Bob Loblaw wrote:Hmmm. He seems to have had trouble remembering who appeared to him in the grove.
Yea, most fraudsters would have gotten their story straight. Unless of course, if it weren't a fraud.
Bob Loblaw wrote:Hmmm. He seems to have had trouble remembering who appeared to him in the grove.
why me wrote:dblagent007 wrote:
Edit to add: It would also be interesting to see if there is a correlation between "visionaries" such as Joseph Smith and Martin Harris and memory (I believe people said Harris also had a fantastic memory when it came to the Bible). The techniques used to become a memory champion seem to align very well with people who have "visions."
I still think that it would be a little difficult to do with a head in a hat. And then he would have to conjure up a vision for the three witnesses and make some tin plates that had the appearance of gold complete with 11 more witnesses. Plus, mary whitmer...he would need a fool to show her the plates and then disappear.
And pray that all would stick to their story. And then we have emma who swore that he couldn't have written the book without her knowing it. But then, she could have been in on the fraud too. Right?
And then we would need to think just what exactly was going through his mind when he was doing all this...why bother? To start a new church. He could have just started a new protestant sect without the Book of Mormon.
dblagent007 wrote:Edit to add: It would also be interesting to see if there is a correlation between "visionaries" such as Joseph Smith and Martin Harris and memory (I believe people said Harris also had a fantastic memory when it came to the Bible). The techniques used to become a memory champion seem to align very well with people who have "visions."
http://dyslexiamylife.org/signs_dsy.htmlDyslexia Symptoms Adults
Difficulty in processing auditory information
Losing possessions; poor organizational skills
Slow reading; poor comprehension
Difficulty remembering names of people and places
Hesitant speech; difficulty finding appropriate words
Difficulty organizing ideas to write a letter or paper
Poor spelling
Inability to recall numbers in proper sequence
Lowered self-esteem due to past frustrations
May hide their reading problems; many subterfuges
May spell poorly; relies on others
Avoids writing; may not be able to write
Often very competent in oral language
Relies on memory; may have excellent memories
Often has good "people" skills
Often is spatially talented;engineers, architects, designers, artists and craftspeople, mathematicians, physicists, physicians (especially orthopads, surgeons), dentists
May be very good at "reading" people (intuitive)In jobs is often working well below their intellectual capacity
May have difficulty with planning and organization
May have difficulty with time; often too early, late or forgets appointments. Relies on digital watches; cannot tell time
Often entrepreneurs; may have lost one or more businesses they started
CaliforniaKid wrote:When Joseph dictated Section 132, he said he didn't need the Urim and Thummim because he knew it by heart.dblagent007 wrote:Edit to add: It would also be interesting to see if there is a correlation between "visionaries" such as Joseph Smith and Martin Harris and memory (I believe people said Harris also had a fantastic memory when it came to the Bible). The techniques used to become a memory champion seem to align very well with people who have "visions."
This is a really interesting idea. Put another way, is there a connection between extraordinary memory and vividness of imagination? Makes sense that there would be. The visualization strategy has always seemed impractical to me, because I'm not a very visual/spatial person. I best remember concepts when I organize them logically, not spatially. Suffice to say, my right brain is somewhat lacking.
dblagent007 wrote:. The ability to memorize large amounts of information is learned rather than inherent. If Joseph Smith Sr. knew how to memorize large quantities of text, then there is a strong likelihood that he taught his son the same techniques.
The TED talk also notes that these memorizing techniques have been known since ancient Greece. I wouldn't be surprised if the Smiths knew some of them."
why me wrote:Bob Loblaw wrote:Hmmm. He seems to have had trouble remembering who appeared to him in the grove.
Yea, most fraudsters would have gotten their story straight. Unless of course, if it weren't a fraud.
MCB wrote:Strong ability to memorize is not necessarily a component of strong analytical skill. Together, however, they can be powerful, particularly when reading skill is lower than both.
MCB wrote:Strong ability to memorize is not necessarily a component of strong analytical skill. Together, however, they can be powerful, particularly when reading skill is lower than both.