Dan wrote:me wrote:If a Bible was used but never acknowledged, what ground is there to conclude that nothing else was used but never acknowledged? Unless I missed something in our earlier discussion, the only basis you have for coming to that conclusion is the testimony of the Book of Mormon witnesses. Correct?
I’m having difficulty following your reasoning here. We’ve gone over this before; you should have gotten this by now, Roger. You can’t smuggle a MS into the translation room through an argument from silence. There is nothing demanding that the witnesses mention the use of the Bible; Emma’s and Whitmer’s comments against use of a MS were designed to specifically respond to claims about Spalding. You can’t show a purposeful suppression of using a Bible. What they said is far more important than what they didn’t say. Silence is silence—not evidence.
"There is nothing demanding that the witnesses mention the use of the Bible" ---except the obvious use of a Bible.
Emma’s and Whitmer’s comments against use of a MS were designed to specifically respond to claims about Spalding
And those comments are exactly what we would expect from either true dupes or devoted followers willing to lie for the Lord. Your witnesses are neither objective, nor disinterested. As marg points out "Your subjective decision to accept the Book of Mormon witnesses' statements as truth...is not objective verifiable evidence" and therefore does nothing to establish anything, regardless of what it was "designed to specifically respond to."
You are using sources for polemical purposes, not trying to reconstruct events.
Nonsense. I am interested in determining what really happened. Are you?
You are arguing, “you accept the Bible and it wasn’t mentioned, so you must accept a S/R MS could have also been used and not mentioned in order to be consistent.” As I explained, that is an ad hominem (circumstantial), or an argument from personal circumstances. It does nothing to positively establish your theory.
The fact is you do accept the Bible was used and not mentioned. So I am asking on what grounds do you accept a Bible and reject anything else? Correct me if I am wrong but the answer seems to consist entirely of: "Because the witnesses say no manuscript was used." Is that correct or not? Do you rule out all other ms's solely on the basis that the Book of Mormon witnesses deny it?
You have no text to compare to the Book of Mormon.
Of course we have a text to compare to the Book of Mormon.
All you have are the very problematic testimonies based on 20-year-old memories given to an individual bent on destroying Mormonism.
Then why do you accept the other testimonies he received?
I don’t believe that kind of evidence can overturn Mormon witnesses (and at least two non-Mormons), some of whom specifically denied Joseph Smith’s use of a MS.
Well you are entitled to believe the Book of Mormon witnesses were fine, upstanding citizens who would never stretch the truth to uphold the cause, and I am entitled to disagree.
Tell me this... how could a witness know for sure whether a ms was being used or not--especially a disbelieving witness? What basis do you have for drawing that conclusion?
They gave their testimonies independently years after Joseph Smith was dead—years after such testimony would have been most needed. The original Book of Mormon MS is consistent with dictation, and the loss of the 116-page MS supports their testimonies.
Whether the entire text is consistent with dictation is debatable, but regardless, the more important point is that dictation is not inconsistent with S/R.
This is not an anything goes (imagination) or ad hoc theory to ward off negative evidence. I’m using sources and incidental supportive evidence. On the other hand, theories about trick hats and special displays of head in hat are ad hoc. Negating testimony of some witnesses (Cowdery, Whitmer, Harris) by including them in the conspiracy is also ad hoc and unfounded.
It is "anything goes" when you concede that a Bible was used but never acknowledged and then irrationally conclude that that is all that was used because the same (unreliable) witnesses who forgot to mention a Bible flatly denied everything else. That is attempting to use silence as an argument. You can't get away from the notion that your entire argument hinges on the trustworthiness of what the Book of Mormon witnesses failed to mention(!) Your argument (from silence) is that IF the Book of Mormon witnesses would have ever been directly asked about Bible use, they would have, of course, acknowledged that a Bible was used. But if that highly unlikely speculation is wrong (as it likely is), your whole thesis comes crashing down because the witnesses are then not as reliable as your theory requires them to be.
I already pointed out that at least one witness--Knight--flatly contradicts that element of your theory and you responded with the notion that he would not have been in a position to know (what you apparently do!) That is indeed an ad hoc response to a testimony that is otherwise adverse to your thesis.
Beyond that, we already know these witnesses are not reliable. There is no question that Emma lied about polygamy in order to protect the image of her late husband. And you yourself write about the inconsistencies in the testimonies of David Whitmer and the others. That you (quite falsely in my view) attribute those inconsistencies to their interviewers is remarkable, but does nothing to establish their credibility in the first place. It is simply an ad hoc response to adverse evidence. You are willing to give these witnesses benefits of the doubt they don't deserve. And apparently you do so because you realize your theory rests on their credibility.
You seem more interested in trapping people than discussing evidence. That worries me. Stop playing games.
You seem to be more worried about getting trapped than determining who produced content for the Book of Mormon.
Present your evidence and arguments. Forget about our assumptions about unseen evidence, make sure yours are right.
This is meaningless. You claim the backing of science and logic. Error distribution patterns are fixed. Data about the frequency of their occurrence is empirical. I already made a prediction based on an S/R perspective. What prediction would S/A make?
And does S/A have a rational explanation for why the wherefore/therefore shift occurred or not?