Nevo wrote:(quote fifth-c)The Johnson brothers are using a iterative source separation algorithm and it is showing that the Book of Mormon was influenced by the following books, in order of influence: the 1822 Koran, The First Book of Napoleon, The Late War, The Rights of Christ, and Strengths in Weakness Manifest.
And this bizarre result should make us highly skeptical that the Johnsons' method can tell us anything meaningful about possible modern sources for the Book of Mormon.
Hmmm...I'm not sure which study Fifth C was pulling from, but I do remember the 2-gram study showing better results for Napoleon than Late War, and the 4-gram study better for Late War, so this may be the 2-gram results.
Initially I dropped a sentiment Similar to Chris's, that I have a hard time imagining Joseph Smith using two sources, I mean, what I'd want to avoid is patching the Book of Mormon together with random books. At the end of the day, of course, if Joseph Smith used 27 books to create the Book of Mormon then that's what he did. But we'd want to see some method to the madness.
I have gone back over the 4-gram data and I believe it is compatible with Mosiah priority. So a little speculation here, as the Late War influence is waning by 1 Nephi, could very well be room for 1 Napoleon. Maybe Duane can publish those 4-grams on their blog since he's lurking...;)
We know Joseph Smith was sneaky thanks to David Wright's analysis of the Isaiah material, good motivation to believe he was open to pulling material from elsewhere and cover his tracks.