Did Joseph Smith understand the Book of Mormon?

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_beastie
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Post by _beastie »

I think I understand what you're saying, but my point is that one can understand the meanings of individual words but still not understand the meaning of a text as a whole. For example, I can know the meaning of a word like "those", but I may not understand the contextual referent of this particular occurrence of the word. Or I might know that black means the color black, and that heart is the cardiopulmonary organ, but if you told me that Daniel Peterson has a heart as black as coal I might not understand what you were saying unless I had been steeped in the English language and idiom all my life.


Yes, I agree with you, but I'm saying that this scenario could only exist under a tight translation, and even in your interlineal Biblical example, God gave Joseph Smith the exact words, he just had to unscramble it.

Under a loose translation, no matter how you imagine it, Joseph Smith had to understand the context to produce the text. And if his understanding was flawed, the resultant text would be flawed.
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
_The Dude
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Re: Did Joseph Smith understand the Book of Mormon?

Post by _The Dude »

beastie wrote:A current thread on MAD is actually interesting, not just mindlessly entertaining:

http://www.mormonapologetics.org/index. ... 25415&st=0



Addictio came back from vacation. His reply to WS is rather entertaining.
"And yet another little spot is smoothed out of the echo chamber wall..." Bond
_Inconceivable
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"Mistaken Identity"

Post by _Inconceivable »

truth dancer wrote:..

For a prophet of God to restore the fullness of the gospel, translate an ancient text, be taught by angles, receive revelations, and be the very spokesperson for Jesus Christ, I find it odd that apologists assert have a better understanding than the prophet!

Ya know? It just seems strange!

~dancer~


I believe I mentioned it in another post that the other posibility is that he stole the manuscript from a righteous man and then threw him
under a bus.

I cannot discount the fact that the Book of Mormon is a book with an amazing amount of peaceable life teachings - many of which, if Smith
assimulated them, he could potentially have been a righteous enough man worthy of leading others to further enlightenment.

Instead, he defrauded the members of their treasure, raped their women and ultimately abandoned them - all in the name of the same author
as the Book of Mormon.


It is a problem of mistaken identity.

Joseph Smith did not emulate the teachings of the Book of Mormon. His followers only drew that awful conclusion because he claimed it came
through him.

For many years, I did too.


(not sure why this may not have pasted in my previous post)

http://mormondiscussions.com/discuss/vi ... php?t=2189
_beastie
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Post by _beastie »

Thanks for the heads-up, dude. Addictio is always entertaining - the smartest, wittiest, and most poetic poster in the history of exmormonism, in my opinion.

Can't wait for Will's response.
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
_Brent Metcalfe
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Post by _Brent Metcalfe »

Hi Beastie,

I concur with your assessment of Addictio. After years of interaction with him, I’m proud to count him among my friends.

Kind regards,

</brent>
_truth dancer
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Post by _truth dancer »

I'm an addictio fan too!

Can we all start a fan club?

Seriously he is brilliant!

I'm waiting for him to write a book, or two, or ten!

:-)

~dancer~
"The search for reality is the most dangerous of all undertakings for it destroys the world in which you live." Nisargadatta Maharaj
_harmony
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Post by _harmony »

truth dancer wrote:I'm an addictio fan too!

Can we all start a fan club?

Seriously he is brilliant!

I'm waiting for him to write a book, or two, or ten!

:-)

~dancer~


Seriously, you are absolutely correct. If there was an Addict (as I first knew him) Fan Club, I'm a charter member. He's brilliant and all those other adjectives, but he's also a very nice man, and patient with those of us who simply cannot up to his caliber of intelligence.
_Addictio
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Post by _Addictio »

Dee-os mee-o!! Thanks for the ultra-generous words, folks. Hmm, I’m afraid my first, graceless impulse is to accuse anyone who pays me a high compliment of being promiscuous. ;-) But it helps that I count you as friends. (Really. I've had the pleasure of reading and learning from your posts, over the years, and eventually, the luck of meeting you in person.) So a bit of early childhood conditioning comes into play, here. One of my primary teachers used to remind us earnestly each week, just before the bell rang: "If you can't forgive your friends their promiscuous ways, children, how will you ever understand 'Give Said the Little Stream'"?

OK, yeah. I think she probably just said “prodigal.”

[And then, kidding aside, I actually wrote right here (yep) and then somehow managed to lose (yep) something about one of beastie's points. Anyway, 'twas a good point ya made, beastie, and a small loss, here. ]
_beastie
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Post by _beastie »

Ah, the pleasure of seeing addictio here leads me to exclaim: Enish- go-on-dosh!

Just popped in to say hello, I'll be back with more of a response after work (summer school, the curse of the poor school teacher)
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
_beastie
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Joined: Thu Nov 02, 2006 2:26 am

Post by _beastie »

I keep returning to this point, because unless I’m missing something somewhere, it is a fatal flaw to current Book of Mormon apologia.

Here’s the “normal” translation process that can feasibly result in errors. Sue’s native language is English, but she is fluent in French. Sue reads a French text, and processes its meaning in her mind, and then does her best to capture that same meaning in English. Errors can occur in this process in several ways. Perhaps Sue didn’t understand a specific French term, although she though she did. Or perhaps she inadvertently inserted an anachronism to capture the meaning of a phrase, which could not be translated word-for-word because it is culture-based. So the end result may be a translated text with some errors. Now when someone reads that translated result – without benefit of either having access to the French original, or not be able to read French – all the reader has to work with to create his/her own understanding is the flawed English translation. Without access to additional information, the reader is captured in the flawed translation, so to speak. That, as far as the reader is concerned, IS the text.

Now it may be possible for Sue to not understand the text differently than someone reading her translation in certain manners, but these would be tend to be differences in interpreting larger or hidden meaning in the text. Did the author intend to make a social statement of some sort? - those sort of literary issues.

Now, of course, if Sue were simply a “reader” of English words that appeared on a stone, then she could feasibly not understand the resultant text at all.

Joseph Smith, in some unexplained way, figured out what the text was saying without seeing words appear on a rock (according to the loose, “slutty”, translation theory – copyright EA ;) So how did he figure it out? There’s only so many ways it could happen – maybe a movie was shown in his mind. Or maybe he just suddenly “knew” the story and told it. (kind of like, say, writing a story without divine intervention sometimes works) But whether it was visual images, or some mental “knowing” of the story – what we have as the Book of Mormon is the direct result of what he understood those images or story to be.

Maybe it will be clearer if I use one specific example – the infamous “others” passage.

2 Nephi 5:6

Wherefore, it came to pass that I, Nephi, did take my family, and also Zoram and his family, and Sam, mine elder brother and his family, and Jacob and Joseph, my younger brethren, and also my sisters, and all who would go with me. And all those who would go with me were those who believed in the warnings and the revelations of God; wherefore, they did hearken unto my words.


LGT apologists insist that “all those who would go with me” really means all those indigenous Mesoamericans that Joseph Smith never knew existed. (my own interpretation is “all those who would go with me” refers to family members not named by name, perhaps certain offspring of the rebellious members who decided to follow Nephi instead of their wicked parents)

As I understand the possible loose translation process, it is just not possible that these specific worlds - “and all those who would go with me” – really refer to the indigenous others, because those words were the end result of Joseph Smith’ understanding of what happened, and Joseph Smith did not understand there to be indigenous others. The only way an apologist can logically insist that “and all those who would go with me” really means something Joseph Smith never imagined or understood – indigenous others – would be under the tight translation theory.

So did Joseph Smith see some movie in his mind, and that is what created the words in the Book of Mormon? If so, then he did not see indigenous others, whom Nephi met and converted, in this movie – because he didn’t believe they existed. If he had seen them in his little movie, he would KNOW they existed. If, instead, the idea of the story came to him (more likely given how he described revelation in other instances), then the idea didn’t contain indigenous others, because Joseph Smith didn’t believe they existed.

Am I off the track, or is this really a fatal flaw in current apologia? (for those who adhere to the loose translation theory, of course, which is a necessity for anyone who knows anything about Mesoamerica)

Addictio and Brent, I’d love to get your feedback on this (and anyone else, of course, just naming those two because they are so “learned in the ways of man”. ;)
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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