Shoemaker is a respectable scholar of the Quran and Early Islam. Hardly someone one should laugh at.
He's not a scholar of the Quran and Early Islam. See his cursus.
"Stephen Shoemaker (Ph.D. ’97, Duke University) is a specialist on the history of Christianity and the beginnings of Islam.
His primary interests lie in the ancient and early medieval Christian traditions, and more specifically in early Byzantine and Near Eastern Christianity. His research focuses on early devotion to the Virgin Mary, Christian apocryphal literature, and Islamic origins."
For me it is a specialist on the history of Mary traditions in Christianity which is interested in beginnings of Islam. His dissertation : The Ancient Traditions of the Virgin Mary’s Dormition and Assumption. Nothing to see with Islam. Sorry but, for me he's an amateur, same level as Shaddel but it is a "professor". That's all.
Question for Altara: Do you think the Quran is a Christian book? I am still not entirely sure of the scholarly paradigm you follow. Do you see a Christian influence on the Quran; or do you see a Jewish-Christian one? Are you saying that the Nazoreans mentioned in the Quran are Christians, as in Trinitarian Christians?
1/ Do you think it could be?
2/Very interesting statement which says many things on you dear Mahgraye. According to you, I would follow a scholarly paradigm. Meaning that it is normal somehow that I follow one. But you have a problem : you have not perceived yet which one. It is maybe because I have none known and therefore I do not follow any scholarly paradigm?
3/ What do you mean by influence?
4/ Nasara is an Arabic transcript of syriac "Nasrayé", used by Persians to named "Christians"in a
pejorative way. (Simon Brelaud & FBC academia, in French : « Quelques réflexions sur la désignation des chrétiens dans l'inscription du mage Kirdīr et dans l’empire sassanide », Parole de l’Orient 43, 2017, 113-136..)
Simon Brelaud :PhD subject (2014-): “Christian presences in Mesopotamia during the Sasanian era (3rd to 7th century)”, under the supervision of Prof. Françoise Briquel-Chatonnet (National Center for Scientific Research, Paris)