Diferencia entre revisiones de «La crítica del Mormonismo/Sitios web/PiensaMormón/Corriendo con Planchas de Oro»

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* That the plates probably did not weigh 200 lbs, and yet despite this that it was impossible for Joseph to have run for 1-2 miles carrying the 40-60 lbs plates.
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* El sitio web llega a la conclusión de que las placas probablemente no pesan 200 libras, y sin embargo a pesar de esto que era imposible para que José ha ejecutado durante 1-2 millas que llevan las 40-60 libras placas.  
* That Joseph could not have fought off or evaded the three men trying to take the plates from him.
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* El sitio web llega a la conclusión de que José no podría haber combatido o eludido los tres hombres que intentaban tomar las placas de él.  
* The website concludes that the story of Joseph escaping those who tried to take the plates is a "tall tale" that should not be taught.
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* El sitio web concluye la página web llega a la conclusión de que la historia de José de escapar a los que trató de tomar las placas es un "cuento chino" que no se debe enseñar en la Iglesia.
  
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Revisión del 18:17 23 mar 2014

Tabla de Contenidos

Respuesta a PiensaMormón página "Corriendo con Planchas de Oro"


Un Análisis FairMormon de: PiensaMormón
Una obra de autor: Anónimo

PERCEPCIÓN DEL FAIRMORMON DE LAS CONCLUSIONES DE LA CRÍTICA

  • El sitio web llega a la conclusión de que las placas probablemente no pesan 200 libras, y sin embargo a pesar de esto que era imposible para que José ha ejecutado durante 1-2 millas que llevan las 40-60 libras placas.
  • El sitio web llega a la conclusión de que José no podría haber combatido o eludido los tres hombres que intentaban tomar las placas de él.
  • El sitio web concluye la página web llega a la conclusión de que la historia de José de escapar a los que trató de tomar las placas es un "cuento chino" que no se debe enseñar en la Iglesia.

RESPUESTA DE FAIRMORMON Y DATOS DE APOYO


Reclamaciones PiensaMormón...
The critics say that Joseph could not have possibly transported and worked with these heavy 200 pound plates. Also pure gold would be too malleable to be useful for permanent engraving....In this instance [MormonThink] disagree[s] with the critics' premise. We don't feel that the plates had to be made of solid gold. Although the plates are often referred to as 'gold plates' they didn't necessary have to be made of pure gold. The witnesses described them as having the 'appearance of gold'....We do however, wonder why the angel would give Joseph specific instruction that he could not use the plates for personal gain if they were not made of gold....So using the statements of the witnesses, it seems logical that the plates weighed about 50 pounds give or take 10 pounds. We summarily reject the critics' arguments that the plates must have weighed 200 pounds.


Comentario de FairMormon

  • 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 lighter alloy?
  • William Smith, who MormonThink was happy to 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.



Información adicional


Reclamaciones PiensaMormón...
How could any man, especially a man that had a slight limp run with a 50 pound weight and avoid capture by three assailants? The journey through the woods was about 3 miles as Joseph indicated above. It's inconceivable that anybody could run carrying a 50 lb. set of metal plates, jumping over logs and such and be able to outrun three men for some 1 to 2 miles that were bent on taking the plates from Joseph. And all this from a young man that had a slight limp and would have difficulty running at a high speed for a long distance -especially carrying a 50 lb. weight.


Comentario de FairMormon

  • Several people testified of the plates' weight, and they all knew Joseph Smith. None of them found the story inherently impossible. None of them challenged Joseph's tale—including his family who both knew him best and handled the plates.
  • Joseph's mother (who told this story) did not say that Joseph "outran" the three men—instead, he was attacked three separate times on his way home. In each case, a single man tried to ambush him alone, and Joseph struck them, knocked them down, and ran on.
  • MormonThink also doesn't tell us that Joseph's mother specifically said that one man who was probably involved in the attack had traveled sixty miles over the last day and night to get there--surely not someone who was well rested for a long footrace against young Joseph.
  • So, the key question would seem to be, "Was Joseph physically capable of incapacitating someone with a blow, or slowing them enough to evade?" His well-known skill at wrestling and stick-pulling would suggest that this he was.



Información adicional


Reclamaciones PiensaMormón...
And all this from a young man that had a slight limp and would have difficulty running at a high speed for a long distance -especially carrying a 50 lb. weight.


Comentario de FairMormon

  • Joseph was well-known for his strength and ability to do serious amounts of physical work, as well as wrestle and pull sticks.
  • Joseph managed fine during the Zion's Camp march of nearly a thousand miles on foot at 25-40 miles per day (Bushman, Rough Stone Rolling, 239). He'd had the limp since his boyhood operation, and was likely well-adjusted to it.
  • In a culture and time when all work is done by either human or animal muscle power, frontier farmers like the Smiths were likely in far better physical condition than most twenty-first century westerners.



Información adicional


Reclamaciones PiensaMormón...
If the story is but a 'tall tale', regardless of its origins, it should not be taught in church as a true historical account, as we have been taught growing up in the church, just to provide a faith-promoting event.


Comentario de FairMormon

  • We have no reason to think it a "tall tale" save MormonThink's "argument from incredulity"—they don't believe it can be done, so therefore it's a tall tale. But, people clearly can and do do what Joseph claimed he did, especially when the story which his mother actually told (three separate attacks by individual men) is considered.
  • MormonThink needs to do better than this before labeling a "tall tale" just because they want a faith-destroying non-story.




Notas


  1. [back]  Christopher Ailsby, SS: Hell on the Eastern Front: The Waffen-SS War in Russia, 1941-1945 (Osceloa, WI: MBI Publishing Co., 1998), p. 18
  2. [back]  Mark L. McConkie, Remembering Joseph: Personal Recollections of Those Who Knew the Prophet Joseph Smith (Salt Lake City, UT: Deseret Book Company, 2003), Henrie, William account citing Callie O. Morley, "History of William and Myra Mayall Henrie, Pioneers of 1847 and 1847," Delta, West Millard County, Utah, October 1955, LDS Church Archives, Salt Lake City, Utah, 4-5..(print version) ISBN 978-1570089633 GL direct link