Have they been invited to do so?
And, if so, have they agreed?
Have they been invited to do so?
In what academic setting do you think there are still smoke-filled faculty lounges? Or is that an expression you think a typical Mormon who believes in us vs. them would use?
“Substantive replies.” Oh dear. If you had those, I might be interested, but so far your record doesn’t show that. I’ll take a look at your response and post it back here later.kyzabee wrote: ↑Sat Sep 04, 2021 7:07 amNot sure why that was, Lem. Probably because you submitted two very similar comments before the moderator had a chance to approve one of them.
I understand that you disagree with me in terms of the independence question, but just to keep the conversation in one place I'll keep my substantive replies over on Interpreter.
Glad you've been reading!
None of the arguments or stats you’ve presented addresses the very basic non sequitur problem. Strange does not equal ancient. Unknown oddities are not evidence of a hypothesis when that hypothesis fails to predict any such oddity. Kyler your project has a lot of words and statistical presentations, but it’s riddled with process errors. You really should take it all down, find a group of statistics professionals who will give you a thorough peer review AND their names on the work along with you. Revise and republish what remains. A three yard run or two will be more valuable than this collection of Hail Mary passes.kyzabee wrote: ↑Sat Sep 04, 2021 7:18 amThanks for reading, PG!Physics Guy wrote: ↑Fri Sep 03, 2021 9:19 amThe analysis is persuasive that the Book of Mormon was not written in a similar way to those other pseudo-Biblical books. That only implies it wasn’t written in the 19th century, however, if you assume that “19th-century pseudo-Biblical writing” is one particular thing with a fixed set of rules that are accurately exemplified by that handful of texts.
Rasmussen simply assumes, and has in no way shown, that any possible 19th-century effort at a Biblical-sounding book would have to be similar in style to his basket of examples. He assumes that if Smith had written such a book, its prose style would necessarily have resembled that of those other books.
Which were written for sale as entertainment rather than as a hoax, by educated professional writers, whose texts were edited for publication.
Gee. Could every single one of those major differences between the other books and the Book of Mormon perhaps all tend to make the Book of Mormon a lot more archaic in style than the others? Would the professional writers have been willing and able to keep their archaism down to an amusing flavor, fairly consistent with the King James Bible? In contrast, could an uneducated fraudster have clumsily ladled on every archaic stylistic quirk he had ever heard in sermons or hymns or Shakespeare or Bunyan, ham-handedly overdoing it wildly as he dictated to a scribe from his hat?
No, instead of that it is astronomically more likely that a native speaker of 16th century English composed the Book of Mormon while employing 19th century vocabulary and concepts. This is Rasmussen’s premise.
"however, if you assume that “19th-century pseudo-Biblical writing” is one particular thing with a fixed set of rules that are accurately exemplified by that handful of texts."
It's definitely an assumption at this point that Carmack's four examples are characteristic of attempts at biblical writing. But, then again, Carmack's up to 25 of those pseudobiblical works that all tend to employ similar syntactic patterns. At some point a black swan could show up, and I'd have to revise my estimate. But for the moment I can only work (conservatively) with the data I have available.
And if you think someone in the 19th century could end up with the Book of Mormon's Early Modern English (along with the extinct semantics!) via clumsy ladeling during the dictation, go ahead and try that method and see how it goes. I'd be very interested in the results.
Flippant confidence in your pornography is duly noted.kyzabee wrote: ↑Sat Sep 04, 2021 7:10 amI'm glad you're making a collection! You'll have to send me the list when you're done. I'll stick it on my wall.Dr Moore wrote: ↑Sat Sep 04, 2021 2:24 am
Wow!! This is an incredible and devastating admission. To summarize, Kyler has set himself up like used car salesman, with multiple ways to get paid. Ask for a sticker discount, he makes it up on financing. Ask for a lower financing rate, he makes it up on a bundled warranty sale. His trade offs are Poisson parameters and consequent probability assumptions. It might work for the uninitiated, but to folks who’ve worked with large math models where many dials leads to greater errors, this is an absolutely revealing confession. I count this as fatal process error #8 that Kyler has admitted to. (yes I’m counting and yes each one is fatal)
Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Sat Sep 04, 2021 5:48 amThey already know you Lem. It's why they are absolutely terrified of letting you in on the discussion over there. Dr. Moore has demolished this guy. PG has done so, Billy has crucified him, and now you crucify him upside down as the explanation point! This has got to be the single worse thing Interpreter has ever produced! It even is worse than the outright debacle of the last Bayes Theorem paper they "published."
No one with skin in the reputation game would. Is there any evidence in Kyler’s work that is predicted from the “ancient record” hypothesis? Maybe one or two. NHM, for instance, would be value added with proper Bayes, as I’ve not seen anyone tackle it yet. (but proper Bayes may not be as friendly as hoped). These others like long book, Early Modern English, witnesses, are all maybe predictable outcomes of various hypotheses, but not the one he force fits backward. Well like most Mopologetics, it adds to the massive volumes of junk science for which the required effort to thoroughly debunk is unequal to the rewards for doing so. Doesn’t change the fact that junk science eventually outs itself. Crowdsourced intelligence is miraculous that way.Lem wrote: ↑Sat Sep 04, 2021 3:39 pmPhilo Sofee wrote: ↑Sat Sep 04, 2021 5:48 amThey already know you Lem. It's why they are absolutely terrified of letting you in on the discussion over there. Dr. Moore has demolished this guy. PG has done so, Billy has crucified him, and now you crucify him upside down as the explanation point! This has got to be the single worse thing Interpreter has ever produced! It even is worse than the outright debacle of the last Bayes Theorem paper they "published."Thank you, you have put me in very good company! And yes, although I didn’t think it was possible, the math behind this endeavor is worse than the Dales. They are probably breathing a sigh of relief that something else finally is taking the academic spotlight off them.
The worst is still KR’s chart where he has assumed that every pro-LDS hypothesis supports one single hypothesis, namely: “Book of Mormon Authenticity.”
In this chart, he combines his bogus results with his completely inappropriate number of significant figures into a running probability. That’s why I’m still pretty sure he is spoofing the Interpreter. No professional statistician would seriously put his name behind that chart. It’s ludicrous.
He’s just academically riffing, get off his back man! It’s Bayesian Jazz!Lem wrote: ↑Sat Sep 04, 2021 3:39 pmPhilo Sofee wrote: ↑Sat Sep 04, 2021 5:48 amThey already know you Lem. It's why they are absolutely terrified of letting you in on the discussion over there. Dr. Moore has demolished this guy. PG has done so, Billy has crucified him, and now you crucify him upside down as the explanation point! This has got to be the single worse thing Interpreter has ever produced! It even is worse than the outright debacle of the last Bayes Theorem paper they "published."Thank you, you have put me in very good company! And yes, although I didn’t think it was possible, the math behind this endeavor is worse than the Dales. They are probably breathing a sigh of relief that something else finally is taking the academic spotlight off them.
The worst is still Kyler Rasmussen’s chart where he has assumed that every pro-LDS hypothesis supports one single hypothesis, namely: “Book of Mormon Authenticity.”
In this chart, he combines his bogus results with his completely inappropriate number of significant figures into a running probability. That’s why I’m still pretty sure he is spoofing the Interpreter. No professional statistician would seriously put his name behind that chart. It’s ludicrous.
Definitely. I’ve put in a bit of effort, as have many here. It’s still interesting to do every so often, but after a while, and especially after such spectacularly and thoroughly insufficient responses such as those recently given by KR, you start asking yourself why you need to explain something, AGAIN, that is so simple, so obvious, and so well-accepted by actual academic and professional communities.
Doesn’t change the fact that junk science eventually outs itself. Crowdsourced intelligence is miraculous that way.