Roger wrote:So again, if one views this from the skeptical point of view (as I do) the question is raised, is the cave association with the hill Cumorah coincidental to Spalding's cave?
Yes.
Roger wrote:So again, if one views this from the skeptical point of view (as I do) the question is raised, is the cave association with the hill Cumorah coincidental to Spalding's cave?
I said:
But, then, why did they go to the trouble of retrieving Spalding's writings?
Roger said:
Who is the "they" you reference?
There are solid reasons for suspecting Ethan Smith. Others, if there were any, are vague enough to say possibly......Roger said:
the more conspirators you add to your theory, the less credible it becomes, unless there are solid reasons for suspecting specific individuals.
Nevo wrote:So why have I apparently resorted to the "Courtier's Reply" with respect to the Book of Mormon?
Simply this: I have recently been reading Sorenson's latest book (and his earlier Ancient Setting book, which I picked up over the summer) as well as bits of Gardner's commentary (in Kindle form) and have come to the realization that the case for the historicity of the Book of Mormon is not as inconsiderable as I had supposed.
Roger wrote:Fair enough. What is the earliest testimony we have regarding Joseph's discovery of the plates?
In the fall of 1827, a person by the name of Joseph Smith, of Manchester, Ontario county, reported that he had been visited in a dream by the spirit of the Almighty and informed that in a certain hill in that town, was deposited this Golden Bible, containing an ancient record of a divine nature and origin After having been thrice thus visited, as he states, he proceeded to the spot, and after penetrating "mother earth" a short distance, the Bible was found, together with a huge pair of spectacles! He had been directed, however, not to let any mortal being examine them, "under no less penalty" than instant death! They were therefore nicely wrapped up and excluded from the "vulgar gaze of poor wicked mortals!" It was said that the leaves of the Bible were plates of gold, about 8 inches long, 6 wide, and one eighth of an inch thick, on which were engraved characters or hyeroglyphics. By placing the spectacles in a hat, and looking into it, Smith could (he said so, at least,) interpret these characters.
— "Golden Bible," Rochester Advertiser and Daily Telegraph (New York) (31 August 1829). Reprinted from Palmyra Freeman, 11 August 1829.
Roger wrote:Can you tell me where was Joseph Smith in the late summer of 1826?
Darth J wrote:Based on the speculative ideas promulgated by Brant Gardner that I have already read, I don't need to read anything more to know that in his six-volume set,
1. He will provide no empirical evidence at all that any of the civilizations described in the Book of Mormon ever existed.
2. He will not demonstrate any kind of coherent methodology that would be accepted by mainstream archaeology or any other field.
Nevo wrote:If you've already read Brant Gardner's arguments and concluded that they're worthless and not worth your time then my comment didn't apply to you. It was directed at those inclined to dismiss Sorenson and Gardner's work (and yes, Hardy's too) sight unseen. But apparently that doesn't describe anyone on this board.
Bazooka wrote:If their work had value, from a Book of Mormon perspective, it would be available on LDS.org (or an official sub site).
Nevo wrote:Bazooka wrote:If their work had value, from a Book of Mormon perspective, it would be available on LDS.org (or an official sub site).
That strikes me as a pretty questionable assumption, but in any case Sorenson's work has appeared in official LDS publications.
I'm pretty sure the Brethren are mainly concerned with getting members to read the Book of Mormon itself and gain for themselves a spiritual witness of its truth. They're content to leave discussion of geography and archaeology to others.
...is the cave association with the hill Cumorah coincidental to Spalding's cave?
Yes.
Probably this:
Had he gone to Ohio presumably someone would have noticed.