antishock8 wrote: Any issues?
"deus ex machina"
If someone wants to believe, they will find a way or just back into the "deus ex machina" card. You cannot argue with unseen faith.
Chris <><
christopher wrote:antishock8 wrote: Any issues?
"deus ex machina"
If someone wants to believe, they will find a way or just back into the "deus ex machina" card. You cannot argue with unseen faith.
Chris <><
antishock8 wrote:cksalmon wrote:By "prove," I mean:
Construct an argument consisting of unambiguous and true premises the conclusion of which ("the Book of Mormon is not a true history") is necessarily entailed.
I'm going to take a poke at your premise based on the Jaredite Barges story.
All right.
We have:
- 8 small (up to the length of a tree, whatever kind of tree that may be), light-weight, ocean faring vessels that are part boat and part submarine
Here's a painting of the kinds of barges Joseph Smith would have seen and known:
[/img]http://www.nevillgallery.com/davidnapp/normalsize/dn16.jpg[img]
Here's a woodcut (?) of an Eerie canal barge Mr. Smith would have observed on many an occasion:
[/img]http://www.uh.edu/engines/erieboat.jpg[img]
As you can see the description of the barges in Ether fit nicely with these images circa Mr. Smith's time. The changes to the vessels would have been such that they are completely sealed, airtight, top, sides, and bottom; the barges would then have to be incredibly strong to withstand the strains of the ocean, both above and below the surface: waves, wind, torque, inversion*, pressure, and maybe a sea creature or two.
The barge is specifically designed to invert for whatever reason.
- 344 days of uninterrupted sea travel
- No ability to navigate *no sails, submarine, dependent on the elements for propulsion
- Numbers aren't provided, but each "small" and "light" barge the "size of a tree" must hold all provisions, flocks and herds, feed, people, water, human and animal waste, and breathable air
- Numbers in Jaredite party: Jared and his brother, and their families, and also the friends of Jared and his brother and their families
- Stones, touched by a god, illuminate, to whatever degree, the interior of the barges
-------- So, in short, we have the above-listed premise as being stated by the Book of Mormon. If, given the information we have above can be proven to be false, then the Book of Mormon is not true. Any issues? Addendums?
If (P) it is not true that the Jaredites completed a successful transoceanic voyage in their eight barges, then (Q) the Book of Mormon is not a true history.
Scottie wrote:One other minor quibble that I seem to recall hearing...
That the voyage was continuous. I seem to remember that it didn't mention continuous in the text? (But I'm too lazy to look it up)
antishock8 wrote:Scottie wrote:One other minor quibble that I seem to recall hearing...
That the voyage was continuous. I seem to remember that it didn't mention continuous in the text? (But I'm too lazy to look it up)
"And thus they were driven forth, three hundred and forty and four days upon the water.", says verse 11. The verses leading up to that passage are very specific reference their travails. There is no indication they made landfall until they "... did land upon the shore of the promised land." That's in the sentence immediately following verse 11.
Again, I prefer to stick with the information the Book of Mormon provides.
Scottie wrote:antishock8 wrote:Scottie wrote:One other minor quibble that I seem to recall hearing...
That the voyage was continuous. I seem to remember that it didn't mention continuous in the text? (But I'm too lazy to look it up)
"And thus they were driven forth, three hundred and forty and four days upon the water.", says verse 11. The verses leading up to that passage are very specific reference their travails. There is no indication they made landfall until they "... did land upon the shore of the promised land." That's in the sentence immediately following verse 11.
Again, I prefer to stick with the information the Book of Mormon provides.
Right, but it doesn't say continuous days. It's a small quibble, not worth arguing about. It still doesn't much help the plausibility of the story.
Reading Ether, I could see that questions regarding the construction and design of the barges and all facets of the Jaredite voyage required a technical understanding not appreciated by the lay person. However, because my profession required constant 24/7 concentration, and my time at home 24/7 family, it was not until retirement that I really put my mind to the subject of proving that the Book of Mormon is logically fact… nothing far fetched. I knew it had to be; but was still a little elated when my calculations and designs proved positive. As I am probably one of very few if not the only person in the Church with the necessary qualifications to understand what we read in Ether about the barges and the voyage, I now want to let the world know that it could only be there by revelation and is therefore just another of hundreds of reasons the Church and Gospel are true and we are safely in His care so long as we do what is right.
The successful transoceanic migrations of the Jaredites and others as depicted in the Book of Mormon scriptures are simply some of the hundreds of undeniable proofs of the Gospel of Jesus Christ as restored through the prophet Joseph Smith in these latter days.