DrW wrote:Radex,
While your explanation (excuse) may make you feel better about the face in the hat, it has not been really accepted by any Mormon I have talked with about this, including members of my large and TBM family.
Admittedly, I am often some sort of exception to the rule in any given scenario. My experience with my faithful family (all converts) is quite different from yours. We, and especially I, do not see an issue with any hat being used as any of the below examples:
- Head wear to keep the head warm.
- Head wear to hide a balding spot.
- Head wear to look more like Connery-esque James Bond.
- An object in which to contain an emergency vomit.
- A plaything for children of all ages.
- A thing which blocks light so that glow-in-the-dark objects are more visible.
Those are just uses for hats that
I've found. I am sure that, throughout the world, there are many creative uses for such a hat. None of them bother me.
The face in the hat translation is definitely a faith eroding disclosure. It is right up there with Joseph Smith's 30+ wives, multiple versions of the first vision, etc. none of which have been represented honestly in LDS teaching materials.
If "symbolism" is the apologetic card you wish to play on this, fine.
From my reading of posts here, it seems that the term "apologist" or its variants is used as an epithet. Are you so using it here? I was unaware that I was behaving in such a contemptible manner.
DrW wrote:But you need to understand that nobody is buying it. The SEC, Commerce Department, and other agencies require truth in advertising. People in the US have come to know what to expect in representations from a truthful organizations and credible institutions - and this isn't it.
Yes, well, of course you understand that the advert with that perfectly positioned and studio-lit Big Mac -- the one showing its visibly juicy colours and flavours -- looked exactly like the one you received at the drive-through window last night.
DarthJ wrote:The reason this is a false analogy is that paintings/drawings from official LDS sources of Joseph Smith translating the golden plates are purporting to depict a historical event.
And they accurately depict one method of the translation process, in my belief. They are no more false or misleading than the Big Mac example above. The difference might be that, when I see an advert for food, I understand that the truth of the matter is that the plate won't look like the photograph on the advert. It might have some similar properties, but any reasonable person might understand that an advert is an advert, and a painting is a painting.
They are not representing an abstract concept (like a swastika does). But if your point about the painting of George III is that the artist was commissioned to make things look better than they appeared in real life, you are not refuting the OP. You are conceding it.
Yes, the
swastika example was a false analogy. I was attempting to make use of my dastardly "symbol apologetic" that DrW pointed out.
Good catch.
thews wrote:So on one hand you have no issues with seer stones and head-in-hat, and on the other you argue that little is known of the process (which isn't true) while continuing to assert there was an Urim and Thummim separate from Joseph Smith's seer stones. Please explain when Joseph Smith obtained the Urim and Thummim, and what happened to them?
I do not see where my statements are in contradiction with one another. We would definitely like to have more information about the translation processes employed, and there is relatively little out there. As I said, we know about the two primary: stone in hat, and Urim and Thummim. We don't know much about what happened to the Urim and Thummim; moreover, we don't have a photograph of Joseph Smith doing any of the translation. A shame, but true. Instead we have artist interpretations, and they'll have to do.
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Go Fulham!)