Jersey wrote:Having said that, I cannot think of a single instance in 9 years or so that I've known you online that I chose to make light of or mock any post of yours.
I'm sorry, Jersey Girl. I didn't mean to hurt your feelings. I just found your enthusiastic championing of this particular study and this particular thread a bit much.
Dr. Shades wrote:Which parts of that thread do you consider "eccentric" and "implausible," and why?
Well, for starters, I find the whole Spaulding theory eccentric and implausible, not least because Joseph Smith and Sidney Rigdon didn't meet until
after the Book of Mormon was published. I do admire the ingenuity of certain posters in matching Book of Mormon personalities and place names with various aspects of Spaulding's or Rigdon's biographies, but I consider it a rather pointless exercise.
Margaret Barker frequently offers ingenious readings of the evidence to advance her problematic theories about preexilic Israelite religion, but I nevertheless remain unconvinced--as do virtually all of her colleagues.
The Jockers
et al. study reminds me somewhat of Walter F. Prince's (admittedly less methodologically rigorous) study, "Psychological Tests for the Authorship of the Book of Mormon," published in the
American Journal of Psychology in 1917 (which was also peer-reviewed, I believe). Sample insight:
Among the names of the men arrested for [William] Morgan's abduction I found that of one Chesebro. This name resembles those of the above group in several particulars. The initial sound is that which most resembles the sibilant. The combination "ese" is the phonetic equivalent of "eez" and "ez." And, disregarding the "b," "ro" is found in two of the group, and in the other two in reversed order. Compare CHESEbRO and ZEEZROm.
Of course, the Prince study is almost universally ignored now, and I expect Jockers
et al. will suffer the same fate.