Glenn:
It is not my boat. It is the boat of textual criticism and analysis. That has nothing to do with the name of the person. It has to do with the text itself. My response was substantive, but you do not seem to understand it.
All right, I'll play your game, what did I not understand?
You may not realize it, but you seem to be operating using a double standard. For instance, you deny that I can infer with any reasonable probability how the lost pages were written.
Uhm... no I didn't. In the first place, I'm not sure what you mean when you say "how the lost pages were written." We've pretty much been discussing what was or was not written on them rather than how they were written.
What I did say is that your argument is from inference only. It has no testimonial support. I said your argument could be wrong. I also presented an alternate scenario that you could not disprove, and you still can't.
Yet, you have made much of the supposedly similar phrases and ideas from the extant Spalding manuscript and the Book of Mormon to infer that Solomon used that same phraseology and the same ideas in his mythical rewrite, a manuscript you have never seen.
I have indeed made much of them because of their striking similarities. But here's the key difference, Glenn. I have testimonial support
in addition to the textual evidence (parallels). You don't. What you say next is simply not correct:
That idea has no support from the only witness who inferred that there was a second manuscript. As Aaron Wright said in his unsigned letter in Philastus Hurlbut's handwriting, "he informed me he wrote in the first place he wrote for his own amusement and then altered his plan and commenced writing a history of the first Settlement of America." That statement does not indicate a rewrite at all, but a new and unrelated effort.
Either I am not following you or you are
really mixing things up! To illustrate, I'm going to have to break this down....
That idea has no support from the only witness who inferred that there was a second manuscript.
This is confusing, but taking my cue from your next sentence, I assume you are referring to Aron Wright... ? If so, you are quite wrong. Aron Wright was an eyewitness. He knew Solomon Spalding and was exposed to his manuscripts. Aron is one of the witnesses who tells us that Spalding had
many manuscripts. And he tells us that important detail
before Hurlbut pulled MSCC out of the trunk. That is
very important, Glenn.
As Aaron Wright said in his unsigned letter in Philastus Hurlbut's handwriting, "he informed me he wrote in the first place he wrote for his own amusement and then altered his plan and commenced writing a history of the first Settlement of America." That statement does not indicate a rewrite at all, but a new and unrelated effort.
??!! The rewrite we've been discussing is Joseph Smith's
forced rewrite of the Book of Lehi, not Solomon Spalding's second (or third? or fourth?) attempt at writing a novel. These are two completely different rewrites.
It's interesting, though, that your observation supports S/R claims, unintentionally, though it may be. You are correct, that the statement indicates "a new and unrelated effort" although there is some speculation that one may have been conceived to be a sequel to the other. You may need to temper your remarks a bit when you consider that such a "new and unrelated effort" necessarily implies that MSCC can't be the only one. Of course you will argue that you don't accept Wright's assertion, but then, if not, how do you propose to use it for what you want to use it for?
My analysis and conclusions about the probability of the original text being in the third person except for direct quotes does have support from the original text itself and the historical record.
Perhaps, if one were to accept the claims of the text itself. I don't. I think Joseph Smith and & Co. were writing as though they were ancient prophets which means they are not bound to follow your guidelines and it also means there never were any plates of Nephi or Lehi in the first place. It means when we read "I Nephi" that Nephi wasn't writing it. So no one is writing in the first person, Glenn. Whoever is writing is writing as though he were Nephi, or Mormon, abridging Nephi. Why is that so difficult to understand? Sure, if Nephi was a real dude and Mormon was a real dude and Mormon is editing Nephi, then unless Mormon quotes Nephi, he can't accurately write "I Nephi." I get your point. But surely you must understand that your point is only valid if these guys were real people?! I don't believe they were... and supposedly, neither does Dan.
So what does that mean? It means what I have been stating all along. There is nothing about this argument that calls into question Cunningham's assertion that Spalding's manuscript repeatedly stated: "I Nephi." None of the points you are attempting to make here accomplish that goal. Why not? Well, I've stated it about four times now, but here we go again:
1. Spalding can write "I Nephi" and either Rigdon or Smith or Cowdery are free to change it to third person and back again if it serves their purpose, OR
2. The Book of Lehi could have contained the story of Nephi either by constantly quoting Nephi or the author could have had Nephi himself picking up his pen (or engraving instrument) and writing in first person just like we see in Omni. Dan's argument that I can't use the pattern laid down in Omni because it's part of the rewrite is simply not valid! Of course I can because the same author(s)/redactors produced both. They weren't produced by ancient prophets, they were produced by 19th century fiction writers. There were no plates to abridge. There may have been a manuscript to abridge, however! There is no valid reason why either of these two alternatives, or point 1, can't be valid.
You also use a double standard for the witnesses. You accept at face value their statements about the names Lehi, Nephi, etc. appearing just so in the mythical Spalding second manuscript.
The way I see it, I have two options.
1. I can believe what they say is fairly accurate (until I see good evidence that it is not, which I haven't seen) OR
2. I can conclude that they were lying.
I simply can't go with something the middle. As you point out, (when you write: "That statement does not indicate a rewrite at all, but a new and unrelated effort") their statements aren't really conducive to the notion that they thought they were telling the truth but they were really mistaken. That is Brodie's logic and Dan seems to have followed it was well, but I don't see that as a valid interpretation.
I don't simply accept their statements at face value, Glenn. There's much more to it than that, as you well know, since we've discussed a number of the reasons I think S/R is valid.
The witnesses say that they were there and you believe them, because those names are in the Book of Mormon.
Not really. I realize they could have gotten the names from the Book of Mormon. But the key point is that they COULD NOT have gotten them from MSCC. So again, they are either lying, or there really was another manuscript that not only had those names, but also had a lot of "and it came to pass" 'es as well.
Yet, when four of those Conneaut witnesses and at least three non Conneaut witnesses say that Solomon's story was about the lost tribes migrating to America and becoming the ancestors of the Book of Mormon, you do not believe them.
How do you figure that?
You do not accept them at face value, because there is no lost tribes story discernible in the Book of Mormon.
Actually no, that's you who does that. My point on that was that you make too big of a deal about the lost tribes and that your interpretation of what they would have meant is too narrow. And not only that, but again, Smith, & Co. had ample opportunity to change Spalding's story if it served their purposes.
You have to invent some story that bears no resemblance to the lost tribes and pretend that it suffices.
Huh? The simple fact is that the Book of Mormon presents a nation, or actually two nations developing from one family. If that family member was originally an escapee from Isreal at the time of the dispersal it could have been thought of as a lost tribes account. And again, the original Spalding manuscript could have been more of a lost tribes account, featuring Lehi and Nephi as heroes. But then Rigdon or Smith/Cowdery changed it. I know S/R critics don't like that, but the fact is, that is certainly well within the realm of possibility. The other possibility is that the S/R witnesses were lying. But why would they lie? And why would so many of them lie? And how did they all come to agree on their lies?
When a witness states that that "When Spalding divested his history of its fabulous names, by a verbal explanation, he landed his people near the Straits of Darien, which I am very confident he called Zarahemla," one would naturally expect to find Lehi and Nephi landing near the Straits of Darien. But that is not in the text of the Book of Mormon. It cannot even be inferred from the test of the Book of Mormon.
Which means you can't claim these witnesses were simply using the Book of Mormon to get their information!
And of course, the Book of Lehi was rewritten, wasn't it! And I think it was you who said: "It had to be
so different that the adversaries could not challenge them." ; )
I know, I know, I can only use the statements of the witnesses when they agree with you and I cannot use them when they do not agree with you.
Well then, I see we
are making progress!
See MCB?! There's
still hope for Glenn. : )
"...a pious lie, you know, has a great deal more influence with an ignorant people than a profane one."
- Sidney Rigdon, as quoted in the Quincy Whig, June 8, 1839, vol 2 #6.