DrW wrote:As one who values objective, verifiable, reproducible, physical evidence in hypothesis evaluation and decision making, I would be very interested in any such evidence you might have that you believe supports the historicity or veracity of the Book of Mormon.
Unfortunately, the place where I have laid out the majority of the evidence is also the difficult place to find it. It is part of the commentary on the Book of Mormon I wrote, which is 6 hefty volumes. Bits and pieces of the information are available from the FAIR Conference papers.
My approach is to assume that the text is what it says, the translation of an ancient document. I assume that vocabulary is a risky level of analysis, but textual actions and descriptions should show the production culture in spite of the translation (based on my experience working with Spanish descriptions of Aztec culture).
Comparing the text to Mesoamerica in a specific geography and during particular times gives the opportunity to compare events and motivations for actions with those that would have been present in that location and time.
As a single example, the text indicates that Nephites from the city of Nephi traveled north and met with people who appear to have traveled south to a location along the Sidon. This occurs in about 200 BC. The way I read the text, the people of Zarahemla were relatively recently arrived (since Zarahemla is king).
Linguistic reconstructions show a movement of Zoque speakers south along the Grijalva around 200 B.C. Archaeology shows that there was a connecting trade route into highland Guatemala, where they spoke a Mayan language. That gives us a time period where there would be speakers of a different language in the area where the Nephites were to go to--along with giving us a reason why they would head in that direction, following a known trade route to a place that was known to be possibly friendly, and at least not an enemy.
Does that prove anything? Not at all. What it does, however, is place an event from the text in a particular place and time. When there are sufficient of these correlations, then the case can be argued that the text represents people from that time and location. Obviously, one such is a coincidence. Much like historical linguistics, it requires multiple data points of correlation before the argument becomes sustainable.
I believe that they exist.
You are correct in surmising that I assume you have no such evidence.
You would have better said that you surmise that you wouldn't accept what I see as evidence. I would hope that you understand that I must have some evidence for my position, whether you accept it as evidence or not.