Dan Vogel wrote:You hit the nail on the head Roger. Dan cited a source and that source found that people tricked such as how Dan conjectures Smith did, provided unreliable statements of what happened.
And then you have the nerve to say to Mikwut:
It should be anyone involved in this thread or reading it who decides whether Dan’s position is based on “evidential conclusions, logic and a clearly stated historical construction of what most likely happened based on the evidence we have.”
Let's see Dan, I quoted you, I didn't misrepresent you or take your words out of context, I then quoted Roger's response and then low and behold and this is important Dan, I addressed with reasoning why Roger hit the nail on the head. What I posted allows any reader to look at the evidence and reasoning and judge for themselves.
Mikwut's statement is cheerleading while in that same post he is attacking Roger... accusing him of not being clear. It's a rhetorical game which he most likely uses in his work as a lawyer. He provides no quotes or reasoning which backs up his claim...that you have provided "evidential conclusions, logic and a clearly stated historical construction of what most likely happened" ..so that it can be evaluated...if true or not.
by the way, I'm going to argue with reasoning and evidence that you have not provided evidential conclusions, logic and a clearly stated historical construction of what most likely happened.
In a previous post after you told me I should appreciate Emma believed in the supernatural powers of Smith I wrote:
“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.”
I had pointed out that Emma's claim of Smith correcting her spelling errors while he head was in a hat indicated she was lying..since no one can do that.
So to counter that, you used an ad hoc fallacy and said that perhaps the person who took her statement was wrong on some things since they published her statement many years later ,maybe Emma never said that …or maybe what Emma said got exaggerated from the actual event of correction of a few spelling errors to Smith having the supernatural ability to correct her spelling when she gave her statement. Nice ad hoc fallacy move there Dan.
Then you go on to another ad hoc fallacy in case no one is convinced of the first one...and you post
Dan wrote: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.
And the reason for posting this, was to to protect Emma as a witness from my accusation of her lying with the reasoning I gave. Because you wrote: “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.”
Right Dan my handling of the source was unsophistated ...rolling eyes.
Well Dan your quote is not suggesting you get to pick and choose what to accept as reliable testimony to suit your purposes. No no no Dan, your quote is saying you don’t get to pick and choose because as it says “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.” So there is no means to determine what the subjects claim is true or not.
So what does this say about your critical evaluation of Emma’s statement and the other Book of Mormon witnesses? It says ...that your acceptance at face value of the Book of Mormon witnesses statements ..is wrong. You should not accept at face value people who have been involved in situations as you quoted in which trickery has been employed..and they don't appreciate what is going on.
So Dan if you’ve been wrong in your critical evaluation of the Book of Mormon witnesses’ statements ...it means Mikwut was wrong with his claim that you have provided “evidential conclusions, logic and a clearly stated historical construction of what most likely happened”, because clearly using your own citation above you have not. Your premises are wrong and hence your conclusion of what happened historically is unreliable.
It’s obvious Dan to any ...even a half-assed...critical thinker ..one who doesn't have a vested interest in Mormonism that the Book of Mormon witnesses with their vested interest and ties to Smith are not reliable witnesses when it comes to their claims of the translation process.