features.
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But the mistaken tagging is especially concerning.
I am confident that it will be fixed/completed. Check out the other new PG facets and see how much more accurate (e.g.) the Era tagging is.
“The trouble is that everyone talks about reforming others and no one thinks about reforming himself.” St. Peter of Alcántara
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I am confident that it will be fixed/completed.
With Lenski in Logos 9 Starter, and Leupold and Lutheran Commentary in Logos 9 Bronze, not tagging these would be nuts, and from my experience of being a Logos customer for almost two decades, they have way more business sense than that. I am just saying that some remarkably basic work has not yet been done with this new feature.
On a positive note, I will say that the new PG looks like it may be much more usable. The old one I would use to demo to people, but in my actual use was too cluttered for me. I would instead almost always use a layout I had created, and then the search box.
And the Factbook looks beefed up and more usable too. Not sure that the featured definition for "Lutheranism" should be from the 19th century Catholic Dictionary in my library though...
The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann
L8 Anglican, Lutheran and Orthodox Silver, Reformed Starter, Academic Essentials
L7 Lutheran Gold, Anglican Bronze
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In doing a few sample passage guides, it did pick out Luther's exegetical writings and the Augsburg Commentaries - a good start. But it did not pick up Lenski and The Lutheran Commentary on the New Testament passage I tried, and did not pick up K&D and Leupold for the Old Testament passage I tried.
We've got many, many more coming.
In fact I added Lenksi.
Even worse, it listed Richard D. Nelson's volume on Kings as being a Methodist commentary. He may work at a Methodist school, but is on the ELCA clergy roster.
Thanks for the heads up.
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Not sure that the featured definition for "Lutheranism" should be from the 19th century Catholic Dictionary in my library though...
If you change your resource prioritization, I expect that will change.
“The trouble is that everyone talks about reforming others and no one thinks about reforming himself.” St. Peter of Alcántara
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That was fast! Now Lenski, The Lutheran Commentary, and Richard D. Nelson are listed as Lutheran.
Spot checks on a few other Lutheran authors show up as Lutheran from larger sets.
K&D and Leupold are not yet listed as Lutheran, but I hardly expected a fix anywhere near this fast.
The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann
L8 Anglican, Lutheran and Orthodox Silver, Reformed Starter, Academic Essentials
L7 Lutheran Gold, Anglican Bronze
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K&D and Leupold are not yet listed as Lutheran, but I hardly expected a fix anywhere near this fast.
We pushed out a large update this afternoon. K&D and Leupold were included.
FWIW. I'm counting 215 individual commentary resources that are classified as "Lutheran"
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Not to complain really, but the top of Lutheran Starter says it includes the Eerdmans Commentary. Instead it includes the Eerdmans Dictionary. IMHO it needs the Dictionary more than the Commentary, but it is specifically listed as a featured resource.
The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann
L8 Anglican, Lutheran and Orthodox Silver, Reformed Starter, Academic Essentials
L7 Lutheran Gold, Anglican Bronze
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Kyle:
I have a biography of Dispensational commentaries. I would like to see that classification. I am a grad of Dallas Theological Seminary and Tyndale Seminary.
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Kyle:
I have a biography of Dispensational commentaries. I would like to see that classification. I am a grad of Dallas Theological Seminary and Tyndale Seminary.
Good suggestion. On our end we've been gathering that information as a theological position but we're not exposing it as a a denominational tradition. We're hoping to do more exposure of an author's particular theological position in the future but we're not there yet.
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