Ignoring for the moment your transparent evasion of my earlier reasonable questions.
Which were ignored because they presumed I accepted a premise I did not. So your choice of words here ("evasion") is just deceptive rhetoric that you are using to evade the fact that you cannot name a single person on this forum who has argued what you claim is being argued.
May I just say that, while the historical record is clear that many a critic has argued that the KEP was intended as a key (modus operandi) to translate the Book of Abraham from the papyri, and Chris Smith's recent JWHA paper argues that at least portions of the GAEL were the "modus operandi for part of the Book of Abraham translation"
Yes, and Chris has explained what he meant by thaat, and narrows this description to a few verses alone. Whereas you and Wilbur are pretending someone on our side has argued that the entire Book of Abraham derived from the GAEL. It proves once again you aren't up to speed.
I am willing to accept that people here may argue differently
I didn't ask you to accept this, I asked you to provide a single person here who has argued for it and so far you can't name a single person.
. I understand that Vogel argues that the KEP were simply a prop, but for what purpose is anyone's guess. And, from what I gather from Beastie, she theorizes that they were intended as a sort of Rosetta Stone.
That's nice. Now, if you're done with the evasive rhetoric, can you please provide the name of someone who has ever argued the GAEL was used to translate the Book of Abraham?
So, at the risk of having even more questions unreasonably dismissed and deflected, let me specifically ask:
Referring to your idiotic questions as "reasonable" is a sign of aa lack of confidence in them. You are not confident that they will appear reasonable on their faces.
What do you, personally, and other critics here, believe was the intended purpose of the KEP--if not to translate the Book of Abraham from the papyri?
The purpose of the translation manuscripts had no specific purpose, they just represented the dictated and subsequently, copied portions of the original translation. The Egyptian Alphabet & Grammar's purpose was exactly as Joseph Smith said. He wanted to create an Egyptian Alphabet and Grammer. Mystery solved. This is what he said he was doing, and there is no reason to twist it into some fantastical, convoluted "enciphering" project that hasn't a shred of historical evidence to support it, and in fact flies in the face of common sense.
But nice evasion. Canyou provide us a list of say three... scraatch that, ONE person on this forum who has argued the A&G was used to translate the Book of ABraham?
Are we to conclude that while some critics view the KEP as the modus operandi for translating at least some portion of the Book of Abraham, that the KEP were not intended for that purpose, but for something else?
I think you need to ask Chris to clarify what he meant when he used that terminology. I doubt anyone here doubts that the English translations came from Joseph Smith's mind ("revelation" to LDS). God granted him revelation to translate the papyrus, but not to translate the entire Egyptian language, including its alphabet and grammar, so he had to work with what he had already translated and reverse engineer it to produce the A&G. This is what Nibley and others suggested and I think it is the most reasonable postion to take given the evidence. You reject it because it is "old." That is a dumb reason to accept newer ideas, simply because they are new.
Abr 1:3 required special attention because both the English treanslation and the Egyptian characters had to be divined from "revelation." So I don't think it is a coincidence that this portion receives special attention in the A&G.