You're begging the question here, and it's not just silly, it's irrational.
I agree with this too, but history cannot be ignored simply because people acted irrationally in the past. There is no question begging going on because at that time, among the three scribes, Williams was the most experienced scribe employed by Smith. Do you really think expertise and experience do not weigh on the question of liklihood that a scribal error was made?
Are you kidding? Keep in mind the question is not whether such an error was possible, but rather likely.
This is the heart of the entire issue you've discussed so far. In order to be able to insist that it's more likely that the scribe intentionally copied this section of text twice, you have to be able to show it's even a rational thing to do.
Well it is far more rational than the proposal your argument is destined to be. Meaning, if you insist on calling this manuscript a copied manuscript, you'll at some point have to deal with the irrationality of scribes being hired to "copy" scribbles and cross-outs from a source document, all the while misspelling words. This just makes no sense here. The document was fraught with errors that are best explained via dictation.
Can you give me a logical reason for Smith wanting to have this section of text copied twice on this one piece of paper?
I didn't say that. I said he obviously wanted two copies, and he did. He probably learned from his past mistakes and didn't want another Martin Harris incident. Now I agree that putting the second copy on the same page wasn't the best place for it, but then this all depends on what Smith planned on using it. Joseph Smith could have very well told Williams to make a copy and then left the room. Maybe the three of them got into an argument, Parrish stomped out and then Williams was being a smart ass by copying it on the same page? We can see the session ended abruptly, so it is anyone's guess what was going on in the room at the time. Maybe that was the last sheet of paper he had at the time and he wanted to make it all fit? Who knows? The list of plausible scenarios is endless.
My point is you're not dealing with the main reason why I reject this theory. You keep reiterating the silliness of my proposed explanations, and I agree they do sound silly. But I'm confident that if we were able to travel back and time and be a "fly on the wall", we'd find plenty that was silly and irrational. I remember being told by apologists that Joseph Smith couldn't have possibly believed an entire paragraph of text could derive from a single character, because that would have been completely irrational. But we know this is exactly what he believed and it must be dealt with no matter how irrational we find it to be. Martin Harris once said that while translating the Book of Mormon, Joseph Smith would translate entire sentences from single characters. So this idea that a character = many words, is something we know Joseph Smith believed.
If you cannot, then your argument cannot possibly hold, and homoioteleuton becomes the only logical solution. I invite anyone else reading to explain why that is not the case.
We're going in circles here. You're misrepresenting my argument by not dealing with the weight of the dictation evidence.
When you can provide that reason or explain that you have no reason, then I will respond to the rest of your post. If you cannot provide a reason then you've forfeited this debate. I'm interested in a respectful, objective, and professional discussion. So flippantly tossing my concerns aside violates all three of those standards.
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With all due respect Dan, there is nothing scholarly about demanding everyone address only the fine details you want addressed, while refusing to address the broader issues raised by others. You keep saying you'll "get to it" and I guess only time will tell. But in the meantime, don't pretend I forfeited the debate and it needs to be emphasized that "getting to it" is key to understanding the rejection of your argument. So until you "get to it," there really isn't much more I can do to help you understand it, and you're being willfully ignorant of it. I've explained this as carefully as I know how. The reason I reject the homoioteleuton is because there is simply too much evidence going against the copied manuscript theory. There are too many textual anomalies that scream dictation, and the initial purpose of the manuscript was either dictation or copying, it cannot have been both because, well, talk about irrational! I can't imagine Joseph Smith telling his scribes to start copying down a text from a document, except during those instances when he is dictating it to them.