Roger wrote:Well this is obviously where the experts disagree and since I am not an expert I have to draw my conclusions based on what is presented by both sides in plain English. I attempted to summarize my understanding of what is being disputed in this thread. Do you disagree with my layman's summation?
If you are correct that option 2 is flawed, do you suggest that Bruce's conclusions are as tenuous as you allege Jocker's to be since even Ben acknowledges that Bruce "still uses most of the framework that the Jockers study erected"
Roger, have you read Bruce's paper? Although you may not be able to follow the math, the logic is laid out very well and I am sure you can follow it. What the Jockers study did not do is perform any kind of goodness of fit test or include any mechanism for determining if any one of the authors in a closed candidate set is actually the author of the text in question. Bruce's work corrected those flaws.
Well this is why I would like to see an ordered debate from the principle experts in plain English on a forum such as this. I think such a debate would be a huge benefit to the public.
I could envision it as one or two principles from both sides going back and forth for a limited time of say maybe three days and then a couple days open to the public for questions and then a formal end of the discussion on the part of the principles unless they wanted to continue the discussion. That would be fascinating.
I don't think that we will see that. Daniela Witten is the statistician who did the math in the original Jockers study and one of her coauthors noted that she will not engage in an online debate. Matt Jockers and Craig Criddle do not have the statistics background to engage Bruce in a discussion. However, if you have read Matt's post in this thread, he basically said that a person could not form a conclusion based on their original study that any of the authors candidates used in the original study were actually the authors of any of the Book of Mormon segments attributed to them because those were only relative probabilities compared to the other authors in that closed set. Where the errors have arose is taking those relative probabilities and holdin them to be absolutes.
Bruce's paper makes it clear how erroneous that can be.
Glenn