stemelbow wrote:I'm not twisting words. You say there was reason for the personal attack. I say, I don't see criticism as a reason. What is the reason, then?
Yes you are, stem. You are confusing the whole situation. There is clearly a difference between use of the word reason as "cause" and as "justification." Don't pretend that you don't understand that difference and did not know which sense I employed.
Please explain to me how the signed statement is a testimony of a fact many here would say is not a fact? Just because they said he translated it does not suggest they are saying they know he translated it. Its a matter of category here. They, in their minds, categorized Joseph as translator because that was his claim. They, in their minds, categorized the plates they saw as those which he translated, because that was his claim. They, in their minds, are not testifying that they are witness to the translation or whether the writings were authentically from an ancient source.
If they say they he is the guy that translated those leaves, and they sign their names to that statement, then they have affirmed in their signed statement that Joseph Smith translated the plates. It is that simple. I am not engaging in mind reading. I am reading the document. You want to make their purported mental state something that changes the facts of the document itself. Their intentions and mental state do not matter. They don't change what the document says.
Indeed, they thought, because he claimed it, they he translated them. They did not testify that he translated them. They simply don't know that.
What they actually thought and knew makes no difference. The document says what it says. It says what Joseph Smith intended it to say when he wrote their statement.
Its of little consequence and I've explained why. Joseph and others, surely, told them Joseph translated the plates. They have no reason to doubt it, so when explaining their perspective they use the categorizing for clarity, it seems to me. No deceptive intent here at all.
They are not explaining their perspective at all. Joseph is explaining it for them, and they signed their names to the document. No one is accusing these guys of intentionally deceiving others. Joseph's authoring of the testimony increases the likelihood that he intended to mislead others by having these men sign a document attesting to his ability to translate the plates that he showed them.
If there had been no interest in creating some kind of validation of Joseph Smith's ability to translate, we would not have the Anthon story or Chandler proclaiming that Joseph could translate the Egyptian on the papyri (another obvious misrepresentation). Consider also the Greek psalter incident, and the Kinderhook plates. It isn't necessary, nor is it desirable in historical terms, to take the Book of Mormon as an isolated incident.
That is why their testimony is what they could verify--yes there are plates, yes they appear ancient and yes they have writings on them.
And Joseph Smith translated these leaves we touched. So have we signed, and so let the world take notice.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist