FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Difference between revisions of "Joseph Smith's reference library"
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+ | {| valign="top" border="1" style="width:100%; font-size:85%" | ||
+ | !width="15%"|Work | ||
+ | !width="60%"|Claim made | ||
+ | !width="25%"|Notes/remarks | ||
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+ | * Solomon Spalding's unfinished novel/romance. | ||
+ | || | ||
+ | * This was the standard explanation for the Book of Mormon during the nineteenth century and the early part of the twentieth. Advocates have included: | ||
+ | * {{CriticalWork:Caswall:Prophet of the Nineteenth Century|pages=13–25}} | ||
+ | *{{CriticalWork:Clark:Gleanings by the Way|pages=246–254}}. | ||
+ | *{{CriticalWork:Howe:Mormonism Unvailed|pages=}} | ||
+ | *{{CriticalWork:Linn:Story of the Mormons|pages=??}} | ||
+ | * {{CriticalWork:Stenhouse:Tell It All|pages=267}} | ||
+ | *{{CriticalWork:Wyl:Mormon Portraits Volume First|pages=20, 118, 122–124, 238–243}} | ||
+ | *{{CriticalWork:Tucker:Origin Rise and Progress|pages=111–128}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | || | ||
+ | * [[Book_of_Mormon/Authorship_theories/Spalding_manuscript|Spalding manuscript] | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | * Solomon Spalding's "second" manuscript | ||
+ | || | ||
+ | * Since the first Spalding manuscript was discovered and found to be of little help in explaining the Book of Mormon, critics have tried to posit the existence of a ''second'' manuscript. There is, however, no evidence for a second manuscript (and evidence that Spalding had not finished his ''first'' manuscript, which makes the existence of a second even less likely. | ||
+ | * This theory is convenient for the critics: since the manuscript is not available (since it likely never existed), they can make any claims they like about its contents without fear of contradiction. | ||
+ | Critics who have made this claim include: | ||
+ | * *George B. Arbaugh, ''Revelation in Mormonism'' (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1932). | ||
+ | *{{CriticalWork:Cowdery:Who Really Wrote 1|pages=1–}} | ||
+ | *{{CriticalWork:Cowdery:Who Really Wrote 2|pages=1–}} | ||
+ | *{{CriticalWork:Martin:Kingdom of the Cults|pages=213, n15-16}} | ||
+ | || | ||
+ | * [[Book_of_Mormon/Authorship_theories/Spalding_manuscript|Spalding manuscript] | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |} |
Revision as of 20:05, 1 July 2009
Contents
Introduction
Critics who attempt a naturalistic explanation of Joseph Smith's production of the Book of Mormon often resort to claiming that Joseph gleaned a certain idea from a book or other source in his New England environment.
There is little or no evidence of Joseph having contact with such books, but this page attempts to lay out all the books which critics have suggested were in young Joseph's "reference library."
(If you add to thist list, please include a specific record to a specific critical work. Do not simply list works "off the top of your head" or by memory. We want this to be well-documented.)
Kabbalistic texts
Magical texts
Miscellaneous
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Pamphlets and newspapers
Religious texts
- King James Bible - of this claim, at least, we are certain. Though, whether Joseph had a Bible during the translation of the Book of Mormon is not clear. Substantial evidence suggests that he may not have. (See here).
Romances
Work | Claim made | Notes/remarks |
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Critics who have made this claim include:
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