My problems with Hales are similar. His conclusions regarding polygamy are especially problematic, because he draws every possible conclusion except the obvious one: Joseph's libido inspired him to make the whole thing up so he could satisfy said libido.
Obvious to you. Others in the room may see it differently.
Would you see it differently if it was any polygamy-starter other than Joseph Smith, Jr.?
Hope you’re doing well, Shades. Thanks for all you do to keep the lights on around here.
You're welcome.
Obvious to you. Others in the room may see it differently.
Would you see it differently if it was any polygamy-starter other than Joseph Smith, Jr.?
I suppose I would look at it case by case. I feel differently about John C. Bennett’s spiritual wifery then Joseph’s plural marriage arrangements.
Mohammad? Not sure. I’d have to know more. And there are others…
I know enough about Joseph Smith by way of the ‘larger picture’ so I am able to make a better judgement. And I don’t think it was simply a matter of libido on his part.
This is a discussion that has been had, again and again, and has made trips around the block hundreds if not thousands of times since the early days of the church. I’m not interested in another walk around the block.
I think we each have our own views and have arrived at different conclusions, and that’s fine.
In my experience, Hales is a frustrating interlocutor. I am sure he means well, and he is not a bad guy, but his tactics are pretty slippery. He straw mans his opponents, and his own arguments are recycled. His Joseph couldn’t have done this ergo God arguments are his usual go-to approach.
My problems with Hales are similar. His conclusions regarding polygamy are especially problematic, because he draws every possible conclusion except the obvious one: Joseph's libido inspired him to make the whole thing up so he could satisfy said libido.
It goes back to that problem of starting with an assumption that one's particular type of religious inclination requires one to conclude. It's an egregious error to make, and is only compounded by statements like this:
I have just one comment to add to this discussion -
The only place that Kircher uses the name Nephi is in private letters to Peiresc to della Valle between 1628 and 1632, which ended up in the Vatican archives. As a collection, these letters have never been published - they have only recently been discussed in literature in the last few decades (with brief excerpts quoted). In his published books, that person is always identified as Abenephius the Arab. Nielsen grabbed on to some of that material that was recently published, saw the name 'Rabbi Barachias Nephi' and figured he had hit a gold mine. No one who read Kircher in the 18th and 19th centuries would have found a Babylonian rabbi named Nephi in his works.
Apologizes for the zombie thread, but this isn't correct. Quick pre-1830 Google Book search turns up Nephi at least once in English and multiple sources in French and Latin.
Not saying this supports Kircher as the source for the Book of Mormon Nephi, but the statement "no one who read Kircher in the 18th and 19th centuries would have found a Babylonian rabbi named Nephi in his works" isn't accurate.
Not saying this supports Kircher as the source for the Book of Mormon Nephi, but the statement "no one who read Kircher in the 18th and 19th centuries would have found a Babylonian rabbi named Nephi in his works" isn't accurate.
The issue in my view is the way Nielsen presents this. He flat out says that Kircher readers would have seen the name Nephi, without qualifying that with the fact that what they were seeing on the page was Abennephi or Aben-nephi. That is misleading. It may be unintentionally misleading, but it is still misleading.
"I have learned with what evils tyranny infects a state. For it frustrates all the virtues, robs freedom of its lofty mood, and opens a school of fawning and terror, inasmuch as it leaves matters not to the wisdom of the laws, but to the angry whim of those who are in authority.”