This is far afield topicwise, and I don't acknowledge this point. I believe that it comes down to your basic assumptions. If you assume the existence of God, then belief in supernatural events connected with that God are both easy to accept, and that acceptance is quite rational.Not necessarily. Nevertheless, I think you have to at least acknowledge that the claims being made by the Book of Mormon witnesses are--by their very nature--much more incredible on their face than the claims being made by the Spalding witnesses and therefore much more difficult for a rational person to accept.
And I also believe that this can be a rational position. However, this issue has nothing to do with the question of how to explain the similarities you are talking about. Disproving the Spalding theory does not suddenly require that you believe in angels.And when you throw in all the other problematic data revolving around Joseph Smith, then, for me personally I can rationally come to the conclusion that there never were any plates with genuinely ancient writing on them.
Yes, and this would indicate that their belief was created by what they had been told, not by independant knowledge or investigation (i.e. their witness was led).Well I think if you are going to accuse them of flat out lying, then, yes, their testimony may not tell us what actually happened, but if you're going to allow that they were not lying but stating what they actually believed then I think you need to note commonalities in the testimony and the more overlap you have, the greater the chances are that something like that actually happened. Which is ironic, because Brodie claims there is too much overlap!
The context of the parallels is the texts themselves, not the alleged (and controversial) statements collected later. But we can agree to disagree.This is where we disagree and I've stated my case several different times now. It appears we aren't going to resolve that difference of opinion, but I do stick by my assertion that the context of the parallels is as important as the parallels.
It's not odd. It happens all the time when we compare texts. That's part of the problem. We have to have something that goes beyond simple parallels - and it has to be in the parallels - it can't be from all the rest of the theory.Well I appreciate that concession. Yes, I agree they do tell us that we ought to look at the texts... and then what happens when we do? We see parallels. Isn't that odd?
And I disagree with you - in part because once we have the texts, the witnesses are irrelevant. But again, we can agree to disagree.But since the witnesses "tell us that we ought to look at the texts" I suggest they are not coincidental.
This doesn't address my point. Either the argument that Joseph plagiarized from Spalding is true or it isn't. This ought to be demonstratable without the need to disprove or prove the orthodox version, don't you think? In fact, if it was plagiarized, it should be demonstratable independant of any other argument about its origins. So why the need to discuss the orthodox narrative?I disagree. The Book of Mormon needs to be explained in some manner. How did it get here. Do we accept the official version? Do we conclude that Smith produced it on his own with no help from Rigdon? Or was Rigdon involved? I think those are important questions.
Actually, since I haven't made my views clear on the three witnesses, you are actually making a lot of assumptions. And this is why this aspect of your discussion has no place here. I have actually been quite clear about what kind of evidence I would accept with regards to the parallels. I have a paper that has been published and should be available soon laying out a formal methodology for discussing this kind of issue. I am not interested in expanding that issue to talk about the witnesses which I suggest have no real bearing on this particular issue. This isn't about the witnesses, its about the parallels.However your answer to the question of where the Book of Mormon came from IS relevant to the discussion because it shows which evidence you are willing to accept and which evidence you prefer to reject.
I am completely willing to temporarily abandon that position - I already said so.That is correct. But I assume you think those who are going to consider production theories for the Book of Mormon should also at least consider the possibility of the official version? Or are you willing--for the sake of discussion--to temporarily abandon that position and argue as though you were Dan Vogel?
Let me explain my position (others here in this forum are well aware of this). I have argued this issue with numerous individuals now in various internet forums for the better part of 20 years. What I constantly get is the angel issue being thrown back in my face. One of the problems that comes up is a basic premise. If the supernatural is irrational to believe (as you noted earlier), than any competing theory, no matter how unlikely on its own, is to be preferred - regardless of whether it is a coherent argument in its own right. So, I find it easier to simply toss the angel out the window.Hmm... it appears as though you do want to argue as though you were Dan Vogel. Certainly you can understand why I would inwardly question your desire to approach the discussion that way... ?
To put it more bluntly, I don't believe the Spalding argument is a good argument. But if all you are going to do is say that it is a good argument compared to the argument involving an angel, then there isn't anywhere the discussion can go. So, I am simply trying to remove that obstacle so that we can talk about the merits of your argument unfettered by an evidentiary bar created by comparison. Maybe this will help you better appreciate why I am uninterested in dealing with the testimony of the three witnesses in this thread. As an aside, these numerous discussions I have had with Metcalfe, Vogel, Broadhurst and others are generally all still available in various internet archives. They weren't private discussions.
No, but its hard to get past the point that you started your last post with, that belief in it is inherently irrational.Do you see the official version as more difficult to defend on a discussion board?
By the way, I am not terribly interested in arguing Vogel's point. But his version is exclusively opposed to yours. That is, both he and you cannot be right. And he doesn't have an angel either. This means that there are competing theories out there that in general Spalding advocates compeltly ignore. It took years to get Vogel to engage in a forum like this with Spalding advocates.
This is an issue which I am claiming is not true. Further investigation has not supported the prior claims.However, after further investigation, the text actually supports the prior claims.
This isn't the issue. Why does Smith use Spalding in the way he does? That is the question. Of course, I understand where your problems inherently lie. Without the alleged Spalding source text, you can't actually be certain where Smith used Spalding (if he used him at all) - beyond what you can attempt to claim from your various witnesses. But we know that he added the religious material (which seems to be quite substantial in the book of course). So I suppose I should let you slide for now on this issue .... on the flip side of the coin, it is relevant for comparisons between the narrative discoveries.Long standing problems? Really? I don't think so. I think that makes for a nice phrase when criticizing a theory you obviously don't accept, but, in the first place the crediblity of the witnesses IS more important than possible motives, and in the second place I think there has been plenty of assertions as to possible motives. I merely mentioned one possibilty. Another is that Smith was raised for much of his life in poverty. Coming out with a new Bible promised to eliminate that problem.
Once more, we have this assumption. But its not really based in evidence.In terms of his specific motivation to copy Spalding's discovery narrative, assuming he had already copied Spalding before and had gotten away with it, ...
Or perhaps, as Vogel suggests, he didn't use Spalding and instead used something else from his environment .... its not an either/or position here.Now that is a good question. Smith was either confident he had eliminated the Spalding problem or stupid or he really had a genuine discovery experience that paralleled Spalding's---but you just agreed to rule out the latter. I don't think he was terribly stupid, do you?
Of course. And should you parade them out, we can start talking about how (in)significant they are.Actually that is not quite correct. There are also parallels between the Book of Mormon and the Roman story--no doubt you are aware of that--which you also--no doubt--see as insignificant, but others don't.
I have an 1832 account mentioning Orson Pratt in connection with the Straits of Darien which was printed in at least two newspapers - following preaching on the subject of the Book of Mormon geography in which he appears to have suggested that Zarahemla was near the Straits of Darien. Marquardt also mentions this in his book. So, what you are saying isn't actually accurate.That is very problematic because you have Miller definitely mentioning the "Straits of Darien" as part of his testimony in 1833 and only Roper's speculation that he's getting that specific detail from the "buzz" around him that wasn't actually put in print until 1840.
I suspect it would have a lot to do with the quality of the evidence. Some things generally are pretty incontrovertable. I am not interested in making arguments that I don't actually believe.Now there's a good question. If I could put them together before 1830 would you then be willing to consider additional S/R claims or would you want to find a way to discredit the evidence?
All righty then. Sometime soon (hopefully next week but we will see how much time I need), I will produce a couple of texts - completely unrelated, as far as we know, with a complex set of parallels connecting them.Then duplicate it. You can't have it both ways. If it's typical you should easily be able to duplicate it. If you can't duplicate it, it's not that typical.