Kishkumen wrote:As to the subject of the panel, Vogel made what I thought were excellent points. In particular, I immediately disagreed with Bushman's way of reading Joseph Smith's experience as a treasure seer, largely because I find it almost impossible to untangle the treasure seer from the prophet. I think that, truth be told, the two are the same. What one sees is a slow evolution in focus. But what do we make of Brigham Young identifying the location of sites anciently dedicated for Nephite temples? I think this is a continuation of the tradition of treasure seership in Mormonism. The focus has shifted (away from acquiring money from the earth), but they are fundamentally the same.
I don't agree with Vogel. I think you can believe in Joseph Smith's claims and still view him suspiciously and even as being a nincompoop or treasure seeker. Joseph Smith is riddled with inconsistencies. Many people have flaws and that is why anyone (believer or no) should take a skeptical view of what he's saying. It actually makes him somewhat endearing except when he's being not so endearing. And valuing Joseph Smith's insights isn't something that is necessarily tied to whether or not you believe he was telling the truth, but whether what he says makes sense and is reasonable and consistent with other sources (including inspiration from God). Which is really the point to Joseph Smith's experiences and insights after all.