ri wrote:Apparently, they did include specific criticisms that Coe raised in his Dialogue paper as part of the analysis.
Yes, from the comments section, they clarified:
We did not limit ourselves to 131 pieces of evidence, nor did we define them as true. After searching all B we found 149 (not 131 as you repeatedly and mistakenly claim) statements of fact, B, about which there were corresponding statements of fact in The Maya. Of those 149 statements of fact in B for which corresponding statements of fact in The Maya existed we found that 131 of them agreed and 18 did not.
The issues i have are
1) that they ambiguously define a statement of fact as something that can be untrue,
2) that they now say that the 18 untrue "statements of fact" are in The Maya when at other times they define those 18 as being additional statements discussed elsewhere by Coe, and
3) that they say they "search[ed] all B," which they now apparently define as the full Book of Mormon text.
Nowhere in the paper do i recall them stating that they searched the full Book of Mormon to get their 131 +18 statements, but now, in the comments section, they say they did. It's interesting that they assert it now, in response to my comment posted over there by chino blanco. they say:
Your core criticism here seems to be “For example, elements B could be every statement in the Book of Mormon, both those known as factual, those known as nonfactual, those not known if they are either, etc. Every element needs to be part of the experiment.”
And follow that with:
The elements B are every statement of fact in the Book of Mormon text itself about the physical, political, geographical, religious, military, technological, and cultural environment. Every element B is part of the study, we did not exclude any portion of the Book of Mormon text from scrutiny.
https://www.mormoninterpreter.com/josep ... -the-maya/
Except that they are only considering those elements that were ALSO facts from The Maya (131) and ALSO non-facts Dr. Coe happened to comment on (18). Restricting the data set like that is absurd, especially since from it they conclude that the probability that the Book of Mormon is fictional is smaller than the mass of a neutrino.