Buckeye wrote:I think LDS apologetics have done a good job of arguing for a limited geography in central america, and arguing that the geography set forth in the Book of Mormon is plausible.
Where have they made these good arguments. If the arguments are "good", who have they convinced?
Posting such arguments on little known LDS message boards, where those who provide realistic counter arguments get banned, or publishing articles that get ignored at little known FARMS is hardly providing any exposure to determine the quality of these arguments.
If such arguments are so good, why intentionally hide and defer their merit to the future chasm of time as if they were published in the 18th or 19th century?
If those who publish such little known arguments are so well respected scholars, why have they not been able to generate any interest from their peers or the academic community they claim to have garnered such great respect?
Common sense makes the answer crystal clear.
Those claiming scholarly merit of the LDS Book of Mormon historicity works know that such works can only provide practical use at a fireside chat. If such works were submitted to the secular academic community for a requested peer review, it would destroy their use even at firesides.
"It's not so much that FARMS scholarship in the area Book of Mormon historicity is "rejected' by the secular academic community as it is they are "ignored". [Daniel Peterson, May, 2004]