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{{MormonThinkSummaryHeader|The Kinderhook Plates}} | {{MormonThinkSummaryHeader|The Kinderhook Plates}} | ||
* | *That new data showing how Joseph actually ''did'' attempt to translate a character on the Kinderhook Plates is actually a "ploy" and should be ignored in favor of the more inaccurate data that it replaced. | ||
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|claim=Since the plates have been proven to have been manufactured in the 1800s as a hoax, how could the prophet Joseph Smith have translated a portion of these plates and say that they give an account of a descendant of Ham through the loins of Pharaoh, King of Egypt? | |claim=Since the plates have been proven to have been manufactured in the 1800s as a hoax, how could the prophet Joseph Smith have translated a portion of these plates and say that they give an account of a descendant of Ham through the loins of Pharaoh, King of Egypt? | ||
|think= | |think= | ||
*See above. Don Bradley demonstrated how it was done. Joseph was attempting to translate manually (without inspiration) and matched a character found on the plates with a character found in the GAEL. The "translation" Joseph produced, as reported by William Clayton, matches the explanation given for that character in the GAEL. | |||
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|claim=[T]he church backed off on its claims that the Kinderhook Plates were real. The LDS historians quickly changed their story and stopped defending that the plates and Joseph's translation of them were true. Now the LDS apologists say it was all a hoax, and Joseph never fell for it, and someone other than Joseph must have said that the plates tell a story of a descendant of Ham. | |claim=[T]he church backed off on its claims that the Kinderhook Plates were real. The LDS historians quickly changed their story and stopped defending that the plates and Joseph's translation of them were true. Now the LDS apologists say it was all a hoax, and Joseph never fell for it, and someone other than Joseph must have said that the plates tell a story of a descendant of Ham. | ||
|think= | |think= | ||
*{{Antispeak|change opinion}} | *{{Antispeak|change opinion}} Why would the Church continue to defend the plates once they were proven to be a hoax? | ||
*No, apologists now say that Joseph attempted to translate the plates manually, but never continued beyond the single character that he ''did'' manage to "translate." | |||
*You need to ''bring your data up to date.'' We understand that you would ''like'' apologists to stick with the old data, but it isn't going to happen. That ship has sailed. | |||
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*{{Antispeak|change opinion}} | *{{Antispeak|change opinion}} | ||
*Nothing was said of the plates during all those years. Everyone was only "fooled" as long as there was nothing to prove otherwise. Once proof was found that the plates were indeed fake, then everyone updated their position to account for the new information. | |||
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|think= | |think= | ||
*{{Antispeak|change opinion}} | *{{Antispeak|change opinion}} | ||
*What you are ''really'' saying is "why didn't someone receive a revelation that stated that the plates were fake," right? There was never a translation produced beyond the single short phrase recorded by Clayton. The plates were lost. Nobody cared any longer, and the plates were simply a part of the historical record. | |||
*MormonThink seems to believe that ''real'' prophets need to issue a revelation to answer ''every unanswered question'', such as where the Book of Mormon took place and where the Hill Cumorah is located. Why? | |||
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*{{Antispeak|change opinion}} | *{{Antispeak|change opinion}} | ||
* Does MormonThink's high opinion of William Clayton's accuracy and trustworthiness carry over to ''everything'' Clayton said and wrote about Joseph Smith? We suspect not--they're willing to praise Clayton only when they think it will help them. If Clayton produces data that doesn't help their critical efforts, how long do you think it will take for Clayton to be rejected as a "biased Mormon source"? | * Does MormonThink's high opinion of William Clayton's accuracy and trustworthiness carry over to ''everything'' Clayton said and wrote about Joseph Smith? We suspect not--they're willing to praise Clayton only when they think it will help them. If Clayton produces data that doesn't help their critical efforts, how long do you think it will take for Clayton to be rejected as a "biased Mormon source"? | ||
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A FAIR Analysis of: MormonThink A work by author: Anonymous
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The positions that the MormonThink article "The Kinderhook Plates" appears to take are the following:
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