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*MormonThink finally gets one right. Interesting, though, that they use this to appear as if they are "objective" and weighing the evidence--but they then go on to distort the evidence they present later. | *MormonThink finally gets one right. Interesting, though, that they use this to appear as if they are "objective" and weighing the evidence--but they then go on to distort the evidence they present later. | ||
*A ''solid block of gold'' of the dimensions described by Joseph Smith and the witnesses would weigh 200 pounds, but does not account for any air space between leaves. The plates were not a solid block of gold. Pure gold is too soft to create such plates. It makes you think—were the plates made of a [[Book_of_Mormon/Anachronisms/Gold_plates#Of_what_material_were_the_plates.3F|lighter alloy]]? | *A ''solid block of gold'' of the dimensions described by Joseph Smith and the witnesses would weigh 200 pounds, but does not account for any air space between leaves. The plates were not a solid block of gold. Pure gold is too soft to create such plates. It makes you think—were the plates made of a [[Book_of_Mormon/Anachronisms/Gold_plates#Of_what_material_were_the_plates.3F|lighter alloy]]? | ||
*William Smith, who MormonThink was happy to [[ | *William Smith, who MormonThink was happy to [[Criticism_of_Mormonism/Websites/MormonThink/The_Witnesses#|quote]] as saying he only saw the plates covered (and which MormonThink tried to insist meant that ''no one'' had claimed to have seen the uncovered plates) specifically said the plates were a mixture of copper and gold—which is much lighter than pure gold. Why don't they mention this statement of William's? | ||
*As antiquarian artifacts, the plates would have been quite valuable even if not made of a precious metal—and, it didn't much matter whether the plates were pure gold, but whether Joseph or others who might be tempted to use them for gain ''thought'' they were. | *As antiquarian artifacts, the plates would have been quite valuable even if not made of a precious metal—and, it didn't much matter whether the plates were pure gold, but whether Joseph or others who might be tempted to use them for gain ''thought'' they were. | ||
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A FAIR Analysis of: MormonThink A work by author: Anonymous
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The positions that the MormonThink article "Joseph Running with the Plates" appears to take are the following:
FairMormon commentary
Quotes to consider
Additional information
FairMormon commentary
Quotes to consider
Additional information
FairMormon commentary
Quotes to consider
Joseph's leg didn't seem to stop him from competing well in footraces and high jumping:
This doesn't sound like a man whose limp is crippling him--and Joseph was younger and likely more fit during the Book of Mormon translating period, when he was focused almost entirely on farming, rather than splitting his attention as required for Church administration.
Additional information
FairMormon commentary
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Notes
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