kyzabee
Because that's ultimately what I'm trying to do here, and where I think the strength of the approach lies: I'm trying to think through the problem of Book of Mormon authenticity as clearly as I can, taking into account as much evidence as possible, working as hard as I can to account for my own biases, and to make it as easy as possible for my inevitable errors to be corrected.
Excellent, and welcome! We look forward to analyzing things with you. In the above case, quit worrying about Joseph Smith. Get onto the evidences and all the background knowledge of the Book of Mormon. And you can't ignore the former attempts of apologists to present authenticating evidences which have now been refuted either.
That is part of the background we now understand.
From my view as well, you cannot ignore that you honestly have no first ground for even supposing Nephites and Lamanites ever existed, since there literally are no artifacts of them which world scholars, archaeologists, historians agree that they were a real, living people. You have no choice but to also acknowledge Bill Hamblin's debate with Philip Jenkins and how Jenkins brought that out and Hamblin could not overcome the obvious fact. That also is now part of the background of the Book of Mormon which must be taken into account.
We also have the background knowledge that all the various geographical theories actually weakens the overall probability since they all share and compete with the probability space in the claim of the Book of Mormon being authentic in an actual geographical setting. So none of the various theories can be as high as the single contrasting theory that Joseph Smith himself invented it. The evidence for its reality in an actual geographical setting is going to have to be seriously strong in order to help it compete with the contrasting theory of Joseph Smith inventing it.
The DNA is gonna be a lulu as well since that too is also part of our background knowledge which must be acknowledged and calculated, as well a the various General Authorities teachings of who the Lamanites were, where they originated, etc. Also don't forget the Jaredites as supposed Olmecs! That too is part of our background knowledge which cannot be ignored. And also the background knowledge that no actual historians or archaeologists have agreed with Mormon scholars, and why they haven't. The LDS evidence does not appear to be all that solid to the world, and this also is part of our overall background knowledge which cannot be ignored, but must be thrown into the hopper of calculating the probabilities.
There is so much more, but this gives you a flavor of the idea of putting the two theories into a ratio.
Looking forward to the discussion of evidences and background knowledge and theories!