Morrissey wrote:No, it's at best a lucky hit. Not too dissimilar from the case where I might be thinking about someone at the very second she calls.
maklelan wrote:That's a ridiculous comparison to make.
No, it's an apt comparison. It goes to the issue of lucky hits vs. systematically getting it right. You want to use one single instance in which a geographical site in the Book of Mormon appears to find independent corroboration as evidence of the book's veracity, all the while ignoring the multiple cases in which the Book of Mormon got it wrong. You are inappropriately ripping this one piece of 'evidence' out of context
This is particularly the case when random 'hits' are to be expected now and then, as they often time are. Even alien abduction enthusiasts, I am sure, can point to 'hits' now and then, but taken into the totality of evidence, the hits are not very persuasive.
Morrissey wrote:Kind of like the numerous other geographical references in the Book of Mormon for which there has been no independent and unbiased verification. What's Joseph's hit rate? Not too good, it turns out.
maklelan wrote:And the lack of evidence for one toponym has absolutely whatsoever to do with the validity of another. You seem unaware of the phenomenon known as the accident of preservation.
Yes it very much does. Again, one cannot consider evidence in isolation. One hit among no misses, 10 hits among 3 misses, etc. can provide powerful evidence of veracity taking all into account. On the other hand, one hit among dozens of misses strongly suggests that the one hit is more likely explained by other factors.
Jeanne Dixon is a psychic who presumably predicted John Kennedy's assassination. (Actually, she did not, but let's assume she did, as many people believe so.) She has gone on to predict many other events, with a horrendous success rate. Yet, many people point to the one she presumably got right and take it as evidence of psychic power. Perhaps arguing that the lack of evidence of pyschic ability in other cases has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with the validity of her claim to be a psychic.
Yet, even if one concedes she got it right in the one case, the many, many other times she got it wrong is persuasive systematic evidence of a lack of psychic powers. What the more plausible conclusion: that she is a psychic based on the one hit, despite the many, many other misses, or that she just got lucky the one time?
I would argue it is the latter. Your reasoning implies that the former is the better conclusion.
Morrissey wrote:Joseph Smith did, however, have a habit of borrowing words and inserting them in full form or in altered from into his narratives.
maklelan wrote:Or so you conclude based on words filling a spectrum of comparability to biblical words that you have a priori decided cannot come from actual historiography.
Given all the highly implausible, a-historical, fantastical, and supernatural claims one would then be obliged to accept, yes, I do conclude thus.
There is ample evidence that Joseph Smith borrowed liberally from his religious, cultural, social, and geographical milieu, and NO evidence of a large, lost pre-Columbian MesoAmerican civilization that rode horses, drove wheeled chariots, fought with steel swords, worshiped Jesus Christ, etc. The former, therefore, strikes me as both a far more parsimonious and plausible explanation.
Morrissey wrote:Borrowing and altering the word Nahum, with which he would have been familiar, and achieving one lucky hit (in the midst of dozens if not into the hundreds of misses), is a far more parsimonious and plausible explanation than the Book of Mormon is an actual ancient record of a lost civilization, and all the implausible baggage that drags in its train.
maklelan wrote:First, you're creating a conjunction fallacy by adding details to the general conclusion that naturally make it less probable than a single very general conclusion (A is more probable than B in conjunction with B1 in conjunction with B2, etc.).
Accepting the historical accuracy of the Book of Mormon clearly obligates one to accept a number of other highly fantastical, supernatural, and implausible conclusions.
maklelan wrote:To turn the tables I could say that it's more parsimonious that the Book of Mormon is true (very general) than that Joseph Smith borrowed a name that happens to parallel a toponym from Arabia that also matches the time period of the Book of Mormon, as well as the location of Lehi's party and the utility of the locale. On top of that, the two candidates for Bountiful lie almost exactly where the Book of Mormon puts it in geographical relation to Nahom.
Yes, you could try this, but you'd look silly doing it. Opting for supernatural explanations may be more parsimonious, but it is certainly not more plausible.
Even then, your explanation is still less parsimonious than saying that Joseph Smith borrowed and adapted a word known to him.
maklelan wrote:You also have to add the "implausible baggage" about eleven witnesses all lying together and maintaining that lie even after becoming hostile to the church, and the numerous Hebrew literary techniques in the book that were completely anomalous to the 19th century, and the etc., etc.
I don't find the prospect that 11 individuals engaged in a conspiracy to lie implausible at all. I think we can find innumerable examples in which individuals have entered into and adhered to all sorts of conspiracies, criminal or otherwise. I think this a far, far more plausible explanation than an ancient prophet in a large, lost pre-Columbian civilization that worshiped Jesus, rode horses, traveled in Chariots, fought with steel swords, etc. wrote a record of its history on plates of gold, appeared as an angel to Joseph Smith, etc., etc.. I mean really, people lie, all the time, and under all sorts of conditions. This is amply documented.
Angels appearing and leading young men to buried golden plates documenting the history of large, lost pre-Columbian civilization that worshiped Jesus, rode horses, traveled in Chariots, fought with steel swords, etc., not so much.
maklelan wrote:Hopefully you see how you're lack of familiarity with statistics, the law of parsimony, and logical fallacies has simply misled your amateur assessment of this issue. Don't let that get in the way of your impotent posturing, though.
Wow, that's quite a conclusion. I don't see how you've demonstrated any of the above to any degree whatsoever.
It is you, my friend, who is impotently posturing. But, if you think me wrong, take your NHM evidence to unbiased, non-Mormon who possess what you believe are adequate skills in statistics, parsimony, and logical fallacies. What do you believe the odds are that they'll buy into your arguments?
I think we all know the answer to this question.
But then, that's not surprising. After all, only one of us believes in angels with flaming swords .