Tobin wrote:Technology and tools don't come out of a vacuum (there is always prior art). This is no doubt there were predecessors of the macahuitl and this is a good example of what is being discussed in these verses.
That is like saying that because the technology to make iPods didn't come out of a vacuum, there must have been a predecessor of the iPod in 1500.
This is another criticism I have of detractors of the Book of Mormon, we can point at examples that fit the descriptions of the Book of Mormon. But then they pull the ole bait'n switch of "well, we don't have an example of the earlier version because it hasn't been discovered yet".
No bait and switch at all. The macahuitl is a bad example both because it does not come close to the description of how swords were made in the Book of Mormon and also because it doesn't appear in the Americas until much too late.
This goes back to my point about barley in fact. It was prefectly fine to state barley didn't exist in pre-Columbian america until it shows up, then we'll just abandon that line of criticism because we have a whole list of yet undiscovered things. It's simply a ridiculous line of reasoning.
As I said, I've never had that line of reasoning. Of course, your line of reasoning is the opposite and is equally fallacious: we just haven't discovered the evidence yet. In four years of studying Latin American history (at BYU, no less), I never came across anything that supported an ancient American setting for the Nephites and Lamanites. Will there ever be any such evidence? I would never say never, but with each discovery and each archaeological dig, we learn more about what life was really like in the Americas in those times. Unfortunately, it's nothing like the civilizations described in the Book of Mormon.
The Bible could never be considered as a book from God if it suffered from the same assault since there is no evidence for a lot of its claims either.
At least we can confirm that the Bible is an ancient text, but no, you can't prove supernatural events.
It is much more simple to speak with God and determine from God if these records arose from him or not and leave the archeologists and scientists to making their own discoveries and theories. There is NEVER going to be a point that discoveries can ever prove the Book of Mormon is true and it will forever be a moving target.
Again, I did ask God, whether you like it or not.