Water Dog wrote:Where is your uniform theory that explains it all? All you're observing is the nature of science and academics. Is anthropogenic global warming real or not? The science was "settled" we were told and now some of the most famous AGW scientists have become skeptics and changed course. Even the IPCC has started to fall apart. In another thread about elephants a commenter made me ware of an interesting essay written by Sorenson in the past couple years where he talks about this. Read the section "About Archaeology". He lays it out, this is simply the reality of the science. Theories will bounce around and maybe in years to come the accepted theory will be completely different. So what, you still haven't been able to prove the Book of Mormon false.
http://www.mormoninterpreter.com/an-ope ... chael-coe/
We don't need a unified theory to explain it all. As I have stated earlier, many of us are interested in the implications of the Late War for different theories of the creation of the Book of Mormon by Smith and others. But just because we don't have all the answers, doesn't mean that your pet theory is true. There is limited conclusive evidence, mainly because the author(s) of the Book of Mormon covered their tracks. But there definitely is converging evidence pointing to a 19th century creation of the book.
And, there is one common factor to all "critical" theories - there is ample evidence that the Book of Mormon is not consistent with science, history, or reality in general. Positive evidence, not just a lack of confirming evidence.
Water Dog wrote:Spanner wrote:One common believer reaction to Book of Mormon critics is to pileup a bunch of "how could Joseph know [insert "hit"]" points and items that are compatible with reality. Then expect critics to counter them. That is a waste of time. There only needs to be ONE piece of disproving evidence to show that the book is a hoax. Joseph was attempting to write a book about Hebrews in ancient America. Of course he is going incorporate as much factual material as he can. And where he guesses something, for many things there is a reasonable chance he will get it right. So accurate items prove nothing in the presence of material that demonstrably contradicts reality. "Hits" would only be of use if there were no counter-factual material.
A very shallow (and circular) argument. You rationalize that the questions you cannot answer don't matter because of some question we cannot answer? Questions I'm sure you also can't prove false, but simply reject the answer. How vague and fallacious. Re-read what I've already written on this line of thinking.
Yes - I don't have to challenge every "hit" you think you have found. I am quite happy to concede (for example) that there was indeed some species of bee in precolumbian America. So what? For YOUR claim to be true (the Book of Mormon is a true history of ancient America), ALL Book of Mormon claims must stand. If you can back up half of them - great - I don't have to challenge every one of them.
It only takes one critical flaw to expose the Book of Mormon as a hoax. You can fling all the red herrings you want, but if you can't answer the critical questions that falsify the Book of Mormon, then the debate is over.
Deal with it - you believers are the ones making flakey claims and perpetrating a scam. If you sold me a car without a motor, and I complained that it was not a functional car, it would not do for you to point out the wheel, and steering wheel, and bumper etc and claim that of course you had sold a functional car - just look at all the car parts on it! Unless you provide the whole car, it isn't a functional car.
Also, for future reference, labeling something "shallow", "circular", "vague" or "fallacious" means diddly-squat unless you can actually show how the labels apply. You can't do that, so you are just handwaving. You will notice through our interactions that I have pointed out where your argument is flawed, and I have provided numerous links to references backing up my position. You have not done this. You have resorted to handwaving and, at times, outright insults. I see no reason to engage with this sort of interaction; I am just noting that you seem to have picked up this undesirable behavior from some very immature mopologists who think debate involves flinging insults and thought-stopping labels, then doing a victory jig, having avoided any meaningful engagement with the issue on the table.
Here are some links to one critical problem with the Book of Mormon - these actually provide evidence it is false, as opposed to pointing out areas where evidence for the book is lacking:
http://user.xmission.com/~research/central/isabm1.htmlhttp://www.dialoguejournal.com/wp-conte ... 04_197.pdf This is not the only critical problem that falsifies the book - but I only need one.
Don't expect us to engage in discussion about peripheral details - elephants or whatever - for anything other than amusement. Even if you did prove some of your interesting claims, the central problems with the Book of Mormon remain.