Shears makes an excellent point about accurately considering both the numerator and denominator of the likelihood ratio, in his discussion of correspondence 3.18.
Recall that the authors' insistence that a "10% guess" results in a likelihood ratio of "0.1" directly requires that their LR denominator = 1:
p(evidence true given Book of Mormon fiction)/ p(evidence true given Book of Mormon true) = 0.1/1=0.1
The authors have objected strenuously to this observation, saying their denominator is NOT fixed, and thus allows for the evidence to be considered under the "not-H" hypothesis, that is, not-H = Book of Mormon non-fictional. However, their analysis does not support this as they, without exception, fall back into a "guess" of 1 in 10 (10% or 0.1) being directly interpreted as a LR of 0.1, which = 0.1/1, thus assuming a denominator = 1, and similarly for the other two LRs.
In the following excerpt, Shears takes them at their word that the denominator is not fixed at 1.
Billy Shears on May 29, 2019 at 11:58 am said:
Correspondence 3.18 “Calendars kept by holy men/priests”
First, on the numerator:
Emphasizing that the calendar was correct because a “just man” kept the record who proved his ability to accurately count because he was “cleansed every whit from his iniquity” and performed miracles in the name of Jesus seems like nothing more than an odd way of foreshadowing the visitation of Christ to a modern reader, and is a very Joseph Smith way of thinking (e.g.. Moroni 7:16-17).
So what is the probability Joseph would guess this, assuming the book is made up? I’ll say 0.10, but this should be interpreted in the comparison to the following probability.
and then the denominator:
Assuming this is based on Mesoamerican history:
Believing that the count of years since the birth of Christ is correct because the counter was a just man who performed miracles in the name of Jesus doesn’t fit very well in the Mayan world. If a Mayan wanted to convince us that a calendar date was correct he would talk about his training, his systems, his responsibilities as a priest, and his diligence. He wouldn’t talk about successfully performing miracles in the name of Christ.
That said, there is some overlap between a man who is believed because he performs miracles and a priest who in addition to keeping the calendars performs human sacrifices and cures diseases, so I won’t say this is a total anachronism. On the whole, I’ll give this a probability of 0.10.
and finally the likelihood ratio:
As a reminder, the likelihood ratio is the probability of the evidence assuming that the hypothesis is true divided by the probability of the evidence assuming that the hypothesis is false.
A man who is believed to be able to accurately count 33 years because he is a righteous miracle worker isn’t the same thing as a Maya Ah K’in who is the calendar keeper because that is a governmental office he inherited from his father. Thus, this isn’t an actual hit. But at the same time, a righteous miracle worker isn’t totally different from a priest either, so I don’t see it as a total anachronism that by itself weighs against historicity. So, I don’t see this tipping the scale one way or the other.
Likelihood ratio: 0.10 / 0.10 = 1.00
(a LR=1 does not change the posterior odds.)