Resuming my response to your comments of 8 June on the witnesses.
Dan it doesn't matter if you were talking about other witnesses as well. The post was about Emma and by your comment you were suggesting she was convince that Smith had supernatural powers. You wrote: "Remember, you are reading statements given by those whom Joseph Smith had convinced he had supernatural powers to see whatever he wanted in his stone." Why should I remember that about Emma..I don't even assume it and I don't think you should either, that is if you are acting as a responsible historian.
This was a fraud perpetuated Dan. You don't know what the participants believed when it came to Smith's powers...especially his wife. And her claim that Smith corrected her spelling while not being able to read what she wrote and with his head in the hat ..has nothing to do with her beliefs about his powers. Either smith could actually do what she claimed or he couldn't irrespective of her beliefs.
So your comment about what she or others believed was irrelevant to the point I had made about Smith correcting her spelling errors.
We are dealing with a conman, and if you don’t know how the con works in the present, you have no hope of understanding it in the past. This is not just any con either; it’s one that involves supernatural beliefs. Joseph Smith was trying to convince Emma and the others that he had supernatural powers, just as he had as a treasure seer. He’s carrying over his ability to convince people that he can locate buried treasure--without ever unearthing one—to an ability to translate a book that’s not even in the room. He has methods of doing that. Emma and the others aren’t just describing what happened, they are giving their interpretation of what happened as if it’s part of what happened. So if what she describes is impossible, that’s what Joseph Smith wanted her to believe—that was his job. It has to do with the psychology of deception. I quoted the following book in my biography of Joseph Smith—it might help explain what I’m talking about. As early as 1887, S. J. Davey conducted well-rehearsed séances for several groups, with the usual trickery and misdirection, and
Immediately after each séance, Davey had the sitters write out in detail all that they could remember having happened during his séance. The findings were striking and very disturbing to believers. No one realized that Davey was employing tricks. Sitters consistently omitted crucial details, added others, changed the order of events, and otherwise supplied reports that would make it impossible for any reader to account for what was described by normal means.
--Ray Hyman, “A Critical Historical Overview of Parapsychology,” in Paul Kurtz, ed., A Skeptic’s Handbook of Parapsychology (Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1985), 27.
So, although Emma’s statement wasn’t reported for sixty-years, even if she was accurately quoted, her statement isn’t surprising and doesn’t prove she was lying. Your handling of this source is unsophisticated for several reasons.