Roger wrote:
When Nephi wrote (which of course, I don't believe in the first place) he would not have been attempting to write in emulation of King James English. He would allegedly have been writing in the mysterious "reformed Egyptian."
He would have been writing in reformed Egyptian, a written, but not a spoken language. The ideas, phraseology would have been Hebraic.
Roger wrote:When the Book of Mormon was translated (which of course, I don't believe it ever was) whoever produced the "translation" was attempting to emulate King James English, which was not the contemporary dialect of either Joseph Smith or his society. It was an archaic dialect even in Joseph Smith's day (with the possible exception of some obscure puritanical groups).
Good point there. Royal Skousen has demonstrated that the English translation of the Book of Mormon was written in even more archaic English than the King James era. Do we know of any groups that were speaking and writing 1500's English in the U.S. during the early 1800's?
Roger wrote:So when Bruce asks: "Not only ‘to what extent would emulation of King James English affect the results’ but also ‘to what extent would emulation of King James English differ from author to author.’"I have to ask myself which authors is he referring to? He can't be referring to Nephi or Mormon, he can only be referring to potential 19th century authors--which you insist his study has ruled out (at least with regard to the most likely suspects). So I wonder about the question. Which authors is he referring to?
If he's referring to 19th century authors, then if we discover noticeable variance in King James emulation patterns (whether that is even possible I do not know) then, it would appear that such a variance would support S/R. I don't see how it would support either S/A or S/D.
If we find a noticeable variance in archaic English patterns among the Book of Mormon authors, it would support multiple authorship, whether it be Nephites or nineteenth century authors. If the variances produce more than four authorship styles, especially several more than four authorship styles, that does not support the S/R theory.
It might be helpful if someone were to work with the Book of Mormon authors themselves using the NSC method, sort of revisiting the work done by Larsen, Rencher, and Layton. Their pioneering work in the seventies, built upon other works such as by Mosteller and Wallace, detected 21 different authorship styles, not Including Isaiah and Jesus. It would be interesting to see if the NSC methodology would generally follow those results. Twenty-one authors would be too much except for even die-hard S/R theorists to provide even an ad hoc explanation for. (Maybe).
Glenn
In order to give character to their lies, they dress them up with a great deal of piety; for a pious lie, you know, has a good deal more influence with an ignorant people than a profane one. Hence their lies came signed by the pious wife of a pious deceased priest. Sidney Rigdon QW J8-39