onandagus wrote:The claim, or assumption, has been that Joseph Smith translated from the Kinderhook plates by revelation--i.e., in the same sense he translated the Book of Mormon--and that assumption was the basis for the major critical argument, as Chris has noted. This assumption is demonstrably false.
I still stand by my claim that this essentially revolves around how you want to define "revelatory." If one accepts your definition, then I suppose you can claim that you have demonstrably advanced the apologetic cause. If you accept my definition, that revelatory involves some purported revelation (in this case one supposes the GAEL would have to be revealed), then you haven't shown much at all.
But there is actually something even more fundamentally wrong here. It's not just "revelatory" that is being problematized, the word "translation" has already been problematized, mostly by apologists in my experience. As a case in point you say the KP case is certainly unlike the case of the translation of the Book of Mormon, as if the translation of the Book of Mormon has a stable description in apologetic and/or believing circles. The translation is both loose and tight, depending on who you are talking to. The plates might have been present, they might not have been. The seer stone might have been used, or it might have been a Urim and Thummim. At times the translation seems to involve wholesale copying from the KJV Bible. In short, comparing the KP translation to the Book of Mormon translation is not a stable comparison, thus I really don't know what to make of the comparison.
While this is a line critics may want to take, it is wrong, as I'll explain later tonight.
Well I look forward to hearing the explanation.
It was both, and it will appear a peer-reviewed article.
Just to be clear, I wasn't critiquing the venue, present your research wherever your want. I was just observing why the venue may be causing some confusion.