The Dude wrote:So Joseph Smith was wrong.
About some things, yes.
Not believing him to have been inerrant means that we don't believe him to have been inerrant.
And what does that mean? That he was capable of error.
The Dude wrote:No biggie.
Precisely. Not on the big issues.
The Dude wrote:He was right about everything else, certainly
Certainly?
Constructing straw men is fun, I suppose.
The Dude wrote:because his fundamentalist Protestant background only colored his understanding of trivial matters like Native American origins.
To the extent that his presuppositions were uncorrected by revelation, they were as likely to be right or wrong as anybody else's. Which means that, like any other dated and placed human being, his understanding would be colored by his culture, his psychology, his personal history, his education (or lack thereof), and so on.
Such a proposition doesn't seem all that difficult to derive from the concept of a non-inerrant prophet.
The Dude wrote:If he had been wrong about the plan of salvation or the priesthood, we would surely know about it by now.
Constructing straw men is fun, I suppose.
But you're brighter than this.