The Noose again begins to tighten on the critics...

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_Coggins7
_Emeritus
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Joined: Fri Nov 03, 2006 12:25 am

Post by _Coggins7 »

Not only are traditional views about the text dead, but any fair meaning of the text itself is also dead. Nephi and his descendants are described as powerful kings and leaders, whose influence extended over many polities.

Yet there is no way that happened in mesoamerica, not for the least reason that, had it happened, the Nephite cities would have been the very cities establishing the culture and traditions others followed for many centuries.

Since that obviously didn't happen, Book of Mormon apologist must distort what the text itself says. In "saving" the Book of Mormon, they have also rendered it meaningless.

One could reasonably argue, for example, that the Jesus visitation was really just a mystical apparition of an ancestor to a powerless king over a tiny polity, using the current Book of Mormon technique.

Read my essay to see why the Book of Mormon can't mean what any reasonable person would think it meant:



Perhaps its time you stop pretending to be a serious, objective critic of the Church and cease trying to foist this kind of stuff on the clueless. The entire Nephite history could have come and gone over a relatively small geographical area, and furthermore, the sheer fragmentary and incomplete nature of the Archaeological record of Mesoamerican history, as well as the utter destruction of many aspects of early Mesoamerican civilization, virtually ensures that your entire argument here is purely hypothetical and indeed, wanders well over the line of serious thinking on the matter and into the realm of special pleading. I am not, and no faithful LDS should be, swayed by the completely hypothetical and theoretical extrapolations from within the humanities disciplines of Archeology and Anthropology regarding what Nephite society could or could not have been like based upon a vastly data poor and theory and speculation rich understanding of Mesoamerican history.

The arguments made in your links are not compelling precisely because they rely on so many tenuous extrapolations and assumptions from what are already heavily theoretical constructs regarding the past, as well as assumed interpretations of what the Book of Mormon text says that are quite carefully constructed to support your argument.

1.

The Lehites reached the New World in approximately BC 589. The text makes no mention of the Lehites meeting the pre-existing “others”, the indigenous natives, but the foundation of the Limited Geography Theory demands their existence.


The fact that the Book of Mormon text, of which we have, according of Joseph Smith and the Book of Mormon text itself, only a small fragment, does not mention these "others" means necessarily nothing. Nephi was clear that one set of plates was set aside for strictly spiritual things, and another to chronicle the wars, contentions, and general social conditions of his people. He may or may not have had some concern with any other peoples on the continent of which he was aware. If he did, we may simply not have that aspect of the record. How do you know? As you do not accept the Book of Mormon as a historical record a priori, you can simply dismiss any counter argument I make here as ex post facto circular reasoning, and not bother with the weakness of your own speculations.

The Book of Mormon is understood as scripture, and its primary concern is with a branch of the house of Jacob through Joseph and their dealings with the Lord on this continent. It does not directly concern these "others" and hence, does not detail any dealings with them. Indeed, if large scale intermarriage and contact did occur, these people may have been generally integrated, in the Book of Mormon authors mind, with either the Nephites or Lamanites, depending on political and cultural factors. These are the two great political, cultural, and spiritual demarcation lines of the times, and anyone closely integrated with Nephite and Lamanite civilization may simply have been lumped together as belonging to either group by the Book of Mormon writers. In any case, strictly political and social dynamics, independent of Gospel teaching, were of little interest to the writers of these texts.

2.

However, an additional meeting point, largely ignored, is required due to Mesoamerican history.


This should be a red flag to anyone following this discussion who has any knowledge of the philosophy and history of science. Anytime scholars begin using terminology such as "required by history", there is good reason to believe that what we have here is a huge leap over a vast gap in data and understanding, and in the case of Mesoamarican history, those gaps are large and deep.


The Book of Mormon tells us that the Nephites ruled the City of Nephi until their flight guided by King Mosiah in approximately BC 279 (Omni 13). This dating places them as leaders of Kaminaljuyu from the later portion of the Middle Preclassic period to a hundred years into the Late Preclassic period. While it appears that Kaminaljuyu likely did not reach the full extent of its power until after the dating of the Nephite exodus, it is undeniable that it was already a well organized settlement with a structured leadership by the time that Nephi and his followers would have pitched their tents and named the location the City of Nephi. This indicates that almost immediately following Nephi’s arrival in the New World, he was able to persuade two groups of unmentioned indigenous others to not only join his company, but to actually elect him as their king.

Snip:

Although we can only speculate about how Nephi accomplished this feat, given the fact that the background of these indigenous others included the tendency to completely enmesh religion and government (see the Holy Lords section), it seems quite reasonable to conclude that this must have included a religious conversion. What a remarkable event this would have been, surely surpassing the later miraculous conversions of Lamanites. Yet, strangely, the Book of Mormon, a text that the authors tell us is written for intent of bringing souls to Christ, is completely silent on this event. Regardless of how the indigenous others were persuaded to elect Nephi as their leader, the group went on to experience great prosperity, to the point where Jacob, Nephi’s brother, already saw fit to warn the people of the danger of pride.


The thrust of Beastie's argument here, as is the case with the arguments of so many observers of human culture (not the least of which is ancient culture) who come to the table with a positivistic, environmental determinist template. (This template is useful, even if not coloring all aspects of the critics world view, in filtering out the actual complexities and vagaries of human behavior and cultural development; gaps in knowledge, and large unknowns regarding what actually did or did not happen in a past that is known only in fragments and is largely unrecoverable at higher degrees of resolution) is, not to put to fine a point on it, that since Beastie doens't think certain occurrences the Book of Mormon claims happened happened, then they did not, in fact happen.

The language he uses here is indicative: "This indicates that almost immediately following Nephi’s arrival in the New World, he was able to persuade two groups of unmentioned indigenous others to not only join his company, but to actually elect him as their king." Now, as anyone who understands the nature of Biblical languages and linguistic devices knows, when Nephi says "And we did take our tents and whatsoever things were possible for us, and did journey in the wilderness for the space of many days. And after we had journeyed for the space of many days we did pitch our tents", this term "many days" may mean some months or a number of years. As the term "forty days" is used biblically to mean "a very long time", so "many days" means precisely this; many days. How long we do not know.

He uses terms such as "it seems quite reasonable to conclude" yet does not tell us why. He does not tell us why it is equally reasonable to conclude that Nephi and his people initially camped and built dwellings around the city (suburbs, so to speak), and gradually integrated themselves into the city's cultural and political life over time. Beastie wants us to believe that the time frame of cultural integration is quite rapid, yet the Book of Mormon demands no such interpretation.

further, nothing, neither Archaeological evidence or the Book of Mormon text prevents the city in question from having been abandoned when it was found (if only for a short period of time, perhaps decades or even a few years). Either through war, revolution or disease, this was hardly uncommon in the ancient American world (The Anastazi disappeared from their cliff side dwellings at some point, but if one had in wandering, come upon their city, even if it had only been abandoned for a few months, this would matter little for our purposes, as the time resolution of Archaeological dating is nowhere near what is necessary to pin down an exact year, or month, at which such a thing might have taken place).

Indeed, nothing prevents the Nephites from having discovered an abandoned, or partially abandoned city, essentially moving in, and then being present when many of the original inhabitants migrated back. Anything could have happened. I don't know, and Beastie doesn't' know. He wants to believe certain things must have transpired in a culturally channeled, deterministic way because he needs to believe the Book of Mormon is false. The agenda, as always, precedes the interpretation of evidence.

He says "Yet, strangely, the Book of Mormon, a text that the authors tell us is written for intent of bringing souls to Christ, is completely silent on this event.


Here Beastie creates a textual criticism of the Book of Mormon from a hypothetical mass conversion experience among the people of the city of Kamnaljuyu that the Book of Mormon doesn't mention, but which Beastie thinks should or must have happened, derived from a logically vague extrapolation from the text that since the Book of Mormon's primary purpose is to brings souls to Christ, for Nephi to have eventually become a king here, there must have been some kind of mass conversion. As one can see, this follows only psychologically, and not logically, from the Book of Mormon's stated prime directive, and in the day to day dealings with the cultures around them, over years and generations, there is no need for there to have been constant attempts at conversion on a mass scale, nor need Nephi have required this. The Book of Mormon prophets were of a substantially democratic frame of mind, according to the text. There is no reason why multiple religious beliefs could not have existed side by side with Nephi as a king in a somewhat pluralistic city-state (the law could have no hold on anyone according to their belief, under Nephite rule).

Beastie here also assumes ("these indigenous others included the tendency to completely enmesh religion and government") that because a general cultural tendency obtained in a certain region, it must necessarily have continued in exactly the same way under Nephite influence, necessitating something near deductive conclusion regarding what it is "quite reasonable to conclude happened." predicated upon that theoretical template. Of course, we are speaking of things claimed to have occurred some 600 years B.C. among peoples and cultures about whom, despite what Beastie would like you to think, we know relatively little, and, of course, even vastly less regarding isolated incidents like the origin of the city of Nephi

Further, Beastie makes conclusive claims about the Book of Mormon text based upon Sorenson's suggestion of Kaminaljuyu as the city of Nephi without bothering with the obvious: Soronson may be wrong. The city of Nephi may be in another region entirely, buried under meters of volcanic basalt or mud (as are some number of other known sites, which we may never be able to get to at all). That doesn't really matte for Book of Mormon historicity in any case, as there are a number of ancient Mesoamerican languages that at present cannot be deciphered (and many never be), and therefore we wouldn't know a Nephite city if we saw one unless we could read the stelas or other texts available. Soronson can make educated guesses, and Beastie can make educated guesses, but at the end of the day, limbo reigns supreme in critically uncertain areas such as Archeology and ancient human history.

The evidence for Book of Mormon historicity is quite good, for anyone with an open mind who wants to look at it. There is also plausible evidence against it. As with DNA, the huge gaps and uncertainties in our knowledge preclude us from dogmatic assertions, which is why Book of Mormon apologists don't make them, while critics trade in dogma (like Beastie's certainty regarding the clearly purely circumstantial refutation of the Bat Creek inscription).

Skepticism is good in moderate and reasonable doses, but those like Beastie who cling to it as an ideology would have stalled science and humanities disciplines in there tracks ages ago if left to run their course without restraint. Beastie, like the two authors of the Bat Creek Stone refutation, are credentialist gatekeepers of academic orthodoxy defending ideological turf. It took Thor Hyerdahl, some half a century ago, to prove empirically what theory said was impossible, with materials and technoogy well below what was available to engineers and designers in the ancient world.

I can't possible respond here in this particular thread.any further to Beasties lengthy, challenging, and detailed sophistries, as this will get way overlong.
The face of sin today often wears the mask of tolerance.


- Thomas S. Monson
_beastie
_Emeritus
Posts: 14216
Joined: Thu Nov 02, 2006 2:26 am

Post by _beastie »

Cog:
Perhaps its time you stop pretending to be a serious, objective critic of the Church and cease trying to foist this kind of stuff on the clueless. The entire Nephite history could have come and gone over a relatively small geographical area, and furthermore, the sheer fragmentary and incomplete nature of the Archaeological record of Mesoamerican history, as well as the utter destruction of many aspects of early Mesoamerican civilization, virtually ensures that your entire argument here is purely hypothetical and indeed, wanders well over the line of serious thinking on the matter and into the realm of special pleading. I am not, and no faithful LDS should be, swayed by the completely hypothetical and theoretical extrapolations from within the humanities disciplines of Archeology and Anthropology regarding what Nephite society could or could not have been like based upon a vastly data poor and theory and speculation rich understanding of Mesoamerican history.

The arguments made in your links are not compelling precisely because they rely on so many tenuous extrapolations and assumptions from what are already heavily theoretical constructs regarding the past, as well as assumed interpretations of what the Book of Mormon text says that are quite carefully constructed to support your argument.


Beastie:
I’ll ignore your pointless ad hom attacks and address your comments that deal with my own assertions. I’m so surprised that you actually did spend a least some time, I doubt much, actually thinking about my statements that I’m willing to overlook your personal predilection towards insults.

I constructed my comments BASED on the idea that the entire Nephite history took place in a relatively small geographical area. Did you happen to notice the map? I used the exact paradigm that LGTists offer. Should I have, instead, responded as if Nephite history occurred entirely in one small neighborhood? Perhaps you are confused by the word “polity”. It simply means an organized community. It can be an extremely small village, or a city.

So please, tell me – I based my commentary entirely within the exact distance span that the LGTists offer. Yet, according to you, that is still not small enough.

Perhaps that should be a clue.

Next you repeat the very common assertion that we really can know very, very little about ancient Mesoamerica, anyway. This refrain is what I call the “know nothings”. We can know next to nothing about ancient Mesoamerica, so apparently anyone can claim anything they want to about its possible history. This attitude is based on a very poor grasp of the field of archaeology and anthropology, and seems to convey that written history is the only way to know anything about history. This is utter nonsense. Written history should actually be balanced by “dirt history”, due to the human tendency to propaganda. In fact, the notion that written text can be unreliable due to the propaganda effect is one of the pillars of LGT apologetics. You see, when Nephi said thousands, he meant less than a hundred. Yet, in the next breath, the same people claim we can really know nothing without that same propaganda.

Despite the know-nothings, most educated people accept that archaeology and anthropology are legitimate fields that can actually offer quite a bit of information and insight into the past. This is based on analysis of the stuff people leave behind, obviously, and stuff tells us things about people. Where buildings were located, and how they were built, tells us something about people. Ian Hodder, in Reading the Past – Current Approaches to Interpretation in Archaeology, says:

Yet archaeology is about material culture not documents. The writing of ink on paper is itself one type of material culture, and the inference of meaning from such evidence is equivalent to that for material objects in general. In this sense, history is part of archaeology. Even though historical documents contain considerably more contextual information when we recognize the language they are written in, the process of inference is still one of giving meaning to the past material world. Of course, in those cases where texts are not readable, the archaeological record should not be considered impoverished in comparison with the historical record. Texts record the voices of select segments of the population, depending on the (often low) rates of literacy in the past, therefore putting the archaeologist in an excellent and sometimes unique position to uncover the actions of the less powerful. (p 13)


If you, like some MADdites, completely disdain archaeology as a legitimate avenue of obtaining information and knowledge about that past, that is your opinion, and nothing I can say would change that. There is an agenda to your opinion, of course. If archaeology were more accommodating in terms of correspondence between the Book of Mormon and Mesoamerica, then you, and other believers, would happily embrace the field as legitimate. In the meantime, with the unfortunate set of circumstances archaeology has provided, then at least be consistent, and disdain all uses of archaeology, including those of your OWN “side”. If archaeology is a faux science, then Sorenson, Gardner, and Clark are as much a waste of time as I am.

Cog
The fact that the Book of Mormon text, of which we have, according of Joseph Smith and the Book of Mormon text itself, only a small fragment, does not mention these "others" means necessarily nothing. Nephi was clear that one set of plates was set aside for strictly spiritual things, and another to chronicle the wars, contentions, and general social conditions of his people. He may or may not have had some concern with any other peoples on the continent of which he was aware. If he did, we may simply not have that aspect of the record. How do you know? As you do not accept the Book of Mormon as a historical record a priori, you can simply dismiss any counter argument I make here as ex post facto circular reasoning, and not bother with the weakness of your own speculations.

The Book of Mormon is understood as scripture, and its primary concern is with a branch of the house of Jacob through Joseph and their dealings with the Lord on this continent. It does not directly concern these "others" and hence, does not detail any dealings with them. Indeed, if large scale intermarriage and contact did occur, these people may have been generally integrated, in the Book of Mormon authors mind, with either the Nephites or Lamanites, depending on political and cultural factors. These are the two great political, cultural, and spiritual demarcation lines of the times, and anyone closely integrated with Nephite and Lamanite civilization may simply have been lumped together as belonging to either group by the Book of Mormon writers. In any case, strictly political and social dynamics, independent of Gospel teaching, were of little interest to the writers of these texts.


I am very familiar with all the justifications of the existence of the “others”. I have accepted that Book of Mormon LGT apologists insist on this premise, as well as the premise of “loose translation”. My opinion is that both of these constructs are ad-hoc, created in response to the fact that archaeology – you know, that faux science – has thoroughly demonstrated to the satisfaction of EVEN the “know nothings” that the New World had been populated for a very long time prior to the Book of Mormon time period. However, I deliberately constructed my comments are accepting the premise of the “others” as legitimate.

Cog citing beastie:
However, an additional meeting point, largely ignored, is required due to Mesoamerican history.


Cog protests:
This should be a red flag to anyone following this discussion who has any knowledge of the philosophy and history of science. Anytime scholars begin using terminology such as "required by history", there is good reason to believe that what we have here is a huge leap over a vast gap in data and understanding, and in the case of Mesoamarican history, those gaps are large and deep.


Cog, the premise of the “others” is required by history. If history, as demonstrated through archaeology, shows that one group of people were already living in an area when a new group of people arrived, then there is a meeting point. Not only does Sorenson’s choice for the City of Nephi require this second meeting point, because Kaminaljuyu was already populated, but the rapid complexity of the City of Nephi itself also requires a pre-existing population. You know, the same argument that requires the “others” for the Book of Mormon overall.

Cog:
The thrust of Beastie's argument here, as is the case with the arguments of so many observers of human culture (not the least of which is ancient culture) who come to the table with a positivistic, environmental determinist template. (This template is useful, even if not coloring all aspects of the critics world view, in filtering out the actual complexities and vagaries of human behavior and cultural development; gaps in knowledge, and large unknowns regarding what actually did or did not happen in a past that is known only in fragments and is largely unrecoverable at higher degrees of resolution) is, not to put to fine a point on it, that since Beastie doens't think certain occurrences the Book of Mormon claims happened happened, then they did not, in fact happen.
(snip irrelevant protests about time element)


Beastie:
Why all this protest over the time frame? The Book of Mormon itself provides the time frame, and it was relatively short. Besides, the time frame is irrelevant to my point. It seems to me that you simply inserted these paragraphs because you wanted to protest SOMETHING.

Cog:
Here Beastie creates a textual criticism of the Book of Mormon from a hypothetical mass conversion experience among the people of the city of Kamnaljuyu that the Book of Mormon doesn't mention, but which Beastie thinks should or must have happened, from a logically vague extrapolation from the text that since the Book of Mormon's primary purpose is to brings souls to Christ, for Nephi to have eventually become a king here, there must have been some kind of mass conversion. As one can see that this follows only psychologically, and not logically, from the Book of Mormon's stated prime directive, and in the day to day dealings with the cultures around them, over years and generations, there is no need for there to have been constant attempts at conversion on a mass scale, nor need Nephi have required this. The Book of Mormon prophets were of a substantially democratic frame of mind, according to the text. There is no reason why multiple religious beliefs could not have existed side by side with Nephi as a king in a somewhat pluralistic city-state (the law could have no hold on anyone according to their belief, under Nephite rule).


This response is entirely based on your ignorance of ancient Mesoamerica. There was no separation of church and state in ancient Mesoamerica. There is such an abundance of material that demonstrates this point I’m not going to belabor it, other than to advise that if you really want to debate the setting of the Book of Mormon in ancient Mesoamerica, you ought to at first seek to obtain at least a cursory level of information about the topic.

The very fact that the Book of Mormon does provide, as you state, a pluralistic city-state is a great example of a very grave anachronism, and yet you use it as a resource. The only reason you naïvely did so is due to your ignorance about ancient Mesoamerica.

Cog:
Beastie here also assumes ("these indigenous others included the tendency to completely enmesh religion and government") that because a general cultural tendency obtained in a certain region, it must necessarily have continued in exactly the same way under Nephite influence, necessitating something near deductive conclusion regarding what it is "quite reasonable to conclude happened." predicated upon that theoretical template. Of course, we are speaking of things claimed to have occurred some 600 years B.C. among peoples and cultures about whom, despite what Beastie would like you to think, we know relatively little, and, of course, even vastly less regarding isolated incidents like the origin of the city of Nephi


I have another recommendation for you – while you’re working on obtaining a cursory level of understanding of ancient Mesoamerica, do the same thing with the Limited Geography Theory.

One of the basic premises of LGT is that the Lehites all were immediately subsumed within the larger culture. The Mesoamerican culture BECAME the Lehite culture. This is the only way they can insist it would be unreasonable to be able to distinguish between the Lehites and the Mesoamericans.

Instead, you insist the exact opposite must be true – the Nephites actually retained their own culture and politics smack within the alien Mesoamerican culture. Then we should be able to detect their presence. Even more so when you actually pay attention the Book of Mormon text which DOES provide information on the number of polities (cities or towns) involved and the distances between them.

Cog:
Further, Beastie makes conclusive claims about the Book of Mormon text based upon Sorenson's suggestion of Kaminaljuyu as the city of Nephi without bothering with the obvious: Soronson may be wrong. The city of Nephi may be in another region entirely, buried inder meters of volcanic basalt or mud (as are some number of other known sites, which we may never be able to get to at all). That doesn't really matte for Book of Mormon historicity in any case, as there are a number of ancient Mesoamerican languages that at present cannot be deciphered (and many never be), and therefore we wouldn't know a Nephite city if we saw one unless we could read the stelas or other texts available. Soronson can make educated guesses, and Beastie can make educated guesses, but at the end of the day, limbo reigns supreme in critically uncertain areas such as Archeology and ancient human history.


Well of course Sorenson could be wrong, but no one has yet provided an alternative. It is not as easy as it looks, Cog. Have you even read Sorenson’s book An Ancient Setting? I doubt it, but if you did, you need to reread the sections wherein Sorenson explains how he chose his locations. You see, as unfortunate as it may be for today’s apologists, the Book of Mormon actually does provide quite a bit of background geographical information, and this information must be consistent with any chosen location. Not only that, but the chosen location must provide evidence supporting the social complexity described in the Book of Mormon. I do not believe any Mesoamerican location fits that bill (as my essay explained), but even ignoring the problems that the larger Book of Mormon picture presents, and focusing only on individual cities, there are just not that many Mesoamerican polities that can fit the bill.

Moreover, the reason I used Sorenson’s setting is because that is by far the paradigm the majority of Book of Mormon apologists prefer.

So go right ahead, tell me what other location could match the geographical requirements AND have adequate social complexity. Then we’ll discuss that one. Until you, or someone, provide another suggestion, then we’re left with Sorenson.

The evidence for Book of Mormon historicity is quite good, for anyone with an open mind who wants to look at it. There is also plausible evidence against it. As with DNA, the huge gaps and uncertainties in our knowledge preclude us from dogmatic assertions, which is why Book of Mormon apologists don't make them, while critics trade in dogma (like Beastie's certainty regarding the clearly purely circumstantial refutation of the Bat Creek inscription).


Cog, the only reason you think the evidence is good is because you don’t have the vaguest understanding of ancient Mesoamerica. Frankly, neither do the vast majority of other fans of LGT apologia, and that’s precisely why it looks so good to them.

Cog:
Skepticism is good in moderate and reasonable doses, but those like Beastie who cling to it as an ideology would have stalled science and humanities disciplines in there tracks ages ago if left to run their course without restraint. Beastie, like the two authors of the Bat Creek Stone refutation, are credentialist gatekeepers of academic orthodoxy defending ideological turf. It took Thor Hyerdahl, some half a century ago, to prove empirically what theory said was impossible, with materials and technoogy well below what was available to engineers and designers in the ancient world.

I can't possible respond here in this particular thread.any further to Beasties lengthy, challenging, and detailed sophistries, as this will get way overlong.


I’m sure scientologists comfort themselves in the same way. I know for a fact young earth creationists do. Oh, the only reason other scholars reject our assertions is because of their egos, they’re defending ideological turf. It couldn’t actually have to do with the fact that your assertions are misguided and based on ignorance.

by the way, your response didn’t have to be nearly as long as you made it. You could have omitted quite a bit of it, as it was entirely irrelevant.
We hate to seem like we don’t trust every nut with a story, but there’s evidence we can point to, and dance while shouting taunting phrases.

Penn & Teller

http://www.mormonmesoamerica.com
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