DarthJ:
Now it's back to the circular reasoning. Let's just assume that the "dictation manuscripts" are really copies of a parent Q document.
No assumption is necessary. Both Schryver and maklelan have presented conclusive evidence that the EAG is dependent on a pre-existing text. I have yet to see anyone address that evidence, other than to just summarily dismiss it.
The reason he may have created this prop is to prove that he could read all these ancient, mysterious writings---he translated the papyrus by the power of God, and now he's going to show that he knows all these mysteries about the language of the ancients. An after-the-fact prop is no less magician's patter than before-the-fact talk about the mystical arts of the Orient.
An interesting speculation, but one that has no basis in evidence or precedent.
I know that Schryver and his emissaries, like you, want to divorce history from your cipher mania, but unfortunately Michael Chandler signed a document indicating that Joseph Smith could read the Egyptian characters at the time Joseph Smith first obtained the papyri, and if you're an inspired hallucination fan (though you prefer to call it "catalyst"), the papyri are still what set this "translation" in motion.
First off, does anyone really believe that Chandler was in a position to know whether or not Joseph Smith’s translation was accurate? I think it’s pretty obvious that the only thing Chandler was interested in was getting his money and leaving town. I’m pretty sure he would have signed an affidavit that Joseph Smith could walk on water, if it meant putting $2400 in his pocket for the trip back home.
As for the arrival of the papyri being a catalyst for the reception of the translation of the Book of Abraham, no one is disputing that. Perhaps you can explain why you think Schryver’s thesis is affected either way. I can’t see how the quesiton of the dependency of the EAG on the Book of Abraham is affected at all, nor the hypothesis that the EAG represents an attempted encipherment of Joseph Smith’s revelations.
And you also are not talking about who Joseph Smith's audience was: largely unschooled frontier people who believed that a magic rock in a hat was a perfectly acceptable explanation for the Book of Mormon, and who had a very different worldview than any of us.
Your reading of history is dramatically different than my own. No doubt many early Mormons were, like their neighbors, “unschooled frontier people.” But that hardly describes the majority of them, especially those who rose to prominence in the movement like William Phelps, Oliver Cowdery, Frederick Williams, Warren Parrish, the Pratts, John Taylor, Lorenzo Snow, and many, many others. Not only that, but the “audience” for the EAG appears to have been a very small subset of Mormons-a group that included only the most accomplished people, like Phelps and Parrish.
All your false stereotyping does is reveal you to lack the objectivity necessary to assess the issue without prejudice. No surprise there.
I'm not saying this is my theory; I'm wondering why nobody seems to be considering this.
I’m sure most of the people here will be willing to consider any illogical scenario you can come up with. After all, that’s what they do best.
It's at least as likely as creating the cipher idea out of whole cloth.
Whole cloth? lol! The evidence for the cipher idea is, to use Schryver’s exact words, “abundant and compelling.” There is tons of textual evidence, as well as historical. Only here in Wonderland can such evidence be so easily dismissed. I’m sure it will play a lot better in scholarly circles where blind bigotry and stubborn ignorance are not as prevalent as they are here.
By the way, why isn't Hauglid as impressed as you are? I guess he must be just another moron who doesn't know anything.
Why do you think he
isn’t? Did I miss something? As far as I know, Hauglid is convicned that the Schryver theses are 100% correct. Do you have evidence to the contrary? Please share.
Speaking of making things up, have you found that historical evidence about Joseph Smith or his companions thinking they were creating a cipher yet, or an example of them attempting to use this mess to encipher anything?
Schryver has found at least three examples of where the cipher was used. I have seen them. As far as I can tell, the evidence is incontrovertible. They combined the meanings of multiple characters to produce sentences.
But these examples also serve to illustrate how useless the thing would have been, which is no doubt part of the reason they abandoned the project so soon. As Schryver said in the Deseret News article, “It just didn’t work.” That’s why they gave it up not long after they started.
So, Nomad does not know how Schryver decided which words were "unique" and which words were "generic," nor which words Joseph Smith would have considered to be "unique" and which would have been "generic." Does anyone else want to try?
What are you talking about? Sometimes I think you have serious psychological problems.
Why do you think what Joseph Smith thought about “unique” and “generic” words would have any relevance at all to Schryver’s study? You say you’ve watched the video, and yet you still don’t seem to understand the logic behind the substantial word study. It really isn’t that hard to comprehend, if you ask me. He extracted the substantial words from the EA explanations. He categorized those words as either “unique” or “generic.” The classification process was, quite obviously, subjective. But the logic is sound. Words like:
blood
commandments
creation
eternity
follower
glory
government
minister
ordained
Were judged to be more unique in their application than words like:
after
before
end
father
first
God
good
heaven
land
I can see the logic behind the classification here. “Blood” is a much more “unique” word than “before”. “Commandments” much more unique than “end”. “Creation” much more unique than “good”.
I’ve seen the detail analysis of the study. I could not identify any methodological problems with it. In fact, I thought it was a stroke of genius to analyze the Egyptian Alphabet in that way. The study demonstrates rigor as well as a very conservative interpretation of the results. I thought the unique words should have been given a lot more weight than he assigned to them. Even so, just looking at the list of substantial words you can easily see that someone would have had to already know the content of the Book of Abraham in order to create that list. If you didn’t already know the content of the Book of Abraham, it simply would not be possible to create a list of 100 unique words and have over 90% of them be among the words used in the book. It’s a very persuasive study, and I can’t wait to see it published. I think it will be very difficult for anyone to effectively dispute its results and the conclusions that follow from those results.
Nomad, if the "unique" vs. "generic" isn't relevant, then why did Schryver talk about it at all, and why did he use it to introduce his methodology?
Once again we see evidence of the fact that you aren’t paying attention.
I never said the “unique” vs. “generic” classification wasn’t relevant. I don’t believe it isn’t relevant. Obviously, it
is relevant, as well as logical.
I tell you what, let’s do a little test. I have in mind a particular short story by a famous American author. It is only 4 ½ pages long. The story takes place in Italy. Two men are the principal characters. I want you to make a list of 50 “substantial words.” Then we’ll compare that list of words to the story, and see if over 90% of the words on your list appear in that story. If you can even achieve a hit ratio of 30%, I’ll be impressed. You can’t include any articles, conjunctions, or prepositions, or any words with only generic application. They have to be very unique words, with very specific applications, similar in nature to the “unique” words as Schryver classified them in his study.
Here’s a list of ten words (selected from my post) that I would consider “unique” in the same way Schryver’s classified the EA words in his study.
- logical
- method
- theory
- audience
- papyrus
- Wonderland
- classification
- dictation
- manuscript
- illustrate
As soon as you complete and post your list, I will compare it to the story and see how successfully you were able to select only unique words that come from that story.