First, there is absolutely no evidence of metallurgy in Mesoamerica during the Book of Mormon time period. This is apologia 101. You are totally out of the loop. Sorenson desperately tried to cobble together supposed proofs of early metallurgy, but those references fall apart upon inspection. No reputable Mesoamerican scholar believes that ancient Mesoamerica practiced metallurgy during the Book of Mormon time period.
In regards to cement: the first point is that the Book of Mormon has it entirely backwards. Mesoamericans did not build cities out of cement due to lack of timber. They used UP the timber to create plaster to cover their buildings.
Yes, keep up the hair splitting posing and posturing. Mesoamerican archeology is in its infancy. There is a vast quantity of data and information yet to be unearthed, and we shall see if, ultimately, there was no metallurgy during Book of Mormon times (a time spanning a thousand years across a number of cultures and and peoples). Neither you, nor anyone else, in a strictly scientific sense, has the slightest idea what there was or was not, in the case of metals, in Book of Mormon times. You
have no knowledge except the
lack of knowledge and dearth of evidence upon which to hang your hat here. You're entire argument rises and falls on an assumption that, for all intents and purposes, all the relevant data to be found in Mesoameica has already been found, and anything found in the future among the vast and yet unexcavated sites in Mesoamerica (let alone any as yet undiscovered sites) will only be filling in the gaps of present
theory. Yet present theory is vastly incomplete and imprecise (as well as heavily laced with subjective biases of various kinds), and will have to make way for better understandings as further light and knowlege become available.
The danger for the critics is that the eggs, being all in one basket, the basket of "everything we need to know about Mesoamerican culture in Book of Mormon times is already known", may all fall out of the basket at one time, all of them being, well, in the basket.
You are hanging you're criticisms on a thin reed that may begin to break with the next dig. You just have no way to know.
Quote:
"And there being but little timber upon the face of the land, nevertheless the people who went forth became exceedingly expert in the working of cement; therefore they did build houses of cement, in which they did dwell." (Helaman 3:7)
This verse clearly states that it was DUE to the lack of timber that the people constructed houses of cement. No, this is not what occurred in Mesoamerica, and, in fact, is the direct opposite of what occurred.
Neither you, nor anybody else, have
a bloody freaking idea what
actually happened in Mesoamerica (as a whole????) in any but a cursory, vague, and fragmented way. Cut the crap Pleeeeeeeeeeeease.
These kinds of claims to certainty regarding the complexities and developmental paths of long dead civilizations whose texts we cannot read and whose thoughts about themselves are lost to us is unfreakin' believable. Yet this is what Atheism and secularism do to a mind cut loose from its natural humility before the concept and reality of God: the human being does not loses his/her innate desire toward worship and veneration, but once God is removed from the human psych and heart, man begins, most usually to worship himself. This is what I call Anthropotheism, or, in modern parlance, secuaar humanism. This conceit allows us to arrogate to ourselves, though our Lord and Savior, reason, vast reams of knowledge we really do not possess and claims of certainly regarding what we do possess that are well in advance of what a reasoned analysis of our knowledge would really authorize us, in all intellectual honesty, to claim.
Beastie, like most secularists, is just trapped in her own thought world in which absence of evidence, at least when it coincides with her own agenda, is evidence of absence, and in which hypothesis and theories become facts and "knowledge", and vague generalities become detailed understandings, at least when useful for the cause.
Now please cite the specific “highly Christian-like ideas” that existed in Mesoamerica. Please avoid references to ideas that are so generic that they could literally fit just about any religion.
Do the homework yourself. You know the Spanish colonial soureces, I'm sure, and they are quite specific.
T
he rest of your post is the common refrain of those cornered: there's just TOO MUCH we don't know about ancient Mesoamerica to draw any conclusions about anything!!! Go tell that to the people who have spent decades studying it.
Not impressive. All this does is paper over the quite disconcerting fact that there's just TOO MUCH we don't know about ancient Mesoamerica to draw any conclusions about much that went on, culturally, religiously, and developmentally, to draw cock sure conclusions about texts such as the Book of Mormon. You're use of "anything" is just the typical critic's cop out. No one is saying we can't draw conclusions, but we should be very, very careful that our conclusions are tentative and open to change as new evidence becomes available, not the cock sure conclusions of an earlier generations of Egyptologists, for example, about the pyramids that were most definitely wrong (theses were nothing more than 'tombs").
by the way, the fact that you have been forced to this particular refuge (absence of evidence is not evidence of absence) proves that you've been forced to concede my point. You hope I won't notice, but I do.
Using Scratch's tactic of claiming victory after actually running away from every salient point won't help your argument here. The fact persists: the critics have all there eggs in one basket, the basket of absence of evidence in a young discipline that is
not hard science and in which
the vast majority of information has yet to be explored and unearthed.
You have no response to this point except to claim that I've claimed that given the dynamics of the situation, we can't draw conclusions about
anything. Of course, neither I nor any other apologist is making such a claim. It is you who are claiming cock sure certainty in the face of vast gulf of data still unknown and reflecting the overwhelming body of the record of ancient Mesoamerican civilization, as well as making claims regarding what is known that make huge leaps of inference from generalities to specifics that cannot possibly be anything more than bare speculation given the dearth of detailed knowledge in these areas.
Your' position is as a gatekeeper of orthodoxy, not a scientific seeker of truth. That is as it is because of your overriding need to deligitimize the Church, not a disinterested search for greater understanding.
The face of sin today often wears the mask of tolerance.
- Thomas S. Monson