Perhaps. I've been reading too much Deming, maybe.What has that go to do with Hurlbut being intimidated by the LDS? We are getting way off track here.
Glenn
:) Grins. We will get these statements covered, despite our biases.
Perhaps. I've been reading too much Deming, maybe.What has that go to do with Hurlbut being intimidated by the LDS? We are getting way off track here.
Glenn
GlennThigpen wrote:The RLDS and LDS maintain that the "Manuscript Story - Conneaut Creek" is the "Manuscript Found" and published it as such.
Jersey Girl wrote:Why?
GlennThigpen wrote:Because there is so very little evidence that Solomon ever wrote another story similar to the Book of Mormon.
Glenn
Glenn wrote:marg wrote:How is it the Book of Mormon can have Lehi leaving Jerusalem and the Lamanites be remnants of the House of Israel which are the lost tribes, but Spalding can't have his characters leave Jerusalem and be remnants of the House of Israel/lost tribes?
marge, the House of Israel includes all of the tribes which are the descendants of the sons of Jacob who was renamed Israel by the Lord. There are actually thirteen because Joseph was given a double inheritance portion through his sons Manasseh and Ephraim, but there is no tribe actually named Joseph.
So a remant of the House of Israel could be from any of the tribes, including Judah and Benjamin which were the southern tribes.
Dan wrote:
The witnesses say the Indians are descendants of the “lost tribes” according to Spalding’s MS. This isn’t fulfilled by Lehi’s being of the tribe of Joseph. We don’t know that his living in Jerusalem was the result of his ancestors being dispersed from the northern kingdom at the time of the Assyrian captivity. These are the facts. The conflict between the Book of Mormon and the witnesses’ statements is real. Your attempt to overcome this problem with speculation and convoluted logic isn’t working. I seriously doubt that other Spalding advocates support you on this.
Jersey Girl wrote:GlennThigpen wrote:The RLDS and LDS maintain that the "Manuscript Story - Conneaut Creek" is the "Manuscript Found" and published it as such.Jersey Girl wrote:Why?GlennThigpen wrote:Because there is so very little evidence that Solomon ever wrote another story similar to the Book of Mormon.
Glenn
Are you saying that because there is so very little evidence that Solomon Spalding ever wrote another story similar to the Book of Mormon, that the RLDS and LDS elected to give the manuscript a second title, "Manuscript Found", which is the title of the very manuscript testified to by the Conneaut witnesses and thereby, confirming the testimonies of the Conneaut witnesses?
Why would either the RLDS or LDS choose to do anything that supports the Spalding/Rigdon theory with regards to Book of Mormon authorship?
marg wrote:3 or 4 of the witnesses talk about the purpose of Spalding’s book was to show Am. Indians are descendants of the lost tribes. That is not the same thing as saying the book was about lost tribes or the lost tribe myth. John Spalding doesn’t appear to know the difference between Jews and lost tribes so he’s obviously not very familiar with the lost tribe myth. His wife mentions Indians being descendants of some of the lost tribes..not all the lost tribes. Lake said ..descendants of the lost tribes. The only one who implies the book is about the lost tribes..as opposed to it being about Am. Indians was Aron Wright who said “read to me a history he was writing, of the lost tribes of Israel, purporting that they were the first settlers of America”. Given that Aron Wright is the only one implying the story was about lost tribes..I suspect he worded his statement as he did ..as a function of poor knowledge of the myth.
Abner Jackson, now long dead wrote:A note in Morse's Geography suggested it as a possibility that our Indians were descendants of the lost tribes of Israel. Said Morse, they might have wandered through Asia up to Behring's Strait, and across the Strait to this continent. Besides there were habits and ceremonies among them that resembled some habits and ceremonies among the Israelites of that day. Then the old fortifications and earth mounds, containing so many kinds of relics and human bones, and some of them so large, altogether convinced him that they were a larger race and more enlightened and civilized than are found among the Indians among us at this day. These facts and reflections prompted him to write his Romance, purporting to be a history of the lost tribes of Israel.
Marg: When they (Conneaut witnesses)say they clearly remember aspects such as certain names, certain passages, certain phrasing which was brought back to memory by the Book of Mormon…that is not something attributable to false memory. False memory occurs when source memory is weak.
Dan: “No. false memory happens when memory is vague, whether a source is strong or weak. False memory can happen to an entire memory or just part of a memory. Nevertheless, you are assuming that the witnesses were right about the names--therefore their source memories were strong and could not have been false. It’s circular. It could be equally argued that they were wrong about the names, and therefore their source memories were weak, as witnessed by their being wrong about a major theme.”
marg wrote:
Given that the witnesses would have had good source memories because of numerous times as well as different types of memories being encoded ..that opportunity to well encode the memories would enable them to appreciate if their recall was well remembered or vaguely remembered. They would know the difference between vaguely remembering due to a retrieval cue versus simply having some familiarity or just knowing they have some memories.
marge wrote:As far as confusing MSCC with MF…what they say they clearly remember, is not contained in MSCC.
GlennThigpen wrote:
The witnesses were not looking at one tribe, they were looking at the legend as they understood it from the literature of their times. That is what they are saying about Solomon's story. You cannot impose your ideas on their statements, ideas for which you produce no evidence.