Benjamin McGuire wrote:...
so far, the kinds of mapping that I have seen you produce simply don't do this.
That may be so. I am not a language expert. I have no professional
education or training in literary criticism. My graduate studies in
text-critical analysis consisted only of survey and intro courses.
I do not possess the software tools that might allow me to conduct
the expert computer analysis we have recently seen reported upon.
So, consider me a question-asker rather than a hypothesis-prover.
I do what I can, given my limited abilities and circumstances.
My approach (largely inherited from Vernal Holley) has been this --
Should I happen upon a pre-1830 text which included the phrase
"I, Nephi, having been born of goodly parents...", I would want to
track down the context and origin of that phraseology and make
further comparisons of the respective texts (that is, of the new
discovery and the Book of Mormon).
Vern once posed this exact same scenario to one of his co-religionists
(I think, to a fellow stake seventy) and was answered with the quip
that there could be many possible reasons for even so exact a specimen
of textual resemblance, and that the "comparative method" had its
drawbacks, and shouldn't be used as a challenge to faith, etc. etc.
Some of the very issues you are prone to raise were the basis of long
discussions between Vern and myself -- he taking the position that
a few, relatively lengthy examples of shared phraseology were enough
to establish probable authorship -- and I taking the position that we
needed to place any such discoveries in context, to see if the over-all
distribution patterns of textual correspondence appeared to be best
explained by concerted textual borrowing.
The model falls apart when we start to apply this to other texts. This was why I asked for an explanation of what might exclude someone. And it seems to me that you don't actually have an answer.
The best I can offer, "off the cuff," is that some standard needs to be set,
whereby we can quantitatively and exhaustively compare the degree
of language correspondence to an agreed-upon classification of probable
non-borrowing/non-plagiarism.
So, where does that leave us? I don't think that this proposal of yours can actually do what you think it can. I think it will go absolutely nowhere. I believe that the kind of modeling you are talking about is completely incapable of providing the kinds of results you want to get.
If that is your conclusion, should I view it as only one man's
opinion, or as a conclusion that generally represents what
the non-sectarian professional consensus would be, should
other experts examine the situation and render judgment?
But lets go back to the question - what kind of results would exclude someone as a
potential author? This is a significant question.
...
1. Chronological -- proof that the author-candidate could not have
written a precursor text, due to not yet having been born, etc.
2. Spatial -- proof that the author-candidate spent his life in the
wilds of the Amazon jungle, too far removed to have contributed
3. Linguistic -- proof that the author-candidate did not know English
4. Comparison to an accepted standard for plagiarism -- evidence
showing that the author-candidate's use of language did not meet
the established legal requirements for a positive judgment.
5. Comparison to an accepted standard for randomness/coincidence,
such that the author-candidate was excluded beyond a reasonable doubt.
6. A demonstration that some other author-candidate's use of language
better fit the text in question -- to such an extent as to reasonably
exclude the initial author-candidate.
7. A demonstration of textual uniformity which would exclude the suspect
author-candidate on the basis of his/her language resemblance being
generally consistent throughout a body of texts known to have different origins
8. A demonstration of textual correspondence clustering, such that the
limits of "significant" overlap were confined to a very small section of
a much larger text --- the "one-in-a-million" coincidence.
9. A demonstration of the suspect author-candidate scoring the same (or higher)
degree of language overlap with a text he/she is known not to have possibly
composed (Bruce's Rigdon-wrote-the Federalist-Papers argument).
But a very good beginning could be made, simply by showing that a lengthy
section of text attributed to Oliver Cowdery, or Sidney Rigdon, etc. could
be equally (or better) attributable to other pre-1830 writers who by circumstance
or coincidence happened to match up well with that same text in terms of
their word-print, vocabulary, general phraseology, and message-specific language.
That was my basis for suggesting creating a standard for non-author textual
correspondence, based upon the generalization of 100 relevant writers whom
we agree did not write the Book of Mormon.
UD