DeepShadow
White Crow
Speaking as non-resident and non-Mormon, applying my personal standards, I find the fruits mixed.
So do I. I said so several pages back.
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Speaking as non-resident and non-Mormon, applying my personal standards, I find the fruits mixed.
Alright then, that settled, the BoM says that Lamanites and Nephites were quite populous, enough to have tens of thousands of them die in battle, that they lived in many large cities, and inhabited the land from sea to sea and from sea to sea, and that they are the ancestors of today's American Indians, right?
Which is why I think reading a book like "An Ancient American Setting for the Book of Mormon" is a pretty good idea - even if it turns out that Sorenson is dead wrong in his analysis. It at least gets you thinking closer to the correct context.There's a lesson there, though. I betcha the guy who wrote that chapter heading really didn't think those could be anything but coins. It seemed so obvious, an alternative never even entered his head. What kinds of assumptions do we make at the outset of reading, failing to consider even the possibility of an alternative?
This is what makes archaeology of the Book of Mormon so confusing, and why I doubt that any solid (i.e. forensic) archaeological evidence will ever be found.
Which is why I think reading a book like "An Ancient American Setting for the Book of Mormon" is a pretty good idea - even if it turns out that Sorenson is dead wrong in his analysis. It at least gets you thinking closer to the correct context.
I wasn't even trying to get you wrongOh, don't get me wrong, I love reading archaeological findings about the Book of Mormon. I find them fascinating at an intellectual level, though, not a faith level. It's a brain-stretch, if nothing else.
"
Chiasmus and the Book of Mormon
By Sandra Tanner
You call Hugh Nibley a biased source? Sandra Tanner is just as biased (if not more) as he is.
Ok, I didn't know that, I'll stratch the post out. If everybody is agreed, Tanner and Nibly can be excluded.
Melissa G
Agreed? Who agreed? Im not sure how much you know about Hugh Nibley, Bathsheba, so please dont be offended by this brief commentary:Agreed, Mormons and non Mormons should not use Nibley or Tanner as a resource.
Agreed? Who agreed? Im not sure how much you know about Hugh Nibley, Bathsheba, so please dont be offended by this brief commentary:
From his biography on Wikipedia: Nibley began his studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, graduating summa cum laude, and earned a doctorate as a University Fellow at the Universary of California, Berkely . He [has been] praised by Evangelical his ability to draw upon historical sources to provide evidence for Latter-day Saint beliefs. Nibleys research ranges from Egyptian, to Hebrew and early Christian histories, and he often took his notes in a mix of Gregg shorthand, Arabic, Hebrew, Greek, and Egyptian. Nibley "insisted on reading the relevant primary and secondary sources in the original and could read Arabic, Coptic, Dutch, Egyptian, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Italian, Latin, Old Norse, Russian and other languages at sight."
Nibley's methodology draws inspiration from the work of the Myth and Ritual School centered at Cambridge University, most notably represented by J. G. Frazer in his famous work The Golden Bough. He also took inspiration from the work of University of Chicago professor Mircea Eliade, who likewise allegedly expressed approval of Nibley's ability.
In their 1998 paper entitled Mormon Scholarship, Apologetics, and Evangelical Neglect: Losing the Battle and Not Knowing It?, which was published in the Trinity Journal in the fall of 1998, non-LDS scholars, Carl Moss and Paul Owen made the following observation:
Nibley is a scholar of high caliber. Many of his more important essays first appeared in academic journals such as the Revue de Qumran, Vigilae Christianae, Church History, and the Jewish Quarterly Review.12 Nibley has also received praise from non-LDS scholars such as Jacob Neusner, James Charlesworth, Cyrus Gordon, Raphael Patai and Jacob Milgrom.13 The former dean of the Harvard Divinity School, George MacRae, once lamented while hearing him lecture, "It is obscene for a man to know that much!"14 Nibley has not worked in a cloister. It is amazing that few evangelical scholars are aware of his work. In light of the respect Nibley has earned in the non-LDS scholarly world it is more amazing that counter-cultists can so glibly dismiss his work.
It would be more convincing if you could point to a few Mesoamerican archeologists/anthropologists who joined the church as a result of their studies.
Agreed? Who agreed? Im not sure how much you know about Hugh Nibley, Bathsheba, so please dont be offended by this brief commentary:
People don't join the church based on physical studies, but based on the spirit confirming Truth to them.
True enough, from the LDS point of view, no quarrel. But tell me, if a scientist did join the church based on physical studies, would you not use that fact to support the Book of Mormon from a scientific point view? What KingM suggested is that the Book of Mormon would be more compelling from an intellectual standpoint if previously unbiased scientists found evidence that supported the books claims.