I think Smith definitely needed something more than his recorded story to trick people, and I think he must have known clearly that he needed that something more. He was an experienced treasure-finder, after all. He knew the kind of patter it took to hook people. I'm not an expert con artist, but it just seems clear to me that simply producing a stack of foolscap, and claiming to have translated it from ancient plates that no-one was allowed to see, was never going to fly.Stem wrote: ↑Thu May 07, 2020 1:01 pmSure, I think in hindsight [the elaborate charade of translation with seer stone and dictation from hat] works to some extent. I just don't understand the mindset he must have been in in order to think he needed something more than his recorded story, as if it came from plates. "I need to trick certain people to think I'm seeing words in a hat, so I can complete the sham!" Doesn't mean a whole lot to me. He could have just produced the text and voila, tricked everyone just the same without risking someone catching his tells or his elaborate effort to keep hidden from people right before their eyes. It's as if a major part of the whole enterprise was to pull off a big trick for the sake of pulling off the big trick.
There's just not enough of substance there for people to hang onto mentally. It's too obvious that the handwritten pages are the same kind of handwritten page that anyone can make. It's too obvious that the only reason to think those handwritten pages have anything to do with any ancient plates is Smith's naked say-so.
If Smith is standing there with a stack of scribbled foolscap swearing that it came from God, everyone's first reaction is going to be to push for something more from him, something more to the story. If all he can do is say, "Honest, ya gotta believe me!" then that just makes it all even lamer. He has to have a bone to throw people, to make them feel they've got something solid to go on. He needs a comeback to, "Is that all you've got?"
He can't let them see the plates. The plates suck. They're modern lead of the same kind everyone knows as roofing, he only even tried to engrave the top sheet, and the scratches he made there look childish. But he has to do something. Just saying, "I got this story from God, see" is going in naked.
In reality everything Smith did with the rock and the hat and dictating to scribes was so easily faked that it isn't worth an atom more as evidence than Smith's naked word that he got it from God. But look at us, even us. We're not just snorting the whole issue away as worthless flummery. We're fussing over whether the hat was white and how porous it was and whether it made sense for Smith to go through a routine like this. We're digging into the details he gave us, gnawing the bone he tossed our way. The translation schtick is still working on us.
I think Smith was shrewd enough to know it was the right kind of stuff.