Hi Peter1000,
Can I ask firstly in a friendly fashion that you please use the quote function properly, should you wish to continue future conversations concerning my posts? Putting things in differently colored text or other means of distinguishing quotes from responses is really not necessary when we have the quote function built into the reply screen of this messageboard. The way that you've done it in this post makes more work for me to properly reply to you in a way that is readable to everyone. Thank you.
One of the funny things that JS said in 1830 is that people from Jerusalem sailed in a ship to the Americas. He was laughed at for this ridiculous statement. Everybody that knew anything knew that ancient America was populated by Asians coming across the Bering Straight. JS was stupid for putting that in the BOM. That kind of stupid talk worked until a few years ago, when science found so much evidence of seafaring ancients, it became an embarrassment to them to not acknowledge that ancient America could have been populated by both land and SEA.
So now JS does not look so stupid after all. Science has caught up with JS and corroborates the BOM. This major announcement is an evidence that corroborates the BOM because for 150 years JS said people from Jerusalem came to the Americas by ship. Only lately science begrudgingly says that is possible.
Read the following non-Mormon site:
http://www.cnn.com/2013/02/28/world/americas/phoenician-christopher-columbus-america-sailboat/
Again, how does this corroborate
Mormonism? It really doesn't (the link that you give doesn't claim that it does, and even points out that actual historians dispute this idea that the Phoenicians landed in the Americas).
And it would not have been as revolutionary in Joseph Smith's time as you apparently think it was to suggest that ancient seafaring people could've traveled to other lands. For example ancient Greek historian Herodotus noted that the Phoenicians, the people discussed at your link, were the first to circumnavigate the African continent. Herodotus died in
425 BC. Just for reference, the distance from Tyre, Lebanon -- the one-time capital of Phoenicia -- to Cape Town, South Africa is about 6,649 miles. This is much more than the 5,729 miles from Jerusalem to Palmyra, New York. So clearly such a voyage would have been possible (since one of even greater length had already happened, according to Herodotus), but this is not evidence for Mormonism at all. There is still no evidence for ancient Hebrew/Israelite habitation of the Americas.
As I have written before, the people of Joseph Smith's era may have been particularly gullible or ignorant, but they are not the standard by which we can say whether or not something was known in a particular time. Again, Herodotus died in 425 BC, and he is but one ancient witness to the knowledge of the exploits of ancient seafaring people. If people of Joseph Smith's time and place would reject out of hand that an ancient people could've made a long journey from one continent to another by boat, then that really just makes those people look dumb, since it was clearly known to the ancients that this did happen; that doesn't make Mormonism look better, and it certainly doesn't prove that Joseph Smith had some kind of visionary foreknowledge of things that would later be confirmed by science. He didn't. The fact that people could travel long distances by boat was not some amazing discovery or assertion (and all your link even claims is that some adventurer guy wants to prove that the Phoenicians
could have done this; actual historians have many problems with the assertion that therefore they
did travel to the Americas, because there's no evidence of that...kind of like how there's no evidence for anything the BOM says about the ancient peoples that supposedly inhabited the Americas).
I hope you know that confirmation bias can go both ways. IOW an evidence that is extremely valuable to corroborating the BOM can be resisted by non-Mormon scientists as stupid, for no other reason than their negative bias towards Mormons, and willing attitude to trash anything the Mormons say or anything non-Mormons say that corroborates the BOM.
Heaven forbid a Ph.D Mormon should find a corroborating piece of evidence for the BOM. Sound like Ph.D doesn't mean much unless you are a biased non-Mormon. Kind of doesn't sound right.
You are imagining a world by which all claims are equally plausible, thereby making those who dismiss Mormon claims in the areas of linguistics, history, geography, etc. equally guilty of confirmation bias as the Mormons are for claiming every scrap of evidence or pseudo-evidence as validation of the BOM. This is not how things actually are. In any academic discipline, there are means of testing the plausibility of a given claim, such that some are taken more seriously than others (so that we're not wasting our time listening to every theory out there just because it exists). This is why, for instance, actual historians can publish with prestigious academic publishers and teach at reputable universities, whereas "ancient aliens" theorists and UFO believers cannot. No one in their right mind would claim that the two should be treated with equal weight, or that not doing so would reveal some kind of confirmation bias against the claims of the UFO people. The problem is that the UFO people have no evidence. In discussions in all relevant fields, Mormon pseudo-scholarship is more akin to "ancient alien" theorists and UFO people than to actual scholarship, and for much the same reason: the complete lack of compelling, scientifically-valid evidence to support their claims, and the way that they reinterpret things so as to fit their own baseless theories.
We Mormons are fine in saying that it is by faith that we believe the BOM. And if left alone, we could be happy with our Bible and our BOM. But you will not leave us alone.
No, I will not, so long as you are making
scientific claims about the world that are demonstrably false. If they were merely faith-based claims and declared as such, I wouldn't care. What business is it of mine that Mormons believe whatever they do? None. It is only when you claim that there is actual evidence for your narrative that is really not there that you hear a peep from the outside world. You don't see anyone in academia working to disprove Rastafarians' belief that Haile Selassie is God, do you? Of course not. That's not a claim about the phenomena of the natural world, as Mormon claims about language, human migration, DNA, etc. are.
You demand evidence that the BOM is true, not a spiritual and faith based evidence, but a scientific evidence.
To be fair, I also demand scientific evidence from Christians, Hindus, Baha'i, etc., should they make claims about the natural world that are likewise falsifiable. That's why I don't believe in Young Earth Creationism, for instance.
Therefore, to meet that demand, we look for evidence and acknowledge it when it appears, but we do not really care if you believe it or not, it is just a curiousness for us, and we live our lives in faith about the BOM, but if something comes along that is interesting, or our or any other Ph.D comes along and says, look at this, we discovered this the other day and it is interesting. We are willing to look at it and decide if it does or does not corroborate the BOM. The same way we look for evidences that corroborates the bible.
In other words, you're not actually doing science at all. You're looking to corroborate your faith by any means necessary, whether there is evidence for it or not. Fine. That's what I already wrote many posts ago. The problem is when it is presented as scientific evidence when it is really not that. This is an abuse of science and the principles by which inquiry is undertaken. Again, you have no evidence, and you ought to admit that rather than claim for pages and pages that the BOM and its narrative is supported by this or that archaeological or linguistic discovery. The criticism comes when you try to muddy the waters by mixing scientific claims with faith claims, and then say that whoever rejects your faith-based/biased pseudo-scientific conclusions is therefore guilty of bias themselves. That's simply not reality. This is not how things work. If I claim that the moon is made of cheese because God told me it is, and you claim that the moon is made of rock, you're not wrong to point out that we've actually been there and observed no cheese, only rock. That's not "bias" against my idea that it is actually made out of cheese -- that's recognition that you have actual evidence, whereas I have a story based on faith that is directly contradicted by all available evidence. Therefore, you are right and I am not, and no amount of protesting that I am not being given a fair hearing is going to change that. Not everything is of equal merit just because it exists. Science has actual boundaries and if you do not want to operate within them, then you need to acknowledge that and stick to only making faith claims.
I am not one to blindly follow. I need to know the truth as well as the next guy. I have found that my testimony of the BOM is based on prayer to God. But I like the idea that there is some solid evidence to back me up.
Sure, but liking the idea that there is or that there could be doesn't make actual evidence materialize out of nothing.
There is plenty of evidence that Jesus Christ did visit the Americas. There is not a complete lack of evidence. So put your scientific hat on and start googling "Jesus in America" and start your research.
No. You make the claim, so
you have to back it up.
There is zero evidence of Jesus ever visiting the Americas. Mormon claims are not in themselves evidence of anything.
This was not intended to be a threat. But I stick to what I say. If Jesus Christ did visit the Americas after his resurrection and ascension, there is only 1 source for that information at the present, and that is the BOM and the Mormon church. If this turns out to be true, it would be prudent to listen what other things JS said, since he is probably a true prophet. If the BOM turns out to be scientifically proven, you will know that Jesus is the Christ, and that JS is a prophet of Jesus Christ. Is this not right?
That is indeed incorrect. The BOM is not a source of anything but what Joseph Smith's imagination dreamed up as religious scripture. It is certainly not a starting point in any academic inquiry outside of those specifically dedicated to the study of Mormonism as a topic (i.e., non-scientific study of the development of the religion in a sociocultural sense), in which it is perfectly sensible that LDS scholars participate (who would know the relevant sources better?), should they be able to rise to the standards of impartiality required of non-LDS academic publications in order to be published in academic journals on the development of religion and philosophy (as I'm sure many already do). That's the thing that it seems like you're missing in your reply to me: I'm not saying that LDS people cannot contribute in various fields to the advancement of scientific knowledge because they are LDS people. I'm saying that they can't do that while working under the presumption that the LDS narrative and the BOM are scientific (/historical/linguistic/etc.) sources and tailoring their work accordingly, because that biases their conclusions. By contrast, Coptic people have contributed greatly to the study of the Coptic language and other matters directly related to their own history and identity, and they were able to do that precisely because they submitted their ideas to relevant non-Coptic authorities in the field and their work was found to have merit.
Unless Mormons do the same, then what you have is not scientific evidence or theory, but an echo chamber for people who are already convinced of the same conclusions by virtue of sharing the same religious faith. That is almost the exact opposite of science on every level, because the claims are usually not falsifiable, not subject to peer review, and so on.
As a person of faith evaluating faith-based claims, I must also reject your premise that if the BOM narrative is scientifically proven, then we will know that Jesus is the Christ, and Joseph Smith a true prophet. First and most obviously, no Christian anywhere in any age needs to believe or even know about the BOM to know that Jesus is the Christ. Mormonism is the late-comer on the scene, and despite how it sees itself as the restoration of true Christianity in a world full of apostasy, it is not able to escape the fact that a plurality of the world's churches existed long before it did, and hence have no use for it. (It reminds me of the oft repeated story, found in many Coptic books, of the bishop of Asyut in the 1860s who responded to calls to conversion by recently arrived Presbyterian missionaries in Egypt by asking them rhetorically "We have been living with Christ for almost 2000 years; how long have your people been living with Him?") Secondly, scientific validation does not play a part in the confirmation of Jesus' messiahship. There isn't really even anything to add to that. That's just not part of it, because that is purely a faith claim. There is no scientific test for messiahship.