brade wrote:The hand waving is this. Apologists say a lot about history or the best available history to our present understanding. This sets readers up to expect a plausibility/likelihood conclusion. What ultimately gets delivered is closer to a mere possibility conclusion, which readers mistakenly interpret as plausibility/likelihood because they've been made to labor under a lot of fancy research.
All that's required is to invoke magic. God can do anything he wants. Therefore, if God wants, he can populate the American continent with Nephites and Lamanites, and then hide that evidence from us. That's the possibility, which anyone who believes in such a magical God must admit. Similarly, such a person must concede that it's possible the Earth is really just 30 seconds old, but God created us all with intact memories as if we'd all lived whatever our current age is, with all the experiences he wants us to think we had, etc.
It's possible that the dinosaur fossils really were just placed in the ground 6000 years ago to test our faith.
I agree that it's this kind of trivial possibility that some mopologists latch onto, and then think they've won because the critics can't entirely foreclose these possibilities.
I hereby concede that it's possible that Magic Mormon God could have used run of the mill Egyptian funeral documents as a catalyst to get Joseph Smith to pray to God for their translation, upon which God funnels the Book of Abraham content into his mind and causes him to write it down. I cannot deny that such a Magical Mormon God could do such a thing, if he existed and were so inclined. I just very much doubt that such a being exists, and that even if he did, it seems unlikely to me that this would be the method he'd choose to interact with us.