Chap wrote:
I run deer down, wrestle them to the ground, and bite their throats out.
Each to his own.
My kinda guy.

Chap wrote:
I run deer down, wrestle them to the ground, and bite their throats out.
Each to his own.
Ceeboo wrote:Hey Phaedrus!
Phaedrus Ut wrote: In all seriousness this text will be devastating to the average person because the similarities are so obvious.
This will be devastating to the average person?
Do you really think so? (To be clear, this is a serious question)
Perhaps I am wrong but I think the impact it will have will be exactly zero (or very near zero) to the great, great majority.
Not singling you out for an argument, Phaedrus, just randomly chose your post in hope of further discussion along this line.![]()
Peace,
Ceeboo
Fence Sitter wrote:Ceeboo,
I am not sure I would use the word devastating and I'll have to actually read Hunt's book to get a better sense of its actual impact, but many Mormons I know believe very strongly that Joseph Smith could not have created the Book of Mormon on his own. Its an argument you hear frequently from the believer. If Hunt's book is even close to the endeavor of the Book of Mormon it will be an easy example to bring up as a counter to the "how could he have done it by himself" defense. That was one of the reasons I posted above the same question about Hunt's book. One would have to be a member to understand the joke. As missionaries we encouraged prospective converts to ponder the Book of Mormon and ask themselves if it were possible that a man by himself could have written this book.
Phaedrus Ut wrote:
We can see what a author living in the same area of the America as Joseph, Cowdery, Rigdon, Spaulding would produce when writing in a pseudo biblical style with a 19th century bias of American exceptionalism.
Phaedrus Ut wrote:
I think it's the accessibility of the comparisons that make this unique. I've read nearly every think published in the past 2 years concerning the Book of Mormon from a academic, apologetic, and critical standpoint. I've been participating in online forums like this since the early days of ZLMB in the 90's. This to me is one of the most unique items I've read that pertains to the composition of the Book of Mormon.
We can see what a author living in the same area of the America as Joseph, Cowdery, Rigdon, Spaulding would produce when writing in a pseudo biblical style with a 19th century bias of American exceptionalism.
Phaedrus
Bret Ripley wrote:Also considering the amount of time they were adrift, it could be said they were in no sense cracking on like smoke and oakum.DrW wrote:Worse still, since they were not allowed to build fires on the barges, they would not have been able to make repairs with heated softened pitch or bitumen when the seals between the hull planks failed.
canadaduane wrote:Phaedrus Ut wrote:I think there are other things that resemble the language of Book of Mormon much better than Hunt's book. That would be the Book of Abraham, the D&C, and Joseph's language in the JST. So in my opinion this text is running a distant 4th place in texts with similar language to the Book of Mormon.
I think that's a fairly accurate assessment. Here is a scatter plot visualization of our results:
We have 2 "The late war" entries in there because we cleaned up some of the OCR errors in one and wanted to see how much impact these were having on matches.
Ceeboo wrote:
Perhaps I am wrong but I think the impact it will have will be exactly zero (or very near zero) to the great, great majority.