cksalmon wrote:However reasonable your position might be, this is a circular argument. You assume (1) without demonstrating it and then conclude from your assumed, undemonstrated premise that Book of Mormon is not a true history.
At this point, sans demonstration, one would be perfectly justified in rejecting (1) and, thus, the argument fails.
Even assuming that (1) is true, it is also undemonstrated; thus, the argument is not cogent or constraining.
This points toward the reason that I would speak of these things a bit differently than Beastie, for example. While she suggests, "...using languages as we normally do, it is reasonable and logical to state that the Book of Mormon has been proven to be 'not true' in terms of being a factual history," I would approach the issue from a different point of view. I would suggest rather that, all things considered, the probability of Book of Mormon being a true history is so small that one can reasonably exclude that probability from active consideration. I wouldn't say, however, that it has been proven to be "not true."
Chris
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_inference
A→B
A
∴B
Please don't take my lack of verbosity as snarkiness. I don't think I'm using circular logic. I don't have a supercomputer available to me in order to run enough simulations to satisfy an apologist in this instance. However, as an anecdote, my former father-in-law used to run nuclear tests from his computer at Los Alamos. His expertise was in variability equations. He was instrumental in helping the government move from live testing to simulated testing of nuclear devices. My point? Only a handful of people would be educated enough to understand the mathematics behind his programming. In addition, the complex data gathered from the testing again could most likely be understood by very few. What you're asking me to is take us into the realm of that level of expertise. That's impossible.
However, what's not impossible is for us to understand that inference, as a rule, is admissable when establishing truth. Reliable. Verifiable. Truth.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Admissible_rule
In a very basic way, I'm simply providing the model, thanks to the Book of Ether, and then sans the arithmetic (since it's beyond my ability to produce it, get it, or for most of us to understand it) making an inference that is sound. What thinking person could say that releasing 8 bottles, or 8 barges, or 8 anything at one point and then having them travel across seas/oceans for 344 days would land at the same spot, at the same time? We know enough, from a lay person's point of view, about weather and ocean patterns, statistics, probability, etc.. that my inference is sound, logically based, and based in rational principles which follow scientific rules.