Joey wrote:What position were they trying to bolster? The truth or the facts?
They were trying to bolster their position, which I'm sure they believed to be truthful and factual, just as Professor Hamblin was trying to bolster his position, which he believes to be true and factual.
Joey wrote:And they did not cite a supposed letter, they provided a photocopy of for the reader to make their own conclusion.
Professor Hamblin didn't cite a supposed letter, either. He provided the entire text of the letter, complete and unedited, so that readers can draw their own conclusions.
Joey wrote:All we have from you/Hamblin is heresay.
You have a direct quotation from the letter that covers the entire body of the letter, omitting only the date, the salutation, and the signature. That's not hearsay. Or, if it is, just about every quotation in virtually every published book is "hearsay."
Joey wrote:Difficult to know if Hamblin or you interpreted the letter (if one existed) you received (and now can't find) correctly.
There was no "interpretation." Professor Hamblin quotes the entire text of the letter, verbatim.
Joey wrote:Not true again. You have claimed it was a personal letter from Watson to Brooks. It was not.
Letter #1 was a letter written by the individual named Michael Watson, writing in his capacity as secretary to the First Presidency on stationery of the Office of the First Presidency, to an individual identified as "Bishop Brooks."
Letter #2 was a letter written by the individual named Michael Watson, writing in his capacity as secretary to the First Presidency on stationery of the Office of the First Presidency, to an individual generally known as Professor William J. Hamblin.
Joey wrote:Analogously, the second letter was from the Office of the First Presidency to Professor Hamblin.
Please support this claim with more than hearsay.
It's not "hearsay." I saw it with my own beady little eyes. So did Professor Hamblin. So did our production editor, Dr. Shirley Ricks. So did our source checker. So, probably, did a few others.
If you believe that we forged it, please contact the First Presidency and see to it that we get our just reward.
Joey wrote:I believe it is very deceiving to use a personal opinion of Watson as if it were being issued on "behalf of the Office of the First Presidency."
Well, it came on official stationery of the Office of the First Presidency, in an envelope marked "The Office of the First Presidency."
I presume that that's precisely the manner in which the letter from Michael Watson to Bishop Brooks arrived.
How is it, exactly, that we're being "deceptive"?
Joey wrote:Until you can show evidence, I have no choice but to either conclude either Watson or the Office of the First Presidency have no integrity in providing conflicting positions.
So either Watson or the Office of the First Presidency lacks integrity . . . which means that Watson letter #1 must be received as authoritative while Watson letter #2 must be rejected as without value.
I hope this makes sense to somebody else, because it makes not a bit of sense to
me.
Joey wrote:by the way, I sent a certified letter to the First Presidency's office a couple of years ago with a signed receipt in return. I included your claims (copies of your posts) along with a copy of the letter to Brooks asking for clarification as to whether they have changed their position since the letter to Brooks was issued. I know it was received, no answer to date.
They may have regarded you as a hostile crank.
Can't imagine why.
Joey wrote:James R. Clark's Messages of the First Presidency is an anthology of official First Presidency statements, from the nineteenth century on down. Not letters from secretaries to bishops somewhere, not Professor Clark's ruminations on this and that, but official First Presidency statements.
The statement from the First Presidency['s secretary, Michael Watson] to Brooks is quite simple and clear to understand. While you may need Clark's assistance in comprehension, I do not.
What part of the concept of "anthology of official First Presidency statements" is it that you don't understand?
Clark's collection isn't a commentary on First Presidency statements. It's a collection of First Presidency statements. If there's an official First Presidency position on the location of the Cumorah of the final Nephite battle, you should be able to do better to establish that than merely locating a letter from a secretary to a bishop. There should be something on the order of an official First Presidency statement to that effect, publicly issued to the Church at large. Professor Clark's collection of First Presidency statements is probably the best place to begin looking for such a statement.
Joey wrote:Joey wrote:Anyway, will you ever provide evidence that the Office of the First Presidency has formally changed their position as to the location of Hill Cumorah, as mentioned in the Book of Mormon, being in NY?
You open with a letter written by a secretary in the Office of the First Presidency. I counter with a letter written by the very same secretary in the Office of the First Presidency.
Wrong again, what I opened with was a statement from the Office of the First Presidency,
And I countered with a statement of precisely the same form -- a letter written by the same secretary, Michael Watson, on the same stationery, from the same Office of the First Presidency.
Joey wrote:Again, I really question your ability to read and comprehend.
I don't think that the irony can possibly get any thicker.
Joey wrote:You have never "countered" with anything more than heresay and a footnote from a publication which cannot speak for the Office of the First Presidency.
Have you ever actually even
looked at the article by Professor Hamblin? Scratch apparently hasn't bothered;
he thinks it's in the
FARMS Review. And
you think that the relevant quotation from Michael Watson is in a
footnote.
It's
not in a footnote. It's in the main body of the text of the article. And it isn't "hearsay." It's a direct quotation. It's a complete quotation. Nothing left out. No ellipses. No interpretation.
Joey wrote:And as Hamblin admitted on the FAIR boards, he specifically sought an answer from Watson. The letter from Bro. Sparks, as it appears quite obvious, directed his inquiry to the Office of the First Presidency as Watson acknowledges. Therein lies the difference between a response from the "Office" and one from an individual.
Oh good grief. Professor Hamblin wrote to Michael Watson because Michael Watson was the author of the letter to Bishop Brooks. This is a nitpicking distinction of utterly no relevance. Michael Watson authored both letters.
Joey wrote:But you are free to provide a copy of this supposed second letter if I am wrong.
Its entire text appears in the article by Professor Hamblin. You're free to read it.