Lemmie wrote:honorentheos wrote:Hi Lemmie, I'm curious if you have thoughts on the issue brought up in the last couple of comments between me and Brant? In particular, that the Book of Mormon can be used to support contradictory positions in relation to specific points taken from Coe but the papers methodology determined the correlation warranted their lowest probability Smith was guessing. It seems this shows rather conclusively the paper failed to use Bayes theorem properly wouldn't it? My understanding of Bayes is it is intended for working with conflicting positions to work out the probability of competing hypothesis being true. When the evidence in the Book of Mormon forces a supporter to present qualifying statements saying there are alternative interpretations available to justify the paper placing a item as a hit in spite of conflicting evidence being present and justifiably read in the Book of Mormon yet the authors assigned it as so detailed, specific and unusual it is unlike[ly] due to guesswork, it seems the act of doing so is essentially conceding the paper failed at its stated purpose.
Sorry I didn't see this sooner, i have read yours but let me look back at his posts before answering.
Hi Honor, I went back and looked at Brant's comments in the context of your question. It was a little disappointing, because I really got the sense even stronger this time through his posts that he really doesn't agree with this paper but that he is obligated to be supportive, hence the oblique responses to your comments.
He made this comment below, and I think it is how he separates the issue:
Point 1: Internal consistency and external correspondence are fundamentally different. Fantasy authors work hard to create an internally consistent story, and some use mythological material from known cultures to give a recognizable flavor or context to the story. Attempting to correlate any of those to external sources (i.e. history/archaeology) is impossible beyond random connections. The question here isn’t that every possible scenario is chosen, but whether or not a specific region fits. Random connections are cherry-picking. The larger number of interrelated connections is beyond random. The issue of whether the article establishes those connections can be debated, but then that wasn’t the design of the question. It is hard to complain that the article didn’t do what it didn’t attempt.
It seems that in his mind, statement by statement, he can isolate the question of whether Joseph Smith could have guessed, while avoiding the big picture issue that the likelihood of these guesses being related is very strong because the statements themselves are related.
Of course, the fact that the authors simply assume that all these statements are independent, while not allowing commenters to discuss the issue of possible dependency, begs the question of independence rather egregiously.