Dan wrote:You haven’t overcome eyewitness testimony with regard to Joseph Smith translation method.
I don't need to "overcome" it. I only need to show that it was not an exclusive method or that it was deceptive. You have already agreed it likely was not an exclusive method with your Cowdery speculation. The other option is that the method, as described by the witnesses, is not what was actually transpiring (deception). Again, by agreeing that the stone was merely a prop, you must acknowledge that possibility also.
You can’t get the Spalding MS into the room.
1. Of course I can
2. I don't need to
Joseph Smith’s possible use of the Bible doesn’t allow you to speculate about other documents.
Of course it does. Neither I nor those involved are bound to follow either Dan's rules, or Dan's logic.
Your argument from silence was unsuccessful, despite your inability to acknowledge it.
On the contrary, you were quite unsuccessful at demonstrating why I should believe the word of David Whitmer. You are the one using silence as your ally, but silence is a weak partner--especially given that you must not only argue from silence but contrary to Knight and the implication of the others.
You were unable to impeach Whitmer’s testimony,
Actually I let your words do that.
Let me ask again... give me a good reason to believe the word of David Whitmer. Earlier you stated that eyewitness testimony is as good as it gets. Well the Conneaut testimony is eyewitness testimony and yet you choose not to believe it. Give me the best reason you believe I should take the word of Whitmer over the Conneaut witnesses.
which is supported by many others.
No it isn't. NO ONE disputes that Joseph Smith put on a show, Dan. Even the hostile witnesses agree on that. But you and I agree that words never appeared in a stone. Only the word of Joseph Smith's "suggestible" devotees supports that--which is what I would expect from impressionable devotees.
Your attempt to use Knight’s statement out of historical context to overturn Whitmer and other witnesses was a failure.
And
even now you grossly mischaracterize(!) Remarkable. I never quoted Knight "to overturn Whitmer." You keep suggesting that my argument is exactly opposite of what it is. I'm pretty sure that is a
major logical fallacy. I quoted Knight and said
Whitmer would agree with him, Dan. How many times do I have to state it before it sinks in?
The claim that the whole Book of Mormon was translated by the gift of God is not contradicted by possible use of a Bible, which is why I began discussing the variant readings.
In the first place virtually NONE, of the witnesses you want to believe back you up on this with anything other than silence. And in the second place, any witness who is so devoted to the cause as to consider Bible usage to be trivial enough NOT to mention (which is Dan's argument from silence), is also so devoted to the cause as to consider any other document/manuscript equally trivial--especially if that document is itself considered to be a translation of an ancient record with new revelation thrown in. You have no way of proving otherwise
because to do so would require mind reading. It's just that your theory won't allow that as a possibility. But you can't use your theory as a basis to claim that
surely the witnesses would have told us if anything other than a Bible was being used. That is simply ridiculous. And yet that's what your case boils down to.
Earlier I wrote:
If you have some way of harmonizing Knight's testimony with the use of a Bible, I'm all ears.
You have no way of doing that. You simply assert that Knight did not witness the whole thing.
I wrote:
So, why should I believe the word of David Whitmer?
You have no good answer. You only allege that the "apparent contradictions" in Whitmer's testimony are the fault of his interviewers! Needless to say, I don't see that as a good reason to believe the word of David Whitmer.
I wrote:
I see no reason to accept any of it as anything more than "visions" brought about by blind devotion to a charismatic leader.
You have no rational response to that. In fact you agree that the witnesses were in a "suggestible" state of mind at the time of their alleged plate viewing. You speculate that the
first written account of their experience is, at best, a conglomeration of more than one highly subjective experience. You agree that Smith could have hypnotized them. And yet you want to take their word at face value, no questions asked, when they deny the use of a Spalding ms. And what reason do you offer to do that? Because Dan's theory demands it.
You have done nothing to show that the Book of Mormon witnesses are credible. In fact, the essay you wrote in
American Apocrypha indicates the opposite. Conversely you have done nothing to show that the Conneaut witnesses are not credible. In fact, you even agree that Hurlbut did not instigate the association of Spalding to the Book of Mormon.
And finally, marg has shown that the diagnosis you wish to impose on them from two centuries down the road is faulty. The data of actual memory theory studies--crucial to making your "memory confabulation" theory stick--simply does not apply.
"...a pious lie, you know, has a great deal more influence with an ignorant people than a profane one."
- Sidney Rigdon, as quoted in the Quincy Whig, June 8, 1839, vol 2 #6.