Roger wrote:...
3. Assuming the Con. witnesses actually were suffering from false memories, does that mean that none of what they said was accurate? If not, how do you separate accurate memories from false ones in what they stated?
...
This is the question I began considering back in the mid-1970s,
before I met Vernal Holley and before I began comparing Book of
Mormon passages with Spalding's preserved writings. In other
words, my starting point was an attempt at historical analysis
and specifically an attempt to sort out false testimony from that
which is reliable.
I had recourse to public records, and that is one place I looked
for confirmation that such people as John Rudd, Sr., Lyman
Jackson and William Leffingwell really existed and had crossed
paths with Solomon Spalding.
Later on I was able to inspect documents preserved in libraries.
These included the materials at Oberlin, the Spalding documents
in the New York Public Library and Library of Congress, along
with lesser items at Dartmouth College, Connecticut historical
societies, a museum in Cherry Valley, New York, etc.
Lastly I inspected old newspaper files in Erie Co., Pennsylvania,
Ashtabula Co., Ohio, the Pittsburgh area, etc.
My conclusion -- after several years of such investigation -- is
that witnesses such as Redick McKee, Robert Patterson, Sr.,
Dency Thompson, Rebecca Eichbaum, George Wilbur, Isaac Butts,
Aron Wright, Abner Jackson, Henry Lake, etc. were indeed real
people, who were actually living where they said they were living,
when they said they were living there.
So, I say that it is possible to begin to verify large portions of
these old witnesses' testimony -- and with each historical fact
thus demonstrated, the remainder of their testimony becomes
more reasonable and probable.
However, it is indeed possible that some of the testimony is
wrong -- due to careless reporting, incorrect memories, etc.
It would be very helpful if the Mormons and their Smith-alone
allies would go through the old testimony and superimpose
cross-outs upon all the professions known to be false, and
upon all the professions that they consider to be very likely
false, due to incorrect memory. That is, IF such incorrect
or unreliable assertions do exist in the compiled testimony.
Then, each time they make their
contra arguments, they can
point to the crossed-out portion of Matilda Spalding's testimony;
or to the crossed-out portion of John Dowen's testimony; etc.
We would at least then all know what the consensus agreement
was regarding the accepted, factual information.
But -- as I keep saying -- this S-R advocacy is footnote stuff.
When I originally set up my research web-sites, I created three:
SolomonSpalding.com, SidneyRigdon.com, and OliverCowdery.com.
The latter has a sizable Joseph Smith sub-section, as well.
Unless some new information can be brought forth, bolstering
the S-R claims and testimony, I say it is time to fill in the
missing pieces at OliverCowdery.com. There is a good ten years'
worth of work to be done there. With every piece of the puzzle
we can put in place, for Smith and Cowdery, the easier it will be
to discern the textual/historical areas
not attributable to their
authorship, manipulations and cover-up.
Those areas
not attributable to Smith and Cowdery will be the
grounds upon which the Spalding-Rigdon claims will be established.
UD