Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash ...Really?

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_Mike Reed
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Re: Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash ...Really?

Post by _Mike Reed »

Drifting wrote:There is a mountain of evidence weighing heavily against the Book of Abraham being anything but a total fraud.

I assume that by your use of the word "fraud," you are asserting that Joseph was intentionally deceptive by writing/translating the Book of Abraham.

I personally reject the Book of Abraham as scripture, but remain undecided over whether Joseph's "deception" was intentional.
_Mike Reed
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Re: Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash ...Really?

Post by _Mike Reed »

mfbukowski wrote:Why would he do the same thing again with the Book of Abraham, when he probably already knew (as implied by the Phelps letter) that Anthon was aware of Champollion and himself contributing to the decipherment of Egyptian?

The point is: He wouldn't.

Some Masons, and others dabbling in the occult, believed that Egyptian could communicate layers of meaning simultaneously. Moreover, some believed that priests had the ability to encrypt higher esoteric secrets within relatively profane texts.

Assuming that Joseph Smith knew of the developments Egyptologists were having... I doubt he would have dispaired over the possibility that his translation would differ. His magical/Masonic world view gave him an "out": his translation was not secular, but rather brought forth the Papyrus' esoteric encrypted message.

I need to take a break from this forum for a week or so. I need to finish writing a paper.

Take care all.

--Mike
Last edited by Hawkeye on Wed Jan 04, 2012 8:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.
_mfbukowski
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Re: Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash ...Really?

Post by _mfbukowski »

Drifting wrote:
mfbukowski wrote:I find it very important in understanding the temple ordinances and chapter 4 is a masterpiece of social constructivist theology in my opinion.

Reality is brought into existence by definitions- by "calling" things and giving them names.

Coheres well with "In the beginning was the Word" - in my view the "word" is what organizes the chaos of our experience.


Thanks mfb.

Please don't take this as being disrespectful because I don't mean to be mean. But...

There is a mountain of evidence weighing heavily against the Book of Abraham being anything but a total fraud. It clearly isn't what Joseph said it was "written by the hand of Abraham on the papyrus".

Could it be a Fraud and you still find it of spiritual value or does it have to be truthfully the words of Abraham written on the papyrus as Joseph stated?


I believed that men were gods years before I found the church and that reality is constructed by language, and I do happen to believe that, similar to the way that moral statements can be "justified", religious statements, especially those which derive from personal experience are as "real" as anything else. That puts me in what is known as the "antirealist"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-realism
camp. More specifically, I see myself as a Pragmatist, and most of my positions are pretty close to those of Richard Rorty, except of course his atheism.

That said, I think my personal revelatory experiences justify that the Book of Abraham is what it says it is, and is a revelation to Joseph. It is my personal belief that what is written is indeed revelatory "translation" of an ancient document "written by the hand of Abraham on papyrus", as Joseph thought it to be, though the papyrus we have is NOT the papyrus Abraham wrote on.

I think Joseph thought it was, but what he received was pure revelation, inspiration, whatever you want to call it. It was clearly not a "fraud" implying a direct intention to deceive- I don't believe that for a minute.
Last edited by Guest on Wed Jan 04, 2012 8:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
_mfbukowski
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Re: Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash ...Really?

Post by _mfbukowski »

Mike Reed wrote:
mfbukowski wrote:Why would he do the same thing again with the Book of Abraham, when he probably already knew (as implied by the Phelps letter) that Anthon was aware of Champollion and himself contributing to the decipherment of Egyptian?

The point is: He wouldn't.

Some Masons, and others dabbling in the occult, believed that Egyptian could communicate layers of meaning simultaneously. Moreover, some believed that priests had the ability to encrypt higher esoteric secrets within relatively profane texts.

Assuming that Joseph Smith knew of the developments Egyptologists were having... I doubt he would have dispaired over the possibility that his translation would differ. His magical/Masonic world view gave him an "out": his translation was not secular, but rather brought forth the Papyrus' esoteric encrypted message.


I completely agree. The key is the "layers of meaning".
_Themis
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Re: Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash ...Really?

Post by _Themis »

mfbukowski wrote:
Well I certainly do not hold myself out as an expert or even particularly "informed" about these issues since I regard most historical arguments about Mormonism irrelevant. But, that said, you caught me making a historical argument I suppose.

The Egyptian Revival was huge in early 19th century in America mostly because of Champollion and the discovery of the Rosetta stone. There were tons of buildings being built in that style, and Egyptian stuff was just plain "cool" like maybe Harry Potter or whatever is now.

In fact the whole reason Chandler was touring with the mummies was that he was capitalizing on this "Egyptian fever" with his side-show of mummies and papyri. I think it would be hard to be an American in this period who was NOT aware of things Egyptian at least in a vague way, and certainly for Joseph, who was clearly interested in such things, he would have been drawn like a magnet to anything of this nature.

Furthermore there is evidence that Anthon had a copy of Champollion's book and more interestingly, that Martin Harris apparently used Anthon's phrase "Egyptian shorthand" to WW Phelps, putting a possible direct link between the scholar Anthon and Joseph's inner circle- and notice this was much before the Book of Abraham. This quote is from footnotes found right at the end of this article: http://www.shields-research.org/42_Questions/ques20.htm
(Emphasis added)
3. Champollion’s decipherment of the Rosetta Stone was completed by 1824. He had been working on the problem since 1808, and on 17 September, 1822, read before the Academy of Inscriptions his "Lettre à M. Dacier." The culmination of his Rosetta Stone work was his Précis du système hiéroglyphique des anciens Egyptiens (Paris, 1824, 2nd ed., 2 vols., 1828).

4. Anthon referred to Champollion’s work in his expansion of John Lempriere’s A Classical Dictionary. First published in 1788 by Lempriere, Anthon added 4000 new entries (including some Egyptian) to Lempriere’s work beginning in 1825. The Lempriere/Anthon work underwent an additional six editions by 1828. See Stanley B. Kimball, "The Anthon Transcript: People, Primary Sources, and Problems," BYU Studies 10, No. 3 (1970) pp. 325-352. Kimball found Anthon’s copy of Champollion's work at Cornell University. See also Reexploring, p. 73-74, where is given the information that early L.D.S. convert W. W. Phelps used the term "Egyptian Shorthand" in a letter. The article provides evidence that this term likely came to Phelps from Harris, who almost certainly got it from Anthon.


So in my view, Joseph would definitely be aware of Champollion, or at the very least the idea that Egyptian was being, or about to be, deciphered.


I think you have established that Joseph may have known, not that he did. Regardless, Joseph never seemed to shy away from taking chances right from his early days of treasure seeking. It is obvious Joseph had an interest in things Egyptian with the Book of Mormon itself, so having papyri in his midst would mean members having an expectation Joseph created earlier that he could translate it. Like everything else he did, he did not disappoint, and as usual it was something big instead of mundane.

So to me that indicates that he would have had to be a total fool to publish "translations" which he must have known would eventually be translated literally, especially now that there is evidence that he was aware of Anthon's knowledge of Egyptian.


You haven't established he must have known, nor did it stop him from making a go at the Greek document he got wrong.

I mean who would be so stupid as to be caught twice in the same lie?


What is the first lie you think Joseph made that he would not want to repeat?

Furthermore it seems clear to me that the "translation" of the facsimilies were never intended to be anything but symbolic. I don't feel like looking it up but I think of facs. 2 where it says in many cases things like "Priesthood keys to be had in the temple" etc- clearly that is NOT a "translation" by any means.


Then why do they say something different.

If you google "Champollion Joseph Smith" you find other evidence that critics think that "Joseph should have known better", in fact there are a few videos making that case, very poorly in my estimation.


You need to do a little better since you are the one making the assertion.

My point was that YES he should have "known better" if he was a fraud, but he was not a fraud.


Why is it that apologists want frauds to be the smartest people on earth and always should know better. That has not been my expereince with the many frauds religious or financial. Plus I don't necessarily think of Joseph as a fraud, but more likely a pious fraud. Religious frauds seem to usually have some or a lot of belief in what they are doing.

I think we can all agree that Joseph was anything but stupid.


Even smart people can be foolish.

But again, this is just a "hunch", and I am not a historian, nor frankly do I care much about this issue since I subscribe to a "catalyst" theory and don't much care about the history but much more about the spiritual value of the Book of Abraham. And I definitely don't want to discuss it further.


Why let history get in the way of what you want to believe. :)
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_Themis
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Re: Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash ...Really?

Post by _Themis »

mfbukowski wrote:Oh and regarding Joseph being "burned"- what I meant was that Joseph had already lost a portion of the Book of Mormon by disclosure of the "charactors" when Harris took them to Anthon, with (what he took to be) disastrous results.


Could you elaborate. I was under the impression that Martin lost the 116 pages, which had nothing to do with Anthon. I am still missing how he got burned other then letting the pages out of his control before he could publish the whole thing.

Why would he do the same thing again with the Book of Abraham, when he probably already knew (as implied by the Phelps letter) that Anthon was aware of Champollion and himself contributing to the decipherment of Egyptian?

The point is: He wouldn't.


Still not seeing how these to events are related. Joseph and Martin were presenting the Anthon meeting as a success that supported what he was claiming.

But I really don't have time to be caught up in a debate on this matter - I really don't care enough, since I take the Book of Abraham on its spiritual value and find the history irrelevant.


Not surprising. My understanding of your position is that what one believes or thinks is real, so believe what ever makes you happy.
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_Themis
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Re: Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash ...Really?

Post by _Themis »

Mike Reed wrote:
Drifting wrote:There is a mountain of evidence weighing heavily against the Book of Abraham being anything but a total fraud.

I assume that by your use of the word "fraud," you are asserting that Joseph was intentionally deceptive by writing/translating the Book of Abraham.

I personally reject the Book of Abraham as scripture, but remain undecided over whether Joseph's "deception" was intentional.


I am also undecided. My own expereince tells me very smart people can justify their own dishonesty or wrong doings to the point where they believe they were not being dishonest or acting in bad ways.
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_Drifting
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Re: Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash ...Really?

Post by _Drifting »

If Joseph believed in the divinity of his translations one would rightly expect him to use them in his sermons and teachings.

In all the documented evidence of Joseph teaching and preaching to the members does he reference scriptures from the Book of Abraham?
“We look to not only the spiritual but also the temporal, and we believe that a person who is impoverished temporally cannot blossom spiritually.”
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"One, two, three...let's go shopping!"
Thomas S Monson - Prophet, Seer, Revelator
_Themis
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Re: Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash ...Really?

Post by _Themis »

Mike Reed wrote:Some Masons, and others dabbling in the occult, believed that Egyptian could communicate layers of meaning simultaneously. Moreover, some believed that priests had the ability to encrypt higher esoteric secrets within relatively profane texts.

Assuming that Joseph Smith knew of the developments Egyptologists were having... I doubt he would have dispaired over the possibility that his translation would differ. His magical/Masonic world view gave him an "out": his translation was not secular, but rather brought forth the Papyrus' esoteric encrypted message.


Having outs is always important. What is interesting is that Joseph interest in Egyptian seems again like so many others ideas we used to think are unique come from the environment Joseph grew up in. Like the Book of Mormon. How did Joseph come up with such a wild story of where the Indians came from. Well because the story already existed in his environment.
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_Themis
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Re: Elkenah, Libnah, Mahmackrah and Korash ...Really?

Post by _Themis »

Drifting wrote:If Joseph believed in the divinity of his translations one would rightly expect him to use them in his sermons and teachings.

In all the documented evidence of Joseph teaching and preaching to the members does he reference scriptures from the Book of Abraham?


My understanding is that some of the ideas he was already coming up with were incorporated into the Book of Abraham in order to give some kind of ancient support of things not found in other accepted scripture like the Bible and Book of Mormon. Mind you he did use the Bible and other sources to help create the Book of Abraham.

Now some of have noticed that Joseph did not preach from the Book of Mormon very much if at all. This makes one wonder why.
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