Sigh.
Ok. So we're talking about DNA evidence. None of the DNA evidence we have supports the claim made in the Book of Mormon.
Thus... Can we create a contrived situation where our story could still be true despite not having DNA evidence.
Sure. In addition DNA evidence does not show I was alive during that time frame and since I am a male why would you expect it to. Therefore you can not say I was not alive during that time and therefore I was. (
I've been around for a long, long year)
Shall we just see who can post the most links, Balance?
No but many of those points are directly addressed in that link.
In my opinion, based on what I've actually read and taken the time to understand (which is a huge component), there is simply too little data for either side to try to prove conclusively that their position is correct. I have concluded that we really should not expect to find a genetic link between the Nephites and the 21st century Native Americans, and I say that based upon the factors I mentioned in my post #10. To be perfectly honest, I kind of doubt that most of the posters on RF have much more background in genetics than I do.
Sure, but what points made you come to this conclusion? Lets try a little detail for the purposes of being constructive.
For the sake of closure, lets get past the introduction change in the book of mormon. Past editions of that page say all of the people chronicled in the book "were destroyed, except the Lamanites, and they are the principal ancestors of the American Indians." The new introduction reads much the same, but says the Lamanites "are among the ancestors of the American Indians." -
1
The claim originally made was proven false. Thus because of scientific data and not prophesy the church changed the introduction. This is a big deal is it not? Until 2006 did most mormons believe the original claim? Was it not taught, lectured and accepted as truth?
The new claim made is that they are only among the ancestors. To be fair we have to examine the new claim. In doing so we find no evidence to support it.
However more interesting to me is your initial response.
Katzpur said:
How much do you know about Mitochondrial DNA, haplogroups and how they disapear through genetic drift, the founder effect, and how population bottlenecks work? Have you ever read up on the deCODE Project in Iceland, which is an excellent example of the results of a population bottleneck in completely obliterating an entire genetic line? If you can discuss your position and address the issues raised by these factors, I'd be happy to address the topic with you. Otherwise, it would be a complete waste of my time.
Later we find out that you are not an expert on these matters either. You state most people are not experts and know very little... But your tone changes...
Katzpur said:
Why on earth would you expect to see it reflected in their genetics? That's just not the kind of question I'd expect to hear from someone with a background like you say you have.
That caused me to tilt my head quizzically at what you were driving at. This seems like an argument from authority and you just clearly established you are not an authority. (Censorship complaint: really **** my head is censored? I will try tilt, see if it works.
)
Prior to this you stated:
Katzpur said:
Let's say you have a man from Italy who has five daughters. How many of those daughters would have his mtDNA? None. Let's say those five daughters give him 30 grandchildren. If that man had married an African woman, every single one of his grandchildren would be classified as African according to their mtDNA. There would not be a single solitary one who would have his mtDNA.
mtDNA: Mitochondrial DNA. None is most likely correct, yes? However not necessarily. Reproduction is messy and current evidence supports that sometimes males do pass on mtDNA. (Although rare) Regardless there is no evidence that American Indians have ever had mtDNA derived from ye olde middle east. ( It is possible it was bred out randomly... but unlikely. I will concede that by current standards we learn little of your man from italy... (or more accurately are extremely unlikely to learn anything) However we would look to Y-chromosome studies and in native americans we still don't find any evidence. However my guess is you read FAIR like I do and you already know this.
Thus you go to iceland. A very unique and intriguing situation. One that could be the subject of many months of study. To immediately state that the situation described in the Book of Mormon is akin to the situation presented in Iceland is very revisionist. I have friends who are mormons who have argued to me that when Lehi arrived... no one else was here. Has the argument changed? Absolutely. But I remember the original arguments at length.
(They are good memories, I love debating.)
Today's argument seems to discount the introduction as nothing more then what it is... An introduction. When the mormons got to america it was already populated by native americans. They reproduced here and there but eventually not enough and their dna disappeared. It was a mere side show of american history and in order to dispute that you would need a COMPLETE record of all DNA so you just have to rely on faith and prayers to god that what the BoM says is true.
An effective argument that argues DNA evidence useless to discount the facts of the BoM. This leaves those that believe in the historical accuracy of the BoM to find other sources to validate their beliefs. We do know though that no DNA evidence currently supports any of the claims made in the BoM and the Mormon's have changed their tune a bit so that they can shrug their shoulders and say so... Doesn't mean anything and then go on to describe a situation where they can stand by their beliefs.
But belief is really what it is. Its about belief and faith.
An odd way to present your argument. However... It does bring to mind an age old debate. What if the BoM is historically false and nothing in it is true. Does it matter? Does its message mean the same thing to you regardless of this? What if it is allegorical? A lot of christians I know consider Genesis and many other parts of the bible to be fiction but still say the message and the lessons it teaches are what is important. Does the same hold true for the BoM or its historical accuracy so vehemently defended because if it wasn't true then the message falls apart?