Journey of Faith DVDs

The catch-all forum for general topics and debates. Minimal moderation. Rated PG to PG-13.
Post Reply
_truth dancer
_Emeritus
Posts: 4792
Joined: Tue Oct 24, 2006 12:40 pm

Re: Journey of Faith DVDs

Post by _truth dancer »

JustMe wrote:td
You need to support your accusation with examples of where Beastie has misrepresented the "scholars"?


Not really. I don't think I am all that interested in going the rounds with her right now. I personally have no need at all to respond to her materials. I have my own projects to work on. Hers are her priority, mine are mine. I can disagree plenty with her without feeling the need to show al the ins and outs of her scholars ideas.
(bold mine).

Hi Just Me,

You did more than just disagree with her... you accused her of misrepresenting material on her site.

I think this sort of accusation requires either a detraction or support.

If you don't want to engage in an argument better to just not engage rather than make unsubstantiated accusations then walk away....ya know?

~td~
"The search for reality is the most dangerous of all undertakings for it destroys the world in which you live." Nisargadatta Maharaj
_beastie
_Emeritus
Posts: 14216
Joined: Thu Nov 02, 2006 2:26 am

Re: Journey of Faith DVDs

Post by _beastie »

To be frank, I have never had the impression that Kerry has devoted any significant time to studying ancient Mesoamerica. It doesn’t appear to be a primary interest for him. And that’s fine; really delving into this particular aspect of Book of Mormon apologia probably requires a natural interest in the topic in general, outside of the Book of Mormon. I would never have read dozens of books on the topic if my sole interest was Book of Mormon apologia, either. I got “hooked” on the Maya in particular – a truly fascinating culture that I really wanted to understand, as much as possible, totally outside the Book of Mormon question. I don’t expect many people to share that interest. I don’t think it’s a topic that dabblers have a lot of success with, due to the fact that evaluating the claims of those who do understand ancient Mesoamerica, like Brant, requires a pre-existing understanding and background knowledge in the topic. Really, not many people have that.

My past impression of Kerry is not that he’s studied it himself, but is content to rely on information from those who have, like Brant or even Jeff Lindsey. The quality of Brant’s work far exceeds Jeff Lindsey’s, even though some of his insinuations or connections are either suspect or outright misleading. Jeff Lindsey goes beyond that, and relies on outdated material that was always of questionable quality, or does not provide full information about material he cites. I remember that, for a couple of years, he had a reference on site insinuating that a new smelting site discovered would validate the Book of Mormon, and a quick famsi search revealed the site had been dated to around 1300 AD, which is within the accepted time frame for the development of smelting. Yet he allowed that reference to stand, on his site, for a long time without ever sharing that inconvenient fact. He did eventually update it, but long after the dating was available. But what Lindsay mainly does is cite other apologia.

I also do not believe that DPC has devoted significant time to studying the Mesoamerican, either. Again, I’m not criticizing that, I realize it’s an unusual interest. But I think it’s disingenuous of both Kerry and DCP to insinuate that they could really refute my argument, if they wanted to. It’s just that they don’t have the inclination to do so, because of supposed flaws in my person or posting style. Yeah, right. If either of them were really able to refute these points, they’d be all over it like white on rice, no matter how pleasant or unpleasant of a person I may or may not be. Based on my past experience with both Kerry and DCP, I seriously doubt either of them could adequately address the serious points I raise on this thread, for example:

1. the tapir theory – it is obvious that apologists developed the tapir theory due to the fact that there is no evidence that the horse existed in the New World during the Book of Mormon time period, and respected scholars in the field universally accept this fact. Kerry said this was “hyperbole”. Is Kerry suggesting that apologists would still have developed the tapir theory if there were actually accepted evidence of the existence of the horse during the prerequisite time frame? Laughable.


2. The question I raised on the Book of Mormon/history thread: Was the Nephite polity a powerful force that attracted the attention of Teotihuacan, or was it a minor polity that would not have attracted the attention of such a powerful polity?
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.

Penn & Teller

http://www.mormonmesoamerica.com
_krose
_Emeritus
Posts: 2555
Joined: Tue Dec 04, 2007 1:18 pm

Re: Journey of Faith DVDs

Post by _krose »

"I could whip you easily, with one hand tied behind my back. But I just don't feel like it right now."

- JustMe
"The DNA of fictional populations appears to be the most susceptible to extinction." - Simon Southerton
_Jersey Girl
_Emeritus
Posts: 34407
Joined: Wed Oct 25, 2006 1:16 am

Re: Journey of Faith DVDs

Post by _Jersey Girl »

krose wrote:"I could whip you easily, with one hand tied behind my back. But I just don't feel like it right now."

- JustMe


I don't recall seeing Kerry post the above quote. Can you tell me what thread it's on?

As an observer, I think the better route would be to begin a new topic for discussion of the relative Mesoamerican issues. I, for one, would be interested in seeing an actual topical discussion take place on this board. Perhaps take one issue, isolate it and beat it to death?

I love threads like that!
Failure is not falling down but refusing to get up.
Chinese Proverb
_JustMe
_Emeritus
Posts: 321
Joined: Thu Sep 11, 2008 4:37 am

Re: Journey of Faith DVDs

Post by _JustMe »

beastie

To be frank, I have never had the impression that Kerry has devoted any significant time to studying ancient Mesoamerica. It doesn’t appear to be a primary interest for him.


Fair enough. However, this is hardly a demonstration that you win by default. I understand you have an axe to grind and a serious bias also, so I am seriously suspect of whatever conclusions you draw. We simply are in no wise done yet with discovery. Linda Schele and David Freidel's works showed that plainly enough.
_harmony
_Emeritus
Posts: 18195
Joined: Fri Oct 27, 2006 1:35 am

Re: Journey of Faith DVDs

Post by _harmony »

JustMe wrote:beastie

To be frank, I have never had the impression that Kerry has devoted any significant time to studying ancient Mesoamerica. It doesn’t appear to be a primary interest for him.


Fair enough. However, this is hardly a demonstration that you win by default. I understand you have an axe to grind and a serious bias also, so I am seriously suspect of whatever conclusions you draw. We simply are in no wise done yet with discovery. Linda Schele and David Freidel's works showed that plainly enough.


As if you don't have a serious ax to grind and a unparalleled bias?

Good grief.
(Nevo, Jan 23) And the Melchizedek Priesthood may not have been restored until the summer of 1830, several months after the organization of the Church.
_krose
_Emeritus
Posts: 2555
Joined: Tue Dec 04, 2007 1:18 pm

Re: Journey of Faith DVDs

Post by _krose »

Jersey Girl wrote:I don't recall seeing Kerry post the above quote. Can you tell me what thread it's on?

No, it's not an actual quote, of course, but my interpretation of the last several pages of this thread. Is there a quote symbol for rephrasing?

Coincidentally, you did see "Kerry" (me) post the quote, just above yours (that's the K in KRose). So are you saying that 'justme' is Kerry Shirts? That's interesting.
"The DNA of fictional populations appears to be the most susceptible to extinction." - Simon Southerton
_Jersey Girl
_Emeritus
Posts: 34407
Joined: Wed Oct 25, 2006 1:16 am

Re: Journey of Faith DVDs

Post by _Jersey Girl »

krose wrote:
Jersey Girl wrote:I don't recall seeing Kerry post the above quote. Can you tell me what thread it's on?

No, it's not an actual quote, of course, but my interpretation of the last several pages of this thread. Is there a quote symbol for rephrasing?

Coincidentally, you did see "Kerry" (me) post the quote, just above yours (that's the K in KRose). So are you saying that 'justme' is Kerry Shirts? That's interesting.


What on earth are you talking about krose?

Nevermind. I don't think I care.

I think what you could do in the case of rephrasing would look something like this:

'Nevermind. I don't think I care.'

That's paraphrasing.

I've also seen posters use this method: Channeling Jersey Girl: -------

You could ask Shades, he's far better than I am in this regard.
Failure is not falling down but refusing to get up.
Chinese Proverb
_Ray A

Re: Journey of Faith DVDs

Post by _Ray A »

JustMe wrote:We simply are in no wise done yet with discovery. Linda Schele and David Freidel's works showed that plainly enough.


I think few would argue with that. The problem is when unsubstantiated claims are made.

Mike Ash:

Lastly, we must acknowledge that there are archaeological remains which suggest that the horse survived in Book of Mormon times. In 1957, for instance, at Mayapan (a site corresponding to Book of Mormon lands/times) horse remains were discovered at a depth considered to be pre-Columbian. Likewise, in southwest Yucatan, non-Mormon, Henry Chapman Mercer, found what may likely be pre-Columbian horse remains in three caves. Excavations in a cave in the Mayan lowlands in 1978 also turned up horse remains. (Sorenson, 1992, 99.)

In conclusion, there is some evidence that true horses may have survived into Book of Mormon times. There is also precedence for the theory that the Nephites may have renamed a useful quadruped with the name “horse.” Given these evidences, the supposed anachronisms of the term “horse” in the Book of Mormon, cannot be used against the record in the accusation that it is merely fiction. (Emphasis added)


Mormon Mesoamerica


Subsequent digging has expanded the evidence for an association of humans with horses. But the full story actually goes back to 1895, when American paleontologist Henry C. Mercer went to Yucatan hoping to find remains of Ice Age man. He visited 29 caves in the hill area—the Puuc—of the peninsula and tried stratigraphic excavation in 10 of them. But the results were confused, and he came away disillusioned. He did find horse bones in three caves (Actun Sayab, Actun Lara, and Chektalen). In terms of their visible characteristics, those bones should have been classified as from the Pleistocene American horse species, then called Equus occidentalis L. However, Mercer decided that since the remains were near the surface, they must actually be from the modern horse, Equus equus, that the Spaniards had brought with them to the New World, and so he reported them as such.3 In 1947 Robert T. Hatt repeated Mercer's activities. He found within Actun Lara and one other cave more remains of the American horse (in his day it was called Equus conversidens), along with bones of other extinct animals. Hatt recommended that any future work concentrate on Loltun Cave, where abundant animal and cultural remains could be seen.

It took until 1977 before that recommendation bore fruit. Two Mexican archaeologists carried out a project that included a complete survey of the complex system of subterranean cavities (made by underground water that had dissolved the subsurface limestone). They also did stratigraphic excavation in areas in the Loltun complex not previously visited. The pits they excavated revealed a sequence of 16 layers, which they numbered from the surface downward. Bones of extinct animals (including mammoth) appear in the lowest layers.

Pottery and other cultural materials were found in levels VII and above. But in some of those artifact-bearing strata there were horse bones, even in level II. A radiocarbon date for the beginning of VII turned out to be around 1800 BC. The pottery fragments above that would place some portions in the range of at least 900–400 BC and possibly later. The report on this work concludes with the observation that "something went on here that is still difficult to explain." Some archaeologists have suggested that the horse bones were stirred upward from lower to higher levels by the action of tunneling rodents, but they admit that this explanation is not easy to accept. The statement has also been made that paleontologists will not be pleased at the idea that horses survived to such a late date as to be involved with civilized or near-civilized people whose remains are seen in the ceramic-using levels.5 Surprisingly, the Mexican researchers show no awareness of the horse teeth discovered in 1957 by Carnegie Institution scientists Pollock and Ray. (Some uncomfortable scientific facts seem to need rediscovering time and time again.)


It is odd that the "two Mexican archaeologists" were not named, but the reference for footnote 5 is an article by Peter Schmidt titled "La entrada del hombre a la peninsula de Yucatan." Other sources utilize Schmidt's study of the Loltun caves to draw conclusions about the chronological layers.



The aforementioned book The Ice Age Cave Faunas of North America, page 262, makes this statement:




Stratigraphic and chronological sequences for the excavated units were established, but contradictory data from the field notes imply possible mixing of biological and cultural remains. The sequence as reported is as follows (Schmidt 1988)



1. Levels I through VII are from the Ceramic stage, but extinct animal remains occur at the bottom of Level VII.

2. Level VIII represents the preceramic stage, including some lithic elements and extinct fauna. The boundary between the Pleistocene or the Holocene may be located here or at the bottom of Level VII.


Note that the author is utilizing information provided in Schmidt's report. This statement clarifies that the extinct animal remains were at the BOTTOM of Level VII, which is the possible demarcation for the Pleistocene Era. In fact, elsewhere in this same text, it is asserted that, indeed, Level VII is Pleistocene in dating:




Loltun Cave is found at 40m. elevation in the southeastern portion of the state of Yucatan., 7 m. south of Oxkutzcab. Several publications about the studies undertaken on the remains from this cave are available, including Hatt and his collaborators (Hatt et al 1953) and by personnel of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (Velazquez 1980, Alvarez 1982, Alvarez and Polaco 1982, Alvarez and Arroyo-Cabrales and Alvarez 1990, Pollaco et al 1998, see also Chapter 10 of this volume). The known stratigraphy contains sixteen levels; sediments from levels VII to XVI are Pleistocene in age. (page 285)



Thanks to the help of Chris Smith, who provided scans of the text, and John Williams, who translated the text from Spanish, I was able to obtain the pertinent sections of the Peter Schmidt text. First, let’s review the portion of the previously quoted Peterson essay that refers to this research:


“It took until 1977 before that recommendation bore fruit. Two Mexican archaeologists carried out a project that included a complete survey of the complex system of subterranean cavities (made by underground water that had dissolved the subsurface limestone). They also did stratigraphic excavation in areas in the Loltun complex not previously visited. The pits they excavated revealed a sequence of 16 layers, which they numbered from the surface downward. Bones of extinct animals (including mammoth) appear in the lowest layers.

Pottery and other cultural materials were found in levels VII and above. But in some of those artifact-bearing strata there were horse bones, even in level II. A radiocarbon date for the beginning of VII turned out to be around 1800 BC. The pottery fragments above that would place some portions in the range of at least 900–400 BC and possibly later. The report on this work concludes with the observation that "something went on here that is still difficult to explain." Some archaeologists have suggested that the horse bones were stirred upward from lower to higher levels by the action of tunneling rodents, but they admit that this explanation is not easy to accept. The statement has also been made that paleontologists will not be pleased at the idea that horses survived to such a late date as to be involved with civilized or near-civilized people whose remains are seen in the ceramic-using levels. Surprisingly, the Mexican researchers show no awareness of the horse teeth discovered in 1957 by Carnegie Institution scientists Pollock and Ray. (Some uncomfortable scientific facts seem to need rediscovering time and time again.)”



Now here’s the pertinent section from the Schmidt research, with important sections bolded:


”Critical for associating human industry with pleistocene fauna is layer VIII, where there is no ceramic but where lithic tools and many horse remains appear. But unfortunately there are horse [remains] in layers VII and VI and also a very small quantity in layer V, all three containing ceramics.

Obviously there is some disturbance in these layers. Rodents as well as the most common mammals from the cave stand out in studies of the cave's fauna.

The only radiocarbon dating published (1805 +- 150) BC was taken using a combined sample of various pieces of charcoal and belongs to the area of contact between layers VII and VIII.

The stratigraphic and faunal analyses clearly establish that the excavated sediments must have accumulated from the Pleistocene era to the present, with heavy interference at least from layer VII on up. Only layer VIII remains a possible area of occurrence of both lithic material and pleistocene bones in a primary context. Unfortunately in neither this layer or others is there direct association of human tools with the bones, nor are there fire holes where charcoal or bones were clearly used or worked. The same is true with layer VII (El Tunel) (p 253).”


[After discussing flora found in the cave]. The situation in terms of fauna is more complicated. The majority of the animals discovered are represented since the Pleistocene era, having their origins in some of the neo-arctic and neotropical fauna. Studying in detail only the rodents, a sequence of types of vegetation the caves' surroundings was established that is very similar to that accomplished by means of pollen: layers before XIII-B, grassland; layers XIII and XII-L, medium jungle; layers XII-K to VIII, once again grassland; and from VII to I the current vegetation. These changes were not sudden but rather constitute advances and declines of the jungle with greater or lesser extension of the grasslands, where large animals and certain specialized rodents lived.

Once again the end of pleistocene conditions appears to be situated in the region of layers VIII and VII of the well "El Toro." Of the four extinct pleistocene species (Mammut americanum, Canis diris, Tanupolama, and Equus conversidens) and the three whose distribution receded more to the north (Bison bison, Canis lupus, and Canis latrans) five did not occur above layer VIII in "El Toro" and layer VII-F in "El Tunel." [The exceptions are the bison with three problematic examples in layer VI of "El Toro" and the horse, with 44 fragments in layers VII, VI, and V (all with ceramics), in "El Toro" and 59 fragments en the subdivisions VII-B and VII-E in "El Tunel." What is clear is that the presence of the horse Equus conversidens alone cannot be sufficient to declare a layer as pleistocene in its entirety, given the long series of combinations of this species with later materials in the collections of Mercer, Hatt, and others. Something happened here that is still difficult to explain. Horse bones seem to have formed the last layer of the Pleistocene or Epi-Pleistocene in various caves, or they must have been dragged into the caves decades up to millenia later, something that is difficult to accept given the climatic conditions of the Tropics. If we postulate a longer survival of the horse than that of other pleistocene animals to explain this situation, it would have to extend until almost the beginning of the ceramic epoch, which would not please the paleontologists.

Lithic Loltun also has not been been very amenable [to exploration]. There are very few well-defined techniques for dealing with stone fragments and cores; such techniques have varied widely from the beginning to the end. One of the reasons may derive from the uselessness of local flint for fine work. In the layers considered to be pre-ceramic there are very few tools: scrapers, shavers, knife-scrapers, jagged-edged tools (denticulados), and one sharp-ended tool (punta), all being of a very reduced size and totaling no more than 11 objects. Production techniques are limited to marginal finishing using stone chips and plates as the primary materials.

It may seem excessive the detail with which we have described the evidence that is so hard to understand about Loltun. But I believe that it is necessary because of the site's possible importance and because the findings have become widely known without specifying that the usable data until now are few and weak. Loltun has been incorporated into general theories about Mayan archeology and about the origins of humans in Mesoamerica.

Some authors limit themselves to mentioning an association between stone artifacts and Pleistocene animal bones, for others there is an association [p. 256] with Mammoth bones, and in a summary of the most relevant Mayan archeology in the last few years the long stratified sequence and the appearance of ceramics supposedly dated in 1800 BC is indicated. Regarding this last date, we must emphasize that among the first pots found in layer VII of "El Toro" there appear some fragments having characteristics of early pottery, but comparisons with material from Chiapas and from the Swazey complex in Belize have not given positive results, so the most probable date is Middle Preclassic.

The preceramic lithic material from Loltun has been tentatively assigned, because of it primitive and irregular character, to very early stages, before 14,000 BC. Others place it in the transition between the Pleistocene and Holocene and compare it with the complex of La Piedra del Coyote in the Guatemalan highlands and phase I of the Cave of Santa Martha in Chiapas. In this case it would have an age somewhere around 8000 to 10000 BC. It would be a manifestation of the Superior Cenolithic or until the Proto-Neolithic, or in other words, the Archaic.

In view of the evidence I have described, I lean toward the second possibility, and it is possible that its antiquity could be less, if we consider the continuity of the lithic of the Preclassic.

There is much left to do at Loltun. We are sure that there is an association of humans with pleistocene animals, but we must look in the part that has not yet been excavated for unmistakable evidence, where the strata have not been disturbed, where there is direct association of tools and bones, and direct action with the animals. We lack explicit traces of human visits to the cave as a home, places of work, or remains of other cultural elements besides only stone chips, and in the end, remains of prehistoric humans themselves." (pp. 254-55)


My first comment is that the Peterson/Sorenson summary in misleading in that it states that Schmidt said the possibility that horse bones were stirred upward from lower levels to higher levels by tunneling rodents is “not easy to accept”. This is not true. Schmidt accepts that the tunneling rodents disturbed the layers, as does Mercer.


The more fundamentally misleading context of the Peterson/Sorenson statement is that it implies that Schmidt did not believe that the horse remains dated from the Pleistocene era. Yet Schmidt made it obvious that he believes that the later layers were disrupted and that “only layer VIII remains a possible area of occurrence of both lithic material and pleistocene bones in a primary context.” This is consistent with the conclusions arrived at in the Ice Age Fauna text quoted above.




See link for full entry.

It seems to me that beastie has done a far more thorough job of bringing us the facts (love or hate her), but since Mike occasionally posts here, he might like to respond and give us some pause to reconsider.

In view of the above, Mike's statement:

In conclusion, there is some evidence that true horses may have survived into Book of Mormon times.


Could be re-written:

In conclusion, there is no yet accepted evidence that true horses may have survived into Book of Mormon times, but failing that - we always have the Tapir.
_beastie
_Emeritus
Posts: 14216
Joined: Thu Nov 02, 2006 2:26 am

Re: Journey of Faith DVDs

Post by _beastie »

Fair enough. However, this is hardly a demonstration that you win by default. I understand you have an axe to grind and a serious bias also, so I am seriously suspect of whatever conclusions you draw. We simply are in no wise done yet with discovery. Linda Schele and David Freidel's works showed that plainly enough.


I didn't say that I win by default. I said that neither you nor DCP were able to adequately tackle the issues I'm raising, and you might as well just admit it. This "I, or DCP, could refute you if we really wanted to, but you're just too unpleasant to deal with" should embarrass you both.

The "all the discovery has been done" meme is a fictitious creation of certain apologists, notably Juliann. I don't recall ever reading a single critic claiming that "all the discovery has been done". Nor is it necessary to claim that "all the discovery has been done" in order to refute the Book of Mormon as a ancient Mesoamerican document. As my earlier Coe quote demonstrates, and as the words of many others scholars demonstrate, we do know quite a bit about ancient Mesoamerica. Postulating that a significant Judeo-Christian polity existed during the Book of Mormon time frame wouldn't just necessitate a new discovery - it would require a new discovery that would overturn just about everything that scholars today accept about ancient Mesoamerica. That was more of a possibility before the glyphs were decoded, but subsequent the decoding of the glyphs, it is a very unlikely possibility.

You really ought to drop the "axe to grind" and "suspect" theory, because that taints every single thing apologists produce, including you. You are doing exactly what DCP decried on the Massacre thread - judging a text you haven't read, and declaring that it's tainted by my bias. Now, we all know that this only upset DCP because it was the Massacre book in question (and, by the way, I repeatedly said that the book may be accurate, but that a conflict of interest was undeniable), but I still enjoy pointing out his hypocrisy on the issue. And if you expect your work, or any other apologists' work, to be considered at all, by anyone, you really need to stop insinuating that bias automatically equates suspicious work.

Frankly, I think these things - the peer review, the axe to grind, are diversionary runs.
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.

Penn & Teller

http://www.mormonmesoamerica.com
Post Reply