beastie wrote:Why Me -
"reading" a rock that was tucked in a dark place like a hat was part of the common folk-religion of Joseph Smith' time period -Mineral rods and balls, (as they were called by the imposter who made use of them,) were supposed to be infallible guides to these sources of wealth—"peep stones" or pebbles, taken promiscuously from the brook or field, were placed in a hat or other situation excluded from the light, when some wizard or witch (for these performances were not confined to either sex) applied their eyes, and nearly starting their balls from their sockets, declared they saw all the wonders of nature, including of course, ample stores of silver and gold.
It is more than probable [said the Reflector in the skeptical tradition to which it was dedicated] that some of these deluded people, by having their imaginations heated to the highest pitch of excitment, and by straining their eyes until they were suffused with tears, might have, through the medium of some trifling emmision of the ray of light, receive[d] imperfect images on the retina, when their fancies could create the rest. Be this however as it may, people busied themselves in consulting these blind oracles, while the ground nightly opened in various places by men who were too lazy or idle to labor for bread in the day time, displayed a zeal and perserverance in this business worthy of a better cause.
http://www.signaturebookslibrary.org/da ... apter2.htm
Martin Harris also had a strong testimony of shakerism and James Strang.
Quite right. Nobody thinks Joseph Smith "invented" srcying as a sell point of the fraud. And as beastie points out Martin Harris had "strong" testimony of Strang.
I thought I saw fairies when I was a little kid--I still have very vivid visual memories of them, too. That doesn't mean I did, though. Interesting, too, that they looked just like the illustrations in turn-of-the-century children's books that I loved!