



If, like Shulem, you want to go with the polemical approach, it is fine.
Good lawyers tend to be careful, exacting, and logical readers. RI has proven to be precisely that over time. He has no compunction about telling me when he thinks I am wrong. He doesn’t cut the LDS Church much slack either. There are many reasons why I find his take on this most valuable.
Oh, I read them. If I found them at all convincing, I would have bothered responding to them.And no, RI made some considerable errors in this discussion in his assessment of the definition of repurposing, please read the comments so that you understand this.
Personal biases are all over this thread. Shulem is the most biased voice on this thread. At least he admits it.Your personal attacks even as others continue to make arguments on the points are sounding more and more desperate. Please just stick to the discussion at hand and leave your personal biases aside. The scholarly approach would be far more appreciated than these repeated jabs at motive and intent.
There are different ways of speculating about Joseph Smith’s motivations. This is certainly one of them. I can see its appeal. I don’t think it is the only way of understanding or interpreting the situation.hauslern wrote: ↑Sun Aug 06, 2023 9:42 amIf the Book of Abraham is pseudepigraphy which "involves a kind of intentional deceit by an author. This is when an author writes a work claiming to be written by someone else (Abraham?) "My definition of forgery is a writing that claims to be written by someone (a known figure Abraham) who did not in fact write it" (Smith did) Ehrman p.24 Forged.
Lets face it Smith was caught in a bind. He had a reputation of translating ancient writing (Book of Mormon) and his supporters had forked out a lot of money by todays standards. He had the Bible and Josephus as sources. He did not know then that scholars would argue that Abraham was fiction, camels had not been domesticated yet. (See Finkelstein, The Bible Unearthed, pp.36-47)
Marcus wrote: ↑Sun Aug 06, 2023 5:28 amYour personal attacks even as others continue to make arguments on the points are sounding more and more desperate. Please just stick to the discussion at hand and leave your personal biases aside. The scholarly approach would be far more appreciated than these repeated jabs at motive and intent.
A dictionary is a good starting point for understanding what words mean. Sure. If all you’ve got is quoting the dictionary, then you don’t have much.
I mean, if we’re nailing down the ‘right word’ to describe what he did with the papyri then I’d suggest he “abused” what I understood to be a sacrosanct religious artifact.