Philo Sofee wrote:StarbuckI'll check to see if I have a copy somewhere.
I appreciate that very much.
Unfortunately my backup CD is unreadable.

Philo Sofee wrote:StarbuckI'll check to see if I have a copy somewhere.
I appreciate that very much.
Philo Sofee wrote:Starbuck wrote:About eight years ago I developed software that allowed Byesian Belief Networks to be created and calculated. I fully understand how probabilities from prior and observable data can be computed. I have never really understood how soft observations ie human behavior, could be fully determined.
What approach are you going to use to address this issue?
Now that sounds like software I would LOVE to have! Is it available? How do I go about getting it?
Chap wrote:When the apologists think that there really is some objective evidence is in favour of the Book of Mormon, they make a big, big noise about it, like it was really a game changer. Films, websites, articles, the lot.
But once it is punctured (and so far it always seems to be) ... they suddenly don't need anything so vulgar as evidence any more. Their burning in the bosom is infinitely superior.
However, in that case why bother with any evidence, ever? And why come here to argue, when you just KNOW?
I think some apologists want a silver bullet. For theological reasons I don't think there ever will be one until such matters are pointless. But I certainly agree a constant problem in contemporary apologetics has been overhyping elements that at best are part of a circumstantial argument. First chiasmus then nahom and I'm sure something else will come. Don't get me wrong I find such things interesting and at least chiasmus is helpful to understand texts. But I don't quite understand the desire to overhype them.
Philo Sofee wrote:Based on what little I understand and know, it is because with such an obviously enormous civilization the Nephites and Lamanites were supposed to be based on the Book of Mormon text, there really ought to be much, MUCH more that we find, yet we have truly, literally nothing in an actual world setting to verify anything. And so, anything helps, and things get blown out of proportion which takes our eyes off what matters.
Apologists only have ever dealt with possibility (following Hugh Nibley’s lead, for the most part), but the more weighty and significant probability is what is needed, since most anything is merely possible, but not most anything is probable. Probable is of much more important weight to getting us to what reality is.
The new Joseph Smith Papers project also holds a tantalizing clue as to how we are to understand the description “the writings of Abraham with his own hand upon papyrus.” Under the entry for 14 December, 1835 Monday, after a description of Joseph Smith showing the Egyptian records to “a number of brethren from New York,” there is a line that Joseph Smith wrote – “To day I received a letter form [sic] Elder Orson Hyde from his own hand” but it has a line all the way through it. Notice the language. A letter “From his own hand” similar to what he described of Abraham’s record, “written by his own hand.” It’s not understood to be a later copy of a copy but written by Abraham himself, just as Orson Hyde’s letter was “written from his own hand.” This strike through phrase is not found in J.S. History vol. 2 (1834-1837), p. 332.
ClarkGoble wrote:I can think of things that would be dramatic but not necessarily really indicative of much. So if, for instance horses were found (even though I don't think there were any) that'd be pretty interesting. But honestly it wouldn't really be strong evidence for the text. So what you'd need to find are some unambiguous texts to honestly indicate much. Anything short of that really doesn't establish much. As the old critic joke goes, where's the "Welcome to Zarahemla sign?"
Shulem wrote:There is no possible chance that the goddesses Isis and Maat that are labeled and portrayed in Facsimile No. 3, are really men dressing up for an Egyptian freak show as suggested by Hugh Nibley. Absolutely zero probability! .
Themis wrote:Finding horse would get rid of one of the many problems that the Book of Mormon has. It won't provide positive evidence for the Book of Mormon being a story of a real people, but it would remove some negative evidence which would be good start. It would show the Book of Mormon as being more plausible then where it is right now being very implausible.