Runtu wrote:why me wrote:Now take this picture. Here we have Joseph Smith with his head in his hat. He see a light shining into his eyes but experiences no problem. And he also has to breathe and speak clear enough into the hat to be heard by the scribe. Try it and see what happens. I will bet a penny that you can't do it for a long time. Try it with a dull small flash light and place it in your hat. And keep looking into it. But make sure that your head is in the hat. Good luck.
So, those who described the translation were lying?
As I've said before, I do not believe he had his head in a hat the entire time, or even most of the time. This was classic misdirection, nothing more.
Answer a whyme according to his ... whatever:
No-one who refers to the 'stone in hat' method of translation claims that Joseph Smith kept his head stuck right in there
all the time. He could perfectly well have peered into it to read the glowing words on the stone, lifted his head out a bit to dictate, then looked back in to check they had vanished (which is the way one witness says he knew the scribe had written them correctly).
The essential points, attested by several witnesses, are:
1. English words of Book of Mormon translation appear on magic stone in hat, into which Joseph Smith had to look to read them.
2. No need to look at the actual plates at all.
None of this represented in conventional LDS iconography, which repeatedly shows Joseph Smith reading from the plates, without any representation of the magic stone or the hat in which it was placed.