beastie wrote:I’m going to try, once again, to help Wade see the weakness of his theory.
Let’s pretend I’m going to make a secret code. I want to pick out neat looking figures for my secret code, and pick out such figures from different sources. One such source is a genuine Egyptian papyri, so I use some of those figures, along with others I pick up elsewhere. I use them in a grid for my secret code.
Now, according to Wade, no one could feasibly believe that my secret code contained some genuine Egyptian figures because I had mixed them with other elements and was using them in a grid-like code. In fact, if such a person were collecting genuine Egyptian figures for some purpose, there is no way that they would select those genuine Egyptian figures from my secret code to be used in such a collection – all because I used the figures mixed in with others in a grid-like code.
Get it now, Wade?
It's pretty obvious that you are the one that doesn't "get it."
lol!
I’ve been away from this madhouse for the past several days, and I haven’t even missed it. Imagine that!
But I’ve now scanned (very unattentively, I might add) through a number of the posts over the past few days, and I must confess that I’m confused as to why beastie and others think it matters at all if these guys in Kirtland believed that the Masonic cipher characters were Egyptian?
In other words, why do you think this has any bearing at all on the Schryver thesis of the KEP? As I understand it, his point is simply that EAG stuff wasn’t an attempt to translate the papyri. The characters given explanations, with some exceptions, don’t even come from the papyri. Those that do come from the papyri are selected arbitrarily. Some of the characters are from the Masonic cipher. Some bear a resemblance to characters from the Anthon manuscript.
So what?
The point is that they aren’t from the papyri! These guys weren’t making the EAG in order to translate papyri.
The characters they used were selected arbitrarily.
Who cares whether or not they believed they were Egyptian? It doesn’t matter to either the dependency thesis, or the cipher thesis.
I have seen very little evidence that
anyone on this message board (except people like wenglund and maklelan) even understands Schryver’s arguments well enough to speak intelligently about them. And that includes California Kid, who has been one of the main people behind this red herring line of argumentation. I think it’s funny as can be that the exmos have anointed him and Kevin Graham as their “experts” on the KEP when it’s so obvious that neither one of them knows what they’re talking about. I read through Smith’s Abr. 1:1-3 paper again over the weekend. What a specimen of so-called “scholarship”!!!! Really? The EAG was created to translate a single paragraph, and then they decided to do something different? I started making a list of bald assertions from the paper, but I finally gave up after about a dozen or so. It is comforting to know that Smith represents the future of Book of Abraham criticism. The only thing that could be better is if Graham and Osborn can get themselves published, too.