Uncle Dale wrote:GlennThigpen wrote:...shared phraseology between different scriptures and
even different prophets includes all possibilities.
...
You still are not understanding the point I wish to make.
Attempts to compare relatively long Book of Mormon
word-strings shared with 19th writers have been dismissed,
out of hand, by Mormon apologists, as signifying nothing --
even when the respective texts also share a high similarity
of frequently used non-contextual words.
So -- setting aside that sort of comparison for the time being,
we can compare the Book of Mormon texts against themselves.
That is, we can compare one section of the text against another
section of the text -- in order to establish comparative methods
which the LDS will accept as significant.
For example, in both the sections of Alma that I have been
comparing throughout this current thread, we can discover
the same language being used -- to an extent greater than
is evident in other sections of the book. Take this phrase:
"garments... made white, through the blood of Christ" -- it
occurs in both sections I've been exploring; and immediately
before another lengthy string I have previously pointed out:
"will come to redeem his people."
Two other shared phrases: "for the Lord God hath spoken it" and
"of the fruit of the tree of life" -- Sheer coincidence?
While the reason for this striking language overlap may indeed
"include all possibilities," it is not so much the reason I am
here pointing out, as the method of comparison.
Is it possible to develop some method[s] of textual comparison
which can quantitatively describe the degree of similarity of
language in two or more separated Book of Mormon sections?
If Mormons will ever agree that it is possible to thus compare
(and mathematically rate) such texts, then perhaps they can
also be convinced that the same methods can be used to
compare portions of the Book of Mormon to EXTERIOR TEXTS,
such as the Book of Commandments, Cowdery's "revelation," etc.
UD
You have set yourself a formidable task, Dale. I am not an expert in the literary arts field, so I am speaking just from what I think is reasonable perspective. But are going to have to show that shared phraseology from the same author from one part of his writings to another has any significance. Even from one person to another as in the case of Alma and Amulek because you would need to show that the shared phraseology is not from shared experiences and conversations.
Then you are going to have to show that such shared phraseology can only come from an external source. The problem that you are going to find many such phrases in the Book of Mormon that will have echos in other literature from many different eras. The more phrases that you find that also appear in other and varied sources, the less likely that all those phrases actually came from the other sources and not the Book of Mormon author themselves.
For example ,suppose you were to spend some time checking for Book of Mormon phrases in other literature and came up with three or four hundred, all from different sources. Would it seem logical to infer that the Book of Mormon author(s) had access and were able to integrate all of those phrases from all of those sources?
I guess I really do not see your point or logic.
Glenn