Dan Vogel Responds to Lars Nielsen (Part 7) – The name Mormon

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Dan Vogel Responds to Lars Nielsen (Part 7) – The name Mormon

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Is the name Mormon a Kircherism? Did it originate in seventeenth-century France?

The name Mormon in the Book of Mormon is not a Kircherism. It’s a completely separate issue. My purpose in discussing the surname Mormon was to show that it isn’t exclusively the name of a seventeenth-century book.

How large is truly large? When I argued that coincidences are bound to happen and mentioned the law of truly large numbers, I was talking about the totality of data in the Book of Mormon, not just names, against everything in Joseph Smith’s world or at least everything in print before 1830. It’s hard to get a much larger data set than that. Anyway, with a large set of data points in the Book of Mormon, you should expect coincidences. Lars wants to limit the data set to names only, and then to Nephi and Mormon specifically, saying that they were rare names. Nevertheless, I regard Camora Islands and Moroni as well as Nahom as coincidences. Nephi and Mormon are not linked in a way that makes the odds against coincidence for either less likely.

Lars, you keep dodging my argument, which you quote at 2:24:38—“Anyone familiar with Le Parasite Mormon would not have used the name as the main character in a pseudepigraphic creation.” Even you have said: “Why would Smith intentionally leave such a titillating trail of bookish breadcrumbs directly to Kircher?” You recognize this is a problem, but try to escape it by citing literary works that adopt or create names that allude to known villains or heroes. This has nothing to do with the discussion at hand. These literary authors want readers to make such connections, whereas pseudepigraphists would obviously avoid using such names for the same reason they want to avoid making anachronisms. They would especially want to avoid names associated with fraud. This seems like a serious conceptual problem to me.

For me, the suggestion that Prof. Smith and Spalding wanted their work to be exposed to teach the Christian public not to be gullible is not convincing and makes absolutely no sense. Also, this is a solution to a problem that didn’t exist. You made it up because you knew there was a major problem with your theory. You don’t get any credit for solving a problem you created yourself. This is ad hoc added to ad hoc hypothesis, a sure sign of a struggling theory. This is really a weak way to overcome the problem I discussed in the previous paragraph.

If Nephi and Mormon in the Book of Mormon are to be connected to Kircher and Montmaur, it would be for reasons other than what you have ascribed to them. [Edited to add: Some one on Reddit suggested the names could have been transmitted through Walters the Magician, who had learned the art of Mesmerism in Paris.] Because no reasonable route to Joseph Smith can be demonstrated, the best explanation to take at this time is coincidence.

Next, you respond to a concluding remark I made about the name Mormon—“Without anything to prop it up, the name Mormon appearing in 17th-century France is no more authoritative than other possible sources Joseph Smith had available to him. In fact, any 19th-century American source is far more likely than Vayer’s Mormon.”

Your response is weak (2:26:08): “First of all, Vayer’s Mormon isn’t a source for The Book of Mormon under any authorship theory; it is an influence. Sources and influences are different things.” You are only quibbling, but Vayer’s Mormon would be a source for the name in the Book of Mormon. You might describe Kircher’s glass balls as an influence for the Liahona, but the name Mormon is too specific to be merely an influence.

“Second, there are several supports propping up the idea that the character Mormon was inspired by the caricature Mormon, including Thomas Boys’ conclusion, which, again, Mr. Vogel concealed from his viewers.” I didn’t conceal Thomas Boys’ 1859 statement because I couldn’t mention everything and I wasn’t impressed with his comments, which are uninformed and useless. Not even you believe “the Book of Mormon ... derived its first hint from Paris.” He even tries to parallel Utah polygamy with the Vayer’s Mormon and makes a few other parallels that no one should take seriously. He concludes—“whoever was the author [of the Book of Mormon], that in his first conceptions of the work he borrowed a hint from that tissue of fictions and forgeries which at Paris, in the middle of the seventeenth century, enveloped the unfortunate P. de Montmaur.” There’s that word “forgery” connected with Montmaur. I have seen nothing in Vayer’s caricature Mormon to compare with Joseph Smith’s character Mormon. Rather, a better argument can be made that Mormon is one of Joseph Smith’s alter egos.

•Both were named after their fathers (Mormon 1:5).

•Both were “large in stature” (Mormon 2:1).

•Both moved with their fathers from the north country to a land southward at about age 10 or 11 (Mormon 1:6).

•Both moves were followed by war with the Lamanite/Indians and a period of peace (Mormon 1:8-12). Andrew Jackson’s army defeated the Seminoles in 1817-18.

•Both lived in a time of apostasy (Mormon 1:14).

•Both had a remarkable manifestation of Jesus at age 15 (Mormon 1:15).

•Both lived in a time when Gadianton robbers (or “secret combinations”), slippery treasures, and magic were prevalent (Mormon 1:17-19).

•Both were instructed to go to a hill and remove a record engraved on gold plates (Mormon 1:3-4).

•Mormon was about 24 years of age, which corresponds to 1830 when Joseph Smith published the Book of Mormon.

“Third, Spalding was very well educated on the history and literature of all aspects of the Enlightenment, including the roles played by influential French authors-- not the least of which was Madame de Staël, born in the 1700 ...” I won’t bother quoting your long and irrelevant digression into the Celes MS. You follow this non-evidence with an attempt to lecture me for not reading the Celes MS, which is of very questionable relevance to our Solomon Spalding.

So, you didn’t really respond to my statement—“Without anything to prop it up, the name Mormon appearing in 17th-century France is no more authoritative than other possible sources Joseph Smith had available to him. In fact, any 19th-century American source is far more likely than Vayer’s Mormon.”

At 2:28:03, you claim: “Before my book, no present-day Mormon Mormon historian and no non-Mormon Mormon historian ever knew that the names Nephi and Mormon even existed as bona fide person names associated with fake ancient texts.” At this point, Nephi and Mormon are much like Camoro/Moroni or Nahom. Unless one can connect them to Joseph Smith in a meaningful way, there is nothing to distinguish them from coincidence.
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Re: Dan Vogel Responds to Lars Nielsen (Part 7) – The name Mormon

Post by Shulem »

THIS:
dan vogel wrote:
Sun Jan 12, 2025 8:24 pm
I have seen nothing in Vayer’s caricature Mormon to compare with Joseph Smith’s character Mormon. Rather, a better argument can be made that Mormon is one of Joseph Smith’s alter egos.

•Both were named after their fathers (Mormon 1:5).

•Both were “large in stature” (Mormon 2:1).

•Both moved with their fathers from the north country to a land southward at about age 10 or 11 (Mormon 1:6).

•Both moves were followed by war with the Lamanite/Indians and a period of peace (Mormon 1:8-12). Andrew Jackson’s army defeated the Seminoles in 1817-18.

•Both lived in a time of apostasy (Mormon 1:14).

•Both had a remarkable manifestation of Jesus at age 15 (Mormon 1:15).

•Both lived in a time when Gadianton robbers (or “secret combinations”), slippery treasures, and magic were prevalent (Mormon 1:17-19).

•Both were instructed to go to a hill and remove a record engraved on gold plates (Mormon 1:3-4).

•Mormon was about 24 years of age, which corresponds to 1830 when Joseph Smith published the Book of Mormon.

I love it!

For me, the 11-15-24 is proof that nobody could have written those numbers into the story other than Joseph Smith himself. He dictated those numbers and circumstances while his face was in a hat. The Book of Mormon is all about Joseph Smith and the rising up of the choice seer in the last days. Smith was the sole author. That is what I believe.

Amen.

:D
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Re: Dan Vogel Responds to Lars Nielsen (Part 7) – The name Mormon

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dan vogel wrote:
Sun Jan 12, 2025 8:24 pm
If Nephi and Mormon in the Book of Mormon are to be connected to Kircher and Montmaur, it would be for reasons other than what you have ascribed to them. [Edited to add: Some one on Reddit suggested the names could have been transmitted through Walters the Magician, who had learned the art of Mesmerism in Paris.] Because no reasonable route to Joseph Smith can be demonstrated, the best explanation to take at this time is coincidence.

I understand that the Parisian-educated Luman Walters the magician mentored young Joseph early on while treasure digging. Is it possible that he could have shared certain names with young Joseph while performing ceremonial magic that managed to get into the Book of Mormon?

Is it possible?
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Re: Dan Vogel Responds to Lars Nielsen (Part 7) – The name Mormon

Post by drumdude »

Of course he wrote himself and others into his book. He wrote Christopher Columbus directly into the book, explaining after the fact (in his separately published 1830s reference guide) that his implicit reference was explicitly Christopher Columbus... it's clear as day that Joseph was writing this exactly as you would expect - based off his own knowledge and experiences.

Image

https://contentdm.lib.BYU.edu/digital/c ... MP/id/4566
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Re: Dan Vogel Responds to Lars Nielsen (Part 7) – The name Mormon

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drumdude wrote:
Mon Jan 13, 2025 12:47 am
Of course he wrote himself and others into his book. He wrote Christopher Columbus directly into the book, explaining after the fact (in his separately published 1830s reference guide) that his implicit reference was explicitly Christopher Columbus...
Joseph Smith said:
1 Nephi 13:12 wrote:And I looked and beheld a man among the Gentiles, who was separated from the seed of my brethren by the many waters; and I beheld the Spirit of God, that it came down and wrought upon the man; and he went forth upon the many waters, even unto the seed of my brethren, who were in the promised land.
The Spirit of God?
By Alicia Lee, CNN wrote:During his voyages through the Caribbean islands and the Central and South American coasts, Columbus came upon indigenous people that he labeled “Indians.” Columbus and his men enslaved many of these native people and treated them with extreme violence and brutality, according to History.com.
Wikipedia, Christopher Columbus wrote:Some historians have criticized Columbus for initiating the widespread colonization of the Americas and for abusing its native population. On St. Croix, Columbus's friend Michele da Cuneo—according to his own account—kept an indigenous woman he captured, whom Columbus "gave to [him]", then brutally raped her.

Among indigenous peoples, Columbus is often viewed as a key agent of genocide. Samuel Eliot Morison, a Harvard University historian and author of a multivolume biography on Columbus, writes, "The cruel policy initiated by Columbus and pursued by his successors resulted in complete genocide."
Thank you, Spirit!
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Re: Dan Vogel Responds to Lars Nielsen (Part 7) – The name Mormon

Post by dan vogel »

Shulem wrote:
Mon Jan 13, 2025 12:38 am
dan vogel wrote:
Sun Jan 12, 2025 8:24 pm
If Nephi and Mormon in the Book of Mormon are to be connected to Kircher and Montmaur, it would be for reasons other than what you have ascribed to them. [Edited to add: Some one on Reddit suggested the names could have been transmitted through Walters the Magician, who had learned the art of Mesmerism in Paris.] Because no reasonable route to Joseph Smith can be demonstrated, the best explanation to take at this time is coincidence.

I understand that the Parisian-educated Luman Walters the magician mentored young Joseph early on while treasure digging. Is it possible that he could have shared certain names with young Joseph while performing ceremonial magic that managed to get into the Book of Mormon?

Is it possible?
I think it's possible, but it's all about what you can demonstrate. It has the same amount of proof that Nielsen's theory--nothing.
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Re: Dan Vogel Responds to Lars Nielsen (Part 7) – The name Mormon

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dan vogel wrote:
Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:32 am
I think it's possible, but it's all about what you can demonstrate. It has the same amount of proof that Nielsen's theory--nothing.

Perfect answer. Thank you.
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Re: Dan Vogel Responds to Lars Nielsen (Part 7) – The name Mormon

Post by Marcus »

dan vogel wrote:
Sun Jan 12, 2025 8:24 pm
...At 2:28:03, you claim: “Before my book, no present-day Mormon Mormon historian and no non-Mormon Mormon historian ever knew that the names Nephi and Mormon even existed as bona fide person names associated with fake ancient texts.”
He really said that? That seems awfully naïve.
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Lucky 7

Post by Shulem »

So many podcasts and I'm catching up, in all this fun...

There is a great deal that is pure speculation and guesswork in patching this mystery together and we can never really know what happened without all the facts. I have to wonder how much oral tradition or word of mouth may have played a part in transferring information that may have originated from Europe and found its way to America. Who is to say that the word Mormon was not a word known and passed on without a written record to accompany such a telling? My thinking is that a learned person may be quite familiar with contents of a manuscript or book without ever having owned it permanently or possessing it thereafter.

Look, I don't pretend to have all the answers and yet I often come across as a know-it-all, but that's just part of my personality in having fun. Why bother with all this garbage if we can't have fun doing it?

Let us all carry on!

:D
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