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That was recently solved with a little word change to "among" from "primary".
Precisely. That's what God intended it to say originally anyway, so I'm glad they changed it.

Plus, sure, anti-mormons might say they aren't even "among" the ancestors since there is still no trace of DNA dating to ancient Jews, but in my opinion, DNA is a fool's science.

- Craig
 
For example, I am of the belief that metallurgy exists from that time period, we just haven't dug deep enough in the ground yet. The evidence is there. Smith hit the leather out of the ballpark, we just need to find the metal weaponry and horse remains that surely exist. If they didn't exist, then why is Joseph Smith a prophet? Exactly.

- Craig

So, if horses and metallurgy are found to have existed in the Americas in the Book of Mormon time period, would you become a believer?
 
Precisely. That's what God intended it to say originally anyway, so I'm glad they changed it.

The change he's referring to was in the introduction to the book, written I believe by Bruce McConkie in the 1970s or thereabouts. It's not something considered to be canonical.

Plus, sure, anti-mormons might say they aren't even "among" the ancestors since there is still no trace of DNA dating to ancient Jews, but in my opinion, DNA is a fool's science.

- Craig

So, if a DNA haplotype were to be found in the Americas that is known to exist particularly in Israel today, would you become a believer?
 
Plus, sure, anti-mormons might say they aren't even "among" the ancestors since there is still no trace of DNA dating to ancient Jews, but in my opinion, DNA is a fool's science.

- Craig

So, if a DNA haplotype were to be found in the Americas that is known to exist particularly in Israel today, would you become a believer?

Colton, I think I know where you're headed with this and it is interesting to say the least. That being said, I'm sure Mr. Mancil and his ilk would still find reason to doubt.
 
Precisely. That's what God intended it to say originally anyway, so I'm glad they changed it.

Plus, sure, anti-mormons might say they aren't even "among" the ancestors since there is still no trace of DNA dating to ancient Jews, but in my opinion, DNA is a fool's science.

- Craig

Commie Craig,

I'ma be a good fellow and stop you here before you make a fool of yourself. Do yourself a favor and ask the Old Sage or more of an American continent specialist what a Clovisite is. You're kinda sounding like one and I know you don't want to be so foolish.

I do thank you for your humorous additions to my thread, though. I love your style, even as much as it makes people want to punch you in the face.
 
So, if horses and metallurgy are found to have existed in the Americas in the Book of Mormon time period, would you become a believer?

So, if a DNA haplotype were to be found in the Americas that is known to exist particularly in Israel today, would you become a believer?

So if it were proven scientifically beyond any doubt that neither horses nor metalurgy ever did exist in the Americas during BoM times, would you become a doubter?

Or if the DNA were proven to be completely separate and unique with no inkling of connection in any way shape or form? In fact if they found irrefutable evidence in the genome that the people of the America's COULDN'T in any way have been hebrew, would you become a doubter?

This argument swings both ways.
 
So, if horses and metallurgy are found to have existed in the Americas in the Book of Mormon time period, would you become a believer?
I am already a believer,, I am more LDS than you'll ever be. That aside, I would love to find out about the metallurgy, provided that it fits the use/description/location described in our sacred book. Lots of swords and shields from battles hitherto. That way, we can show that the archeology the rest of the world teaches is wrong:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metallurgy_in_pre-Columbian_America

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While I love apologetics as much as the next guy, people laugh at me when I bring up tapirs and tungsten, you know? Because, yeah, I'll admit, those arguments make me feel like a fool. A damned fool.

- Craig
 
The change he's referring to was in the introduction to the book, written I believe by Bruce McConkie in the 1970s or thereabouts. It's not something considered to be canonical.
Right, a prophet writing an introduction into the official religious book isn't something I'd consider canon either (in 1981 by the way). I have a pretty good working philosophy with prophets. If they say something that makes sense, it's canon and from God, but if it doesn't, they were just saying their opinion and are men. Do you guys do this too? :)

- Craig
 
So if it were proven scientifically beyond any doubt that neither horses nor metalurgy ever did exist in the Americas during BoM times, would you become a doubter?

Or if the DNA were proven to be completely separate and unique with no inkling of connection in any way shape or form? In fact if they found irrefutable evidence in the genome that the people of the America's COULDN'T in any way have been hebrew, would you become a doubter?

This argument swings both ways.

Here's the thing, though. Science can't prove that something DIDN'T exist. All it can do is say that there is no evidence it existed, or that it doesn't seem likely for it to have existed.
 
I am already a believer,, I am more LDS than you'll ever be.

Yes, I can tell that from your obviously pro-LDS posts.

That aside, I would love to find out about the metallurgy, provided that it fits the use/description/location described in our sacred book. Lots of swords and shields from battles hitherto. That way, we can show that the archeology the rest of the world teaches is wrong:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metallurgy_in_pre-Columbian_America

Which part of that do you think is wrong? I don't see much if anything there that contradicts anything in the Book of Mormon. The first line of that Wikipedia article says "People in the Americas have been using native metal from very early times, with recent finds of gold artifacts in the Andean region dated to 2155 - 1936 BC. and North American copper finds dated to approximately 5000 BC." As far as I can tell, that fits nicely with the use of metals described in the Book of Mormon.

This website may help you understand metals in the Book of Mormon better: https://www.fairlds.org/Book_of_Mormon/Steel_in_the_Book_of_Mormon.html
 
Here's the thing, though. Science can't prove that something DIDN'T exist. All it can do is say that there is no evidence it existed, or that it doesn't seem likely for it to have existed.

Yes in terms of metalurgy or horses, but the DNA question is valid.



But regardless, that is a solid non-answer. Nice avoidance there.
 
Which part of that do you think is wrong? I don't see much if anything there that contradicts anything in the Book of Mormon. The first line of that Wikipedia article says "People in the Americas have been using native metal from very early times, with recent finds of gold artifacts in the Andean region dated to 2155 - 1936 BC. and North American copper finds dated to approximately 5000 BC." As far as I can tell, that fits nicely with the use of metals described in the Book of Mormon.
HMMMMMMMMM, you're right, finding sparse copper trinkets in North America is pretty close to the mass amounts of steel weaponry said used in the Mesoamerican region described in the Book of Mormon. I can kinda see what you're doing, and I like it!! Let me try: they also found copper in early China, which is on planet Earth, therefore that proves all kinds of metal objects existed everywhere at any time, right? Am I doing it right? :D :D Kinda fun! !

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This website may help you understand metals in the Book of Mormon better: https://www.fairlds.org/Book_of_Mormon/Steel_in_the_Book_of_Mormon.html
Oh wooOwww, thanks Colton! I really understand metals in the Book of Mormon BETTER! :D :D :D I didn't think I could, but it's as easy as 1, 2, 3! The idea that Joseph Smith dictated one word in what was described as a rigid translation process but actually meant another makes sense now!! ............I say steel all the time when I actually mean copper....... sometimes I even say I'm going outside to ride my tapir...... Easy mistake!. Here, let's both share education, this will help you understand archaeology and the Book of Mormon better, hope you like it!.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeology_and_the_Book_of_Mormon

- Craig :D
 
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I like reading random PDF files too, nice find...... here's a quote that is kinda on the same subject, and although it kinda contradicts your idea of the existence of horses there, I think we can find some way to disregard it like we disregard all other sciences,, right?? Let's brainstorm on how this doesn't matter.....
Horses are mentioned eleven times in the Book of Mormon in the context of its New World setting.[33] There is no evidence that horses existed on the American continent during the 2500-3000 year history of the Book of Mormon (2500 BC - 400 AD) The only evidence of horses on the American continent dates to pre-historic times,[34](between 12,500 and 10,000 BC.[35]). It is widely accepted that horses were extinct in the Western Hemisphere over 10,000 years ago and did not reappear there until the Spaniards brought them from Europe.[36] Horses were re-introduced to the Americas (Caribbean) by Christopher Columbus in 1493[37] and to the American continent by Cortés in 1519.[38]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeology_and_the_Book_of_Mormon

I'll start, I think not only was the Book of Mormon referring to Tapirs, but the radio carbon dating isn't legit!! Neither is anatomy...... I think a lot of the bones we have found in the ground actually belong to horses!! :D :) :D

- Craig
 
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Yes in terms of metalurgy or horses, but the DNA question is valid.

Actually, this may surprise you but the DNA troubles me far less than the metallurgy and/or horses. I believed for many years before the church changed the introduction that there must have been other people--probably lots of other people--already present when Nephi & company landed. The population figures given in the text didn't match what seemed plausible to me to come from a group the size of the one described. Thus, the Nephites & Lamanites must have swelled their numbers from outside sources (the Lamanites in particular... just a few years after their arrival they already VASTLY outnumber the Nephites if I recall correctly, despite starting with roughly equal size groups).

I had been thinking this already, but then my belief was more-or-less solidified ~15 years ago when I ran across a serious treatment of the population figures. It may have been this FARMS review
https://maxwellinstitute.byu.edu/publications/review/?vol=6&num=1&id=141
or possibly the original article from which that review was based.

From that review:
But a total Nephite population of about a quarter million people, with armies in the tens of thousands, also sounds reasonable in light of our growing realization that demographic analysis seems often to suggest that descendants of Nephi's founding group may have been a relatively small population in a sea of other peoples.

If the Nephites/Lamanites were indeed a relatively small population, then the DNA issue becomes a complete non-issue to me. And keep in mind I had already believed that for many years prior to the DNA evidence, or lack of evidence as the case may be.

LogGrad98 said:
But regardless, that is a solid non-answer. Nice avoidance there.

Your hypothetical scenario was not possible, so how/why should I answer it? My belief is that if there is a conflict between science and religion, it's either because the science is wrong or incomplete, or because the religion is wrong or misunderstood. Is that good enough?
 
I had been thinking this already, but then my belief was more-or-less solidified ~15 years ago when I ran across a serious treatment of the population figures. It may have been this FARMS review
https://maxwellinstitute.byu.edu/publications/review/?vol=6&num=1&id=141
or possibly the original article from which that review was based

Joseph Smith thought this as well, and the idea was consistently carried for 150 years alongside the fallacious lay doctrine that the land was empty upon arrival. There's no flip flop here. It was a wording correction and nothing more. Writing "all" didn't mean everyone on the planet in the Bible or the BofM either. Thinking that every single jungle swinging Jaredite except one got killed off in one grand battle is taking literally what was meant figuratively, and against all common sense as well as archaeological evidence to the contrary.

The DNA issue is only an issue because some amateur haters have read a paper or two on Native American heritage and act as if they've found the smoking gun. On the other hand, the professional anthropologists who are writing those papers know fully well that the puzzle is nowhere near solved because the majority of the pieces are missing.

It's the same thing as these Afrocentricism yahoos claiming Mayans descended from the Mende people. They convince a bunch of ignorant and naive common folks, but piss off the scholars for slapping the faces of every single descendent. It's rubbish just as the DNA proves Native Americans traveled across the Bering Strait only, and only once. That held up for years but is laughed at now. Clovisites.

One more thing. For those who love the "bearded white foreigners" proof, you should take a look at some pictures of those Native Japanese Ainu. Bearded foreigners with highly correlating DNA.
 
(For those not interested, I apologize for the very lengthy post.)

Craig, if you’re really interested in a discussion then let’s have a discussion. Please drop the inane sarcasm-only persona.

To make sure I’ve understood you correctly, and so I can address them systematically, let me state what your specific objections so far have been.

1. Metallurgy, specifically metal weaponry – You seem to believe that the Book of Mormon describes “lots of [metal] swords and [metal] shields from battles”, including “massive amounts of steel weaponry”. This massive amount of steel described in the Book of Mormon contradicts current archaeological thinking which only has found “sparse copper trinkets” in the Americas.

2. Horses – You seem to believe that horses could not have existed in the Book of Mormon time period of 2500 BC to 400 AD since it is widely accepted that horses died out in the Americas over 10,000 years ago.

3. DNA – You seem to believe that if the Book of Mormon were accurate, DNA science should have established a link between native Americans to ancient Jews.

4. Introduction – You seem to believe that if Bruce McConkie were a legitimate prophet/apostle then his words in the introduction to the Book of Mormon wouldn’t have needed to be changed.


Please let me know if I have not phrased your objections accurately.


My response:

Before I address the specific items, let me say that I do not believe for an instant that those four items are the reasons why you do not believe in LDSism. That’s what I was getting at with my first couple of questions that you never answered:

“If horses and metallurgy are found to have existed in the Americas in the Book of Mormon time period, would you become a believer?”

“If a DNA haplotype were to be found in the Americas that is known to exist particularly in Israel today, would you become a believer?”

If you are like others with whom I have had similar discussions, then almost certainly you formed a strong opinion against the Book of Mormon before you ran across those four items yourself. You are very likely in one of two camps: either (a) you do not believe in God at all, or (b) you believe strongly in some other religion. There’s a slight chance that you may fall into category (c): you used to be Mormon but then became disaffected for some reason… possibly due to items such as these, but almost certainly not. Of all the ex-Mormons I’ve talked to, I’ve only met a handful who claim to have lost faith due to items like these.

Assuming (a) or (b) is accurate, then you almost certainly started believing that Joseph Smith was a fraud first, and then started looking for items like these to justify your belief against Joseph Smith.

So, care to answer my questions about what it would take for you to become a believer? Or to elaborate a bit on your own background? Please correct me if I have not hit the nail on the head.

As stated, it’s my experience that items such as these four practically NEVER cause someone to disbelieve the Book of Mormon. Similarly, items such as the ones mentioned by Franklin and myself early in the thread – the word “deseret”, the discovery of a place called NHM in the right location relative to Jerusalem, the discovery of a place that matches the description of Bountiful in the right location relative to NHM, the Hebraic language structures, the discovery of names used in the Book of Mormon to be legitimate ancient Semite names, the testimony of witnesses of the plates, the testimony of witnesses to the translation process, and the manuscript evidence that the Book of Mormon was produced from an oral dictation – practically NEVER cause someone to believe the Book of Mormon.

Rather, if a person (such as yourself) already disbelieves the Book of Mormon, he will seize upon items like the four you presented as evidence of its incorrectness, and he will attempt to explain away the items like the several I presented; if a person (such as myself) already believes the Book of Mormon, then he will seize upon items like the ones I presented as evidence of its correctness, and will attempt to explain away items such as the four you presented. That’s why I said in my second post in the thread that, “If I didn't believe [already], I'm not sure which side I would consider to have the stronger evidence.” Even though I'm a professional scientist it’s very hard if not impossible for me to give a fair, unbiased weighting of the evidence. And I’m sure the same is equally true for you.

That being said, from my perspective the question is, “Is there a way to explain/understand the four items you brought up [and others like them] that makes sense with my underlying belief that the Book of Mormon is true?” The answer to that question is absolutely yes.

OK, so how do I view the four items that you brought up? Some of this I’ve already stated, but I’ll list my responses here for completeness.

1. Metals - The website link I provided earlier about metals in the Book of Mormon, https://www.fairlds.org/Book_of_Mormon/Steel_in_the_Book_of_Mormon.html, shows that the belief you hold, that the Book of Mormon describes “massive amounts of steel weaponry” is very likely incorrect. Specifically, and significantly, there are no references to Nephite steel after 400 BC.

Quoting the article,

Putting all this together, we find the following:
• The steel sword is a Near Eastern weapon. It is imitated by Nephi in the first generation-although we are not sure if this imitation is of function, form or material-or all three.
• Steel swords are never again mentioned in the Book of Mormon after this first generation.
• Steel is mentioned once more, in 400 B.C., in a literary topos list, which is notable also for its failure to mention swords, steel or otherwise.
The minimalist and tightest reading of this evidence is that Nephi had a steel weapon from the Near East. He attempted to imitate this weapon-whether in function, form, or material is unclear. His descendants apparently abandoned this technology by no later than 400 B.C. Based on a careful reading of the text of the Book of Mormon, there are no grounds for claiming-as anti-Mormons repeatedly do-that the Book of Mormon describes a massive steel industry with thousands of soldiers carrying steel swords in the New World.

Thus there is no large disconnect between what is described in the Book of Mormon and what is described in your Wikipedia metallurgy article, that is: “People in the Americas have been using native metal from very early times, with recent finds of gold artifacts in the Andean region dated to 2155 - 1936 BC. and North American copper finds dated to approximately 5000 BC.”


2. Horses – Logic demands my view here must be either (a) horses existed in the Americas well after 8,000 BC (given that's the date it's generally felt that horses died out), or that (b) the animals described in the Book of Mormon, and called “horses” were not really horses. While I know that some apologists have gone with (b) (I assume that’s where your “tapir” comment came from), to me (a) seems perfectly possible.

To quote the “Archaeology and the Book of Mormon” Wikipedia article you cited, “There is no evidence that horses existed on the American continent during the 2500-3000 year history of the Book of Mormon (2500 BC - 400 AD).”

However, and this is key to what I was getting at in my response to LogGrad98 in post #30 of this thread: Absence of evidence is NOT evidence of absence. Scientists can’t say that there were no horses in 1000 BC, they can only say that “We don’t have compelling evidence of horses at that time.”

Did horse exist at that time? If the images and dates in the “Chapman Research” link I posted are correct (I don’t know), then there certainly is SOME evidence. This paper provides some additional evidence, specifically mentioning a 1977 dig that found horse bones mixed in with pottery fragments dating from 900-400 BC: https://maxwellinstitute.byu.edu/publications/jbms/?vol=10&num=1&id=246. Perhaps there is not COMPELLING evidence yet that some horses survived well past 8,000 BC, but there is SOME evidence--and the nature of archaeology is such that people often end up reforming opinions when enough new evidence comes in.

If new evidence does come in, causing the scientific community to change their collective opinion about how long horses persisted in the Americas, will that change your mind about the Book of Mormon?

Before I leave this particular topic, is option (b) completely out? Not necessarily… it is clear from all of history that settlers often name things in the new land based on things they knew in the old land. So Nephi & company could very well have called something a horse that wasn’t part of Equus ferus caballus.

3. DNA – I’ve already given a fairly complete answer to this question in my response to LogGrad98. Basically, since I already believed that the Lehites were a small part of the overall population in the Americas, I would have been shocked if they HAD found DNA evidence of a substantial link between ancient Hebrews and Native Americans. As far as I know all DNA experts, both LDS and nonLDS, agree with me—that the DNA evidence shows the native Americans did not exclusively originate in the Middle East, but that it doesn’t say anything one way or another about whether a small group of Hebrews emigrated to the Americas and mingled with the people already there.

4. McConkie – This is such a trivial thing to me that I’m not going to write much of a reply. Suffice it to say I don’t feel like LDS prophets or apostles are infallible.
 
Why are they digging up wooden toy horses on wheels from eras well newer than 10,000 years ago?

Off subject, but it's been long held that Mayans didn't invent the wheel because there was no proof. Now they find wheeled toy horses. That's kind of strange if there was no wheel and no horse.
 
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