You keep repeating the eyewitness testimony is unreliable because they were biased and had a vested interest as if that’s enough to dismiss them and substitute your speculations. You never responded to my defense of the witnesses, so I’m reposting it here for a third time. There is much more, but if I can’t get you to respond to this simple list there’s no need to go further. Since so much rests on your rejection of the witnesses, I suggest we hash this out before we even think about entertaining your speculations.
Historians don’t evaluate testimony like a polemicist does. There are no disinterested witnesses where Mormonism is concerned. Spalding witnesses aren’t objective either. Historians don’t just throw out interested testimony, but they are skeptical and proceed with caution. So, how can we test these witnesses?
Multiple witnesses. Oliver Cowdery, David Whitmer, Martin Harris, Michael Morse (non-Mormon), Isaac Hale (non-Mormon), Elizabeth Ann Whitmer Cowdery, Emma Hale Smith, Joseph Knight Sr.
Consistent story. Variety in minor details, but consistent in the main elements.
Independent testimony. Witnesses gave their testimonies in a variety of settings without collusion with one another.
Consistent over time. Essential elements remained the same from 1829 to 1880s.
Uncontroverted testimony. Any one of the named witnesses could have changed their testimony during their lifetimes, but they didn’t. Cowdery, Whitmer, and Harris were excommunicated in 1838. Other witnesses to the translation who never gave a statement could have come forward at any time to contradict published accounts, but that never happened either.
Incidental witnesses. Cowdery, Harris, and Emma were scribes, but the others were incidental witnesses who happened to be present on various occasions.
Supported by physical evidence (MS consistent with dictation).
Supported by incidental event (losing 116-pages MS).
[Note that the testimony about the head in hat goes back before Spalding claims were made.]
In this discussion, you need to be clear that speculation can’t be used against them. It has to be evidentiary. Bias is not evidence of lying or conspiracy, and bias is mitigated by corroboration of other witnesses, both friendly and unfriendly. This discussion should not attempt ad hoc speculation of conspiracy to negate testimony like Cowdery, Harris, or Whitmer can’t be believed because they are conspirators, and the non-Mormons only observed a temporary show—thus creating an unfalsifiable position. The above list attempts to show how bias can be mitigated through corroborating testimony given by other witnesses in different settings and times. The testimony is too commonplace and supported to be dismissed out-of-hand by “biased, interested”. Caution is in order, which can be overcome, but outright dismissal is silly.
Louis Gottschalk’s Understanding History: A Primer of Historical Method speaks to this:
The historian, however, is prosecutor, attorney for the defense, judge, and jury all in one. But as judge he rules out no evidence whatever if it is relevant. To him any single detail of testimony is credible—even if it is contained in a document obtained by force or fraud, or is otherwise impeachable, or is based on hearsay evidence, or is from an interested witness—provided it can pass four tests:
1. Was the ultimate source of the detail (the primary witness able to tell the truth?
2. Was the primary witness willing to tell the truth?
3. Is the primary witness accurately reported with regard to the detail under examination?
4. Is there any independent corroboration of the detail under examination?
Any detail (regardless of what the source or who the author) that passes all four tests is credible historical evidence. … (p. 150).
The ability to tell the truth “rests in part upon the witness’s nearness to the event.” Other factors are competence, time lapse, etc.
The willingness to tell the truth can be affected by interest and bias, which “requires the exercise of caution” but doesn’t justify summary dismissal—or there would be little usable sources. Gottschalk says the historian “must continue to bear in mind that even the worst witness may occasionally tell the truth and that it is the historian’s business to extract every iota of relevant truth, if he can” (p. 160). Each element of a statement is weighed, not the whole statement—judiciously, not polemically.
Bias and interest can be mitigated through independent corroboration and the presence of other conditions favorable to credibility. One such condition is that the things testified to “are so well-known, so much matters of common knowledge, that the witness would be unlikely to be mistaken or to lie about them,” as well as “the absence of contradictory evidence in other sources may frequently be taken to be confirmation” (p. 162).
So, since most of your ad hoc speculations fly in the face of more established evidence, you need to tell us why your speculations should be preferred over the testimony of eyewitnesses.