mikwut wrote:Chap,
I responded legally because that is the only understanding I can relate to D.J.'s use of foundation etc... I am responding to the OP you know.
I also responded using historical means of assessing the evidence of such statements which aren't limited by legal constructions.
Mikwut, you're not responding to the OP, because the OP does propose the idea you are reading into it. I used the dictionary definition of hearsay, not Federal Rule of Evidence 801. There's not a single thing I said that purports to limit historical evidence by legal constructions.
You make the proper point of when it is presented to a group of hopefully level headed people what weight does it receive? You say zero, no doubt based on your personal perspective. I would think it would depend on the person. People open to supernatural occurences might afford more weight than those that don't. The statements also have to be weighed against other relevant evidence (J.Smith's proclivities towards con games etc.. the credibility of the witnesses etc...). I don't accept the statements of the three based on that analysis (a balancing of all the historical evidence). When I was member I found the statements to be a big part of the construction of positive evidence for my belief. I understood many other believers afforded and still do afford them great weight.
The issue is not whether supernatural occurrences happen in general. The issue is whether based on this claimed supernatural experience, the Three Witnesses in fact had any personal knowledge that the Book of Mormon is true. They did not; the witness is God, not them.
I just find it problematic to attempt whether legally, historically or through common lay sense to reduce the testimony to nothing at all. I say that while rejecting the testimony as reliable towards the truth of the Book of Mormon as strongly as you reject it and D.J. rejects it. I think it more true and respectful to the opponent (better for dialogue) to afford it to found under the large umbrella of "evidence" and then proceed to weigh the value of the evidence.
mikwut
It's not about reducing the testimony to nothing at all. It's a question of what they were witnesses of. They were not witnesses of the existence of the Nephites or the Jaredites, the correctness of the claimed translation, or the authenticity of the golden plates. They were witnesses to a purported supernatural experience (and it wasn't one singular experience, either, since Martin Harris was separate from the other two). Since you have to look at evidence outside of their claimed experience to determine if the Book of Mormon is true, and they could not say for themselves they knew the Book of Mormon is true, you're in the same place without the Three Witnesses as you are with them.