mfbukowski wrote:What sort of remains would show what kind of "understanding" of the Book of Mormon?
Well, that is just it, if your understanding that the Book of Mormon is just some vague metaphor that God inspired in Joseph Smith the same way he inspired Goethe, then you really don’t have the Mormonism that is preached every General Conference.
mfbukowski wrote:Is there a religious "understanding" of the Book of Mormon, perhaps analogous to the fact that even physical evidence of the resurrection cannot prove the religious belief that Jesus took away our sins?
Christianity is rooted in the literal resurrection of Jesus Christ. If Jesus Christ didn’t exist, suffer and die under Pontius Pilate, and become resurrected on the 3rd day, then all the real power behind Christianity fails to materialize, it’s just some story meant to illustrate some principle, that is it.
Now Christian Apologists who make use of Bayesian arguments in the context of the resurrection do so using a strategy of apologetics called ‘Evidential Apologetics’, they are going to point at some feature, event, or phenomenon and say nothing explains this feature, event, or phenomenon as well as the Christian explanation, and we will demonstrate this using bayes as the medium.
mfbukowski wrote:And how would such an analysis show that Joseph was or was not a "prophet"?
Let’s take Archeology as an example. At this stage in the game, there is no indication that Native Americans in Central America has horse-like creatures that pulled chariots, and I think a reasonable agreement that the probability of us finding either of these things is pretty low.
Now let’s say that a digs in Venezuela and Mexico have uncovered the existence of a creature that was large enough to be used as a mount/pull chariots, and was domesticated by ancient inhabitants at a date that was roughly when the Book of Mormon was supposedly taking place, say plus or minus 100 years. On top of that, we discover that these peoples also had the capacity to make wheels sturdy enough to be used in chariots.
A Faithful reading of the Book of Mormon predicted we’d discover these things, when the consensus was that we wouldn’t, so the chance that Book of Mormon at least semi-accurately depicts ancient Americas raises the probability that Joseph Smith really had divine help.
mfbukowski wrote:
I see.
And how would we obtain this evidence?
Depends on what your looking for.
If we are looking for a being who is anthropomorphic in that they have a perfected body (never mind what having a perfected body means, and what it means to have a perfected digestive system and what have you), I guess we start looking in space.
And of course, the first objection being, what if God lives so far away, we don’t have any means of detection. This only complicates things for a believer, because if God is just a jaunty 50,000 light years away, it would take 50k years for him to hear and respond to prayers.
And the next objection is, maybe God operates on some level of physics we have yet to discover, but this isn’t helpful either, because now you are taking the best means of empirical investigation we have, and saying they are completely useless in detecting a humanoid shaped being.