Marg,
It's taken me a little longer than I anticipated to respond to this ad hoc issue, for one reason I came across a book you've been using and I spent a bit of time reviewing it yesterday. I'm also a little bit drugged at this point, because I've taken tylenol 3 and it apparently can cause drowsiness. So I hope to respond today, but it's possible I might need an extension until tomorrow.
That’s OK. I’m in no hurry.
This is my position Dan, I don't think that religious individuals are poor critical thinkers, however the sorts of claims being made need to be considered in evaluating the individuals who make them. In this case the 3 witnesses in the Book of Mormon testifying to seeing angels & God..reflects on their likely credibility...so that includes Cowdery, D. Whitmer & Harris. As far as other Book of Mormon witnesses..as well as the 3 mentioned, none of them appear to be skeptical, inquisitive, and they are not independent, objective witnesses.
What criteria and sources are you using to conclude these witnesses are not “skeptical, inquisitive, and they are not independent, objective witnesses”? What would they have to do to qualify them as “skeptical, inquisitive, and they are not independent, objective witnesses”? Now for the big question—assuming they were not “skeptical, inquisitive, … independent, objective witnesses”, how would that effect their statements about seeing Joseph Smith with head in hat dictating the Book of Mormon? Ah, that made them vulnerable to Joseph Smith’s trick hat, right? Wrong. That’s your groundless and baseless ad hoc theory—not to mention you have no evidence that these witnesses weren’t any of these things. Cowdery asked to try translating with the stone, and Harris tested Joseph Smith by switching the stone. You underestimate Joseph Smith’s ability to convince people of his gift. Some very intelligent people were fooled by him.
So I did not say that religious individuals can't be trusted or that it's the Book of Mormon witnesses' religious beliefs as to why one should be skeptical of their claims.
You just said—“ In this case the 3 witnesses in the Book of Mormon testifying to seeing angels & God..reflects on their likely credibility.” How exactly does having visions reflect on credibility in telling the truth? We are not talking about their testimony about visions and miracles, but their personal observations under ordinary conditions. Otherwise normal people have visions, speak in tongues, etc. You can’t be suggesting they hallucinated Joseph Smith dictating the Book of Mormon with head in hat, so you must be accusing them of lying. Having visions doesn’t make one a liar.
Rather one needs to consider the sorts of sort of claims being made as a factor in evaluating those who make the claims. Because the Book of Mormon witnesses make extraordinary claims some more so than others, and as well the witnesses (except one or 2 hostile ones) are non objective, non skeptical witnesses..that leads one to conclude one must be highly skeptical of their claims. The sorts of claims being made need to be considered in determining if the evidence commensurates with the claims to warrant acceptance. Therefore for the sorts of extraordinary claims the Book of Mormon witnesses make...and the fact that they are not reliable witnesses(for various reasons such as lack of independence) ...leads one to conclude that they as evidence do not commensurate with the sorts of claims made. Those witnesses as evidence on their own do not meet a sufficient burden of proof to warrant acceptance of their claims.
You are bunching all the witnesses together based on their beliefs—there is no other criteria being used here. The witnesses aren’t making “extraordinary claims” in this instance. They were not testifying to miracles or visions, which does warrant skepticism, but to ordinary observations. Of course, bias is a legitimate concern, but that doesn’t warrant a conclusion that they were liars or unable to make sound observations. The only reason you question them on such a basic observation is because they stand in the way of your ad hoc trick-hat theory. There are good reasons to accept their descriptions of Joseph Smith’s translation method. There is independent evidence for their basic honesty and trustworthiness. There are multiple witnesses, both friendly and unfriendly. Your theory that the hat and stone were brought out when hostile witnesses came to visit is ad hoc. While your criticisms of them focus on the time of their observations, you haven’t considered the dates of their statements. Most statements were given long after Joseph Smith was dead, and independent of one another. You are attempting to argue two things simultaneously—they aren’t trustworthy and they were fooled by the hat trick. Which is it? Either way, you don’t have warrant to dismiss all these witnesses categorically.
Dan I've been reading lots of insults from you for a while now. You've appointed yourself the logic expert, but that's not good enough. With high frequency you make specific accusations that I don't understand logic, debate and various fallacies. Frankly it's really the reverse, it's you who has a poor understanding of good reasoning and you misunderstand and misapply fallacies. However, I haven't been insulting you nearly to the degree you have been insulting me.
Wrong. All I have done is name the fallacies. You, on the other hand, manage to make it personal—mostly because you rely on a highly personal notion of what is logical—which is why you take it personally when logical fallacies are pointed out to you. You have tried to quibble your way out of some of these instances, all to no effect. However, even now you are making it personal. Even assuming your opinion of things is right, why do you get so insulted when someone points out logical fallacies? That’s what’s done in debate.
So you misrepresented my reasoning on why one should be skeptical of the Book of Mormon witnesses, .and yes I did insult you because I've had enough of your insults and what looks to me like dishonesty when you are misrepresent what I've said. So you stop insulting me, and I'll stop insulting you.
That’s going to be hard to do since you interpret lessons in logic as an insult. Why do you interpret a paraphrase of your and Roger’s position, whether right or wrong, as dishonesty? Why not simply correct it without getting personal? Ironically, you confirm in this post that what I said was basically correct.