Trevor wrote:Analytics wrote:Regarding Livy, Gardner had said something pretty bizarre: “You expect a literal reading of a text that no historical document supports.” I didn’t know what he meant by that, but I was pretty sure it was false. I brought up Livy as a counter-example to his claim that no historical document can “support a literal reading”.
I speak from a position of some expertise when I say that ancient sources are extremely tricky. History was born as a rhetorical art (persuasion, not literalness and objectivity), which the Greeks invented in the 5th century BC. Just because Livy expresses reservation about a particular anecdote or source does not mean that he is extremely reliable when he does not express those reservations....
I have no problem with that. When talking about the Kingdom of Rome in book 1, even Livy seems to indicate that the early stories about the Trojans and Romulus and Remus are at best half-mythical, and in any case, he rarely comes across as sure about things as Mormon does.
I’m actually surprised this conversation went in the direction it did. I always thought that the apologists were arguing for mere
plausibility if you interpreted it loosely enough. In my highly biased opinion beastie has demonstrated that it isn’t at all plausible regardless of how loosely you interpret it.
But be all that as it may, that whole thread is centered on this claim of mine which I made in passing:
The most rational way to read the Book of Mormon is as 19th century American fiction.
I’m surprised they take issue with this.
What I meant by that is the most rational way to approach this, or any other issue in a rational, secularly-oriented way is to make an
a priori choice for the null-hypothesis (i.e. it will be considered false until proven true) and decide how strong the evidence must be for you to decide that the null-hypothesis is false.
In the case of the Book of Mormon, the null-hypothesis is that it is a product of 19th century America, and the people arguing against that haven’t met the burden of proof for objective observers to believe otherwise.
I thought that the apologists conceded this. Thus, the arguments are about plausibility and needing a spiritual witness. I thought they said it was set up this way by divine design: that essentially, God tampers with the evidence so that faith is required in order to believe.
The apologists took issue with my claim and apparently were saying that
it has been proven using the tools of secular science that the most rational way to read the Book of Mormon is as an accurate translation of an authentic ancient Mesoamerican manuscript. I don’t believe that is the case, but if it is then don’t waste your time trying to convince little biased uneducated
me, convince the anthropologists who dedicate their lives to understanding ancient Mesoamerican civilization.
When you read it as fiction you can focus on the spiritual message and the literary merit, such as it is. You get insights into how the 19th century author viewed the world. It totally makes sense from that perspective, and you can focus on what it actually says and trying to understand that, rather than being forced to ignore, disregard, or twist various essential passages in order to create the veneer that it is plausibly an ancient record. If you force me to read it, I’d rather get lost in the world it presents rather than cram it into the real world.