Fence Sitter wrote:Seriously, the story of how the Book of Mormon was produced is exactly what we would expect to see made up in a 19th century environment.
ClarkGoble wrote:Vogel has made probably the strongest arguments along this line of anyone. I'm obviously not persuaded since I'm still a believing Mormon. I think for the naturalistic critic in the sense of not postulating any phenomena not already reasonably sustained by science that Vogel's work is the best. I think he does a bit too much psychologizing of Joseph but given his thesis of explaining Joseph as a fraud, that makes some sense. I'll confess I like Dan and have enjoyed the discussions I've had with him.
All that said though the biggest places I find this thesis implausible is how someone in the abject poverty he was in had the resources to construct the fraud and why on earth he'd persist with the fraud given the extensive and extremely violent opposition. (Read up on what was going on during the period when he had the plates -- it's not pleasant and I don't understand why he'd stick with it) Especially after it became clear he wasn't going to make money with the book. What's the point of the fraud at that point. If we instead think Joseph is simply delusional rather than a conscious fraud then that seems to raise even more questions. Not the least of which those who are that mentally ill rarely keep to a single story and usually aren't that functional. The biggest problem with the delusional view is explaining the plates. It's even harder to make sense of that if he wasn't conscious about making them.
The longer I analyze his life the more I am convinced he was aware the he was a fraud and that it just snowballed, if you will. I do not dismiss mental illness totally, especially given that his youngest son's condition, but I do not think that was a large factor, if any in Joseph Smith's work.
I often hear the apologetic question of why would anyone continue with a fraud the way Joseph Smith did in the face of what he suffered? I think the answer is simple. He did not know anything else. What was he going to do, at any point in his life, if he stopped? He tried stopping for a while after marrying Emma but quickly returned to it. As a youth, he and his family were in abject poverty with a father who did not support them and the loss of the eldest son, much of the responsibility for supporting the Smith fell to Joseph Smith and where did he find success in making money? They had already failed at farming or investing and were reduced to peddling and hiring out as labors. So where could Joseph Smith find a better way to earn money? In convincing people he had supernatural powers.
I recently finished an excellent book on 19th century counterfeiting by Stephen Mihm called A Nation of Counterfeiters: Capitalists, Con Men, and the Making of the United States which traced the lives of several men and their families who were involved in counterfeiting. Often they were jailed or even executed for such participation yet time and time again they and or their families returned to the trade? Why? Well for the same reasons Joseph Smith stayed with his behavior, they simply did not know a better way to earn a living. There is no deep reasoning required here, Joseph Smith stayed with what he knew and what brought him the most success.
I don't think anyone doubts Joseph Smith genius of combining elements from his environment into something new. Without examples of what you find lacking, I have no way to analyze those components you find problematic within a 19th century environment, but it is clear that as time goes on and we discover more and more about that environment, there are less and less item that do not fit and at the same time continue discovering that the contemporary anti-Mormon sources are where we find the most accurate descriptions of what really went on. As Michael Quinn said "Once again, a Mormon source verifies the accuracy of an anti-Mormon memory of what he heard early Mormon say."ClarkGoble wrote:The other issues to my eyes is that as persuasive as Dan is for certain features of early American myths and legends about mound builders and so forth to explain both early Mormon views and more particularly elements of the Book of Mormon the text itself seems at odd with many elements. Now it's been too long since I last read Dan's books and I have them in storage right now so I can't grab them for argument. However when I read them and when I'd discussed them in the past there simply were a lot of elements in the text that seem odd if we're going for a combination of mound building, masonry, View of the Hebrews as the source for the text.
ClarkGoble wrote:I recognize that's not going to convince anyone here since the alternative is the bigger leaps from non-evidence of the divine. However I think we should recognize there are big, big questions for both the fraudulent and delusional models. Especially given the only time Joseph really was moderately successful was Nauvoo. Explaining the 1830's and 1820's just seems very difficult to my eyes. To me (and I recognize many here won't agree) these problems are the equivalent of horses or metal swords for the critics.
It isn't just horses and swords - it is the entire Nephite/Lamanite nation that we are unable to find anywhere in the America's. There isn't a single physical artifact one can point to that can be linked directly to the Book of Mormon. Not one. The comparison between the difficulty in explaining how the book was produced against the total lack of evidence for it as well the extensive evidence against, is not a level playing field, it is an overwhelming imbalance to anyone outside of faith.
By the way, I hear people bring up Sorenson's work as evidence of Nephites. In my opinion Sorenson is guilty of doing with the Book of Mormon what Biblical archeologist like William F. Albright did for most of the last century, that is, taking the Bible and seeing where it fit in ancient Israel. Of course we know how that has turned out.