Roger writes:
Yet when I challenge you to duplicate that allegedly "typical" occurance you can't. You just brush it off as though it were no big deal that you can't--as if I made up the conditions you can't duplicate.
I am still waiting on the list of texts which you will agree meet your criteria. It seemed to me that your criteria excluded all other texts. I might have misread you though.
You're the one who seems to think Hurlbut tainted everything he touched, not me. But even so Hurlbut did not cause Smith to produce a discovery narrative in 1838 that parallels Spalding--the parallels of which you have already admitted are indeed parallels!
Yes, but as I keep insisting, those parallels are meaningless - there is no case for special significance. And I went through the first several one at a time, and explained why they weren't significant. For you to keep beating me on the head with the fact that I see the parallels too is inappropriate, since I certainly don't value you them the same way that you do.
Unless he was telling the truth, Joseph Smith's discovery narrative DID NOT HAVE TO parallel Spalding's.
I can use Caps too. EVEN IF THERE ARE PARALLELS, THEY DON'T HAVE TO COME FROM SPALDING.
Now if you genuinely remove that option, Ben, then the 1838 discovery narrative does not reflect reality. It is, in that case, a manufactured story.
Sure - but that doesn't mean that it has to automatically come from Spalding. As Dan Vogel pointed out, there are plenty of traditions of finding stone boxes in indian mounds. In fact, there is even a category of indian mounds referred to as "stone-box graves". You don't get a free pass on Spalding.
THEREFORE: Unless he was telling the truth, Joseph Smith's discovery narrative DID NOT HAVE TO parallel Spalding's. Let that sink in.
THE PARALLELS ARE SO GENERIC AND AMBIGUOUS AS TO BE ABLE TO SAY QUITE EASILY THAT THE ONE DOES NOT HAVE TO COME FROM THE OTHER.
And yet it does. Significant? You bet.
Not the slightest. If we were to apply this same logic here, then we could claim dependance between any two texts where we could put together a list of parallels.
Do you suppose that we could find parallels between
The Diary of Anne Frank, and
They Called Me Frau Anna? They are both published personal diaries of holocaust victims. And it seems quite impossible that they read each others books ....
Because witnesses told us prior to 1838 there is a connection between Spalding and Smith.
And if they were wrong? I think you put too much faith in these witnesses as opposed to acutally critically examining the evidence which is the texts. You want the witnesses to be right. You have every faith that they are. And so you think that really anything that you find in the texts must confirm those witnesses. Well, I happen to disagree. What's also fascinating to me is that wherever the idea came from (that there was plagiarism), it is clear that ever since people have been trying to come up with evidence to prove it. In other words, you are actively looking for this evidence. Why didn't anyone in 1838 point out that that there was this similarity between Joseph's discovery narrative and the Spalding manuscript? Surely that's not that much longer than 1833 to remember ....
My observation is factual. You are ignoring context.
Your context is a bunch of unverifiable (and certainly unverified) hypotheticals. Lets see ... Joseph Smith isn't actually plagiairizing a known existing work. He is plagiarizing an unknown but speculated manuscript. Now, the parallels themselves can be quite ambiguous and vague - because he isn't actually plagiarizing those details from the so-called Roman Story. No, he is plagiarizing this unknown manuscript, but this unknown manuscript must be similar enough in detail that the comparison is still valid. (Correct me where I am getting this wrong ok?). So, what context do you really have? Is there actually any conceivable way to falsify your claims? Is the only way to do it to actually find a second manuscript by Spalding and see that it is as poorly written as the first, does not contain the names Lehi or Nephi or Zarahemla, etc.?
But that's not all of the picture... the fact is we had witnesses back before 1834 telling us where it comes from... they allege Smith borrowed from Spalding. And sure enough, Smith's discovery narrative parallels Spalding. Coincidence? You want the world to think so.
The "before 1834" is meaningless - because the accounts which you can date before 1834 are all connected to Hurlbut. I am assuming that this 1834 date is significant because that is when Howe published them - but I fail to understand why having Hurlbut produce them in 1833 somehow helps your argument. Please inform.
You've agreed (in theory) to eliminate real plates from the equation. So you're left with an argument that wants the rest of the world to accept that Smith came up with a fake discovery narrative that parallels Spalding by mere coincidence even in light of the fact that witnesses had already testified there is a connection between the two men years before. You base this on your opinion that the parallels really aren't that significant--to you. Sorry but that's just not very convincing.
Who cares. This is a real issue here. You see, what you are trying to do now is not to actually answer to the evidentiary questions your theory begs, but to instead lower the evidetiary bar by saying that nothing else is remotely likely. You don't prove a theory by dismissing alternatives. Saying that these other scenarios are unlikely doesn't magically make your evidence somehow more reliable or better. This is the same thing that you were doing with the angel though and are now forced to do to everything else now that we have removed the angel. You need to show that the Spalding theory is actually a good argument - because saying that other theories are worse doesn't somehow make it a good argument.
I already answered that question using official LDS sources. Don't you accept what is printed in the Book of Mormon introduction? There is no mention there about Joseph being the intended audience. See my previous post where I cite this.
This is a literary fallacy. Fiction is always twice removed from its context. It confuses the locutionary act with its accompanying illocutionary act. Once we remove the orthodox version (which we did), we can of course speak of the text as fiction. And in doing so, just because the text makes a claim doesn't mean that the author is also making that claim. For example, in 1802 William Wordsworth wrote these lines:
MILTON! thou should'st be living at this hour:
England hath need of thee: she is a fen
Of stagnant waters: altar, sword, and pen,
Fireside, the heroic wealth of hall and bower,
Have forfeited their ancient English dower
Of inward happiness. We are selfish men;
Oh! raise us up, return to us again;
And give us manners, virtue, freedom, power.
Thy soul was like a Star, and dwelt apart:
Thou hadst a voice whose sound was like the sea:
Pure as the naked heavens, majestic, free,
So didst thou travel on life's common way,
In cheerful godliness; and yet thy heart
The lowliest duties on herself did lay.
Now, is Wadsworth actually castigating England himself in calling her a "fen"? Or is Wordsworth representing a castigation of England and isn't actually doing it. And that isn't even fiction. Fiction further distances the meaning of the locutionary act from the illocutionary act. After all, is the author of the Book of Mormon actually making all of the statements made by each of the characters in his novel? Certainly that would be problematic because of course, they are often contradictory. So it is in this case. Just because the text says something - particularly in a piece of fiction as you suggest, doesn't imply or actually tell us anything about the person of the author or the author's motivations.
This is not about what I think or what you think, it's about what the official claim was. Have you read the Book of Mormon introduction?
As part of the fictional account, why do we privildege it (and not other parts) with the actual real views of the author?
Neither do I. The question is did Mormon or Nephi? I would imagine you would answer sure because they had taken scrolls from Jerusalem. But they sure wouldn't be quoting the mistakes of an apostate King's translators that hadn't even been born yet
And the point is? The translation was made in 1830 right? The KJV was widely available. In fact, as I pointed out to Marg, a translation of the biblical texts from the Dead Sea Scrolls in the early 1990s used the KJV almost exclusively to translate them (varying in less than 5 percent of the text from the KJV). There were reasons this was done. It turned out to be quite useful for the purpose of that project and was apparently a measured decision - with those reasons in mind. The point is, though, that you are making some fundamental mistakes in trying to distinguish between the source text and the translation of that source text.
You're stuck on this because there is no rational answer other than plagiarism of King James.
I am perfectly happy to admit to the plagiarism. I don't find it that unreasonable. I suspect that with our different backgrounds, you might not fully appreciate my reasons also.
Doesn't matter. See we don't have the source text so all you're doing is speculating what might have been on it if it ever actually existed.
But you and Marg have been speculating - I am just responding. When you make assertions about what such a translation wouldn't look like, you need to be able to jsutify those assumptions you use. I just want you to list them. Otherwise all of your concerns are kind of hollow. You say "well it would look anything but something like that ...."
No I think it would be better if you tell us since you're the one who believes God was actually involved in this process.
I find this demand funny because I didn't bring up this issue - you and Marg did. Now, when I ask you to defend your assertions - you both have done exactly the same thing and tell me that it is my job, and not yours to define the process. Well, I didn't make the assertions - you defend yours - or withdraw the point.
I can, however, read what the witnesses state. What part of "Thus the Book of Mormon was translated by the gift and power of God, and not by any power of man" don't you agree with?
I am comfortable with the idea that the text in its current condition could meet those requirements. Such a position is rationally based, and studied. So, what specifically about such a statement is it that you find incompatible with the text as it stands, and what assumptions are you making when you take such a position?
Perhaps you can simply explain why God had "seraphims" and "cherubims" appear in the stone instead of "seraphim" and "cherubim"? Since--whatever his "style"--I would guess it is safe to conclude that God is a pretty decent translator why would he not actually translate but instead he simply copies a mistake from an apostate King's translators?
Obviously, precisely because it was copying the King James text. When the scholars who produced the Dead Sea Scrolls revealed CD, which includes the Isaiah text from Qumran (the great Isaiah scroll, not the smaller fragments), why do you think it is that they also followed the King James text instead of trying to correct every error they thought existed in the text?
It is a relevant question, don't you think?