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Pregunta: ¿Es la mención del "cemento" en el Libro de Mormón un anacronismo?
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Este ariculo esta siendo traducido por: Alberto Barrios
Contenido
Critica
Los criticos afirman que los Nefitas en las tierras del Norte edificaban con cemento en Helaman 3:7-11 (circa 47 A.C.) no es valida. Como John L. Smith afirma, "Hay zero evidencias arqueologicas de que cualquier clase de cemento existieran en la Americas previo a los tiempos modernos" (Smith, 8).
Fuente(s) de la critica
- John L. Smith, "WQue hay de esas planchas de oro?" The Utah Evangel 33:6 (September 1986): 8.
Respuesta
Desafortunadammente los criticos, basan sus ataques sobre una explocion de 'evidencia obsena'. De hecho, Hay excelentes evidencias para el uso de cemento en Mesoamerica:
- Una vez pense en ser anacronico,con referencia al "cemento" en el Libro de Mormon (Helaman 3:7,9,11) can be seen today as further evidence of the authenticity of the text. This is because today the presence of expert cement technology in pre-Hispanic America is a well-established archaeological fact. "American technology in the manufacture of cement, its mixing and placement two thousand years ago, paralleled that of the Greeks and the Romans during the same period" notes structural engineer, David Hyman, in a recent study devoted to the use of cement in Pre-Columbian Mexico. The earliest known sample of such cement dates to the first century A.D. and is a "fully developed product." Known samples of Mesoamerican cement work show signs of remarkable skill and sophistication. "Technology in the manufacturing of calcareous cements in Middle America [were] equal to any in the world at the advent of the Christian Era." For example, concrete floor slabs at Teotihuacan that date to about this time exceed many present-day building requirements. While the earliest known samples are from the first century A.D., scholars believe that "their degree of perfection could not have been instantaneously created, but rather would have required a considerable period of development" before then. Hyman asks, "Were these materials invented by indigenous unnamed people far preceding the occupation of Teotihuacan, or were they introduced by an exotic culture." In its references to "cement," the Book of Mormon anticipates what has now been well established.[1]
Conclusion
Cement is not anachronistic. The Book of Mormon places it in exactly the right spot and time period for Mesoamerican use of this building material.
Endnotes
Further reading
FAIR wiki articles
Libro de Mormón "Anacronismos" |
- Anacronismos (pagina general)
- "Adieu"
- Animales
- Cemento
- Monedas
- Brújula
- ADN problemas
- Ladrones de Gadianton como Masones?
- Planchas de “oro”?
- Espíritu Santo
- Jerusalen como sitio del nacimiento de Jesús
- Codigos y concepto legales
- Metales
- Planchas metálicas
- Mulek
- Nombres [Necesita traducción]
- Olivicultura
- Plantas [Necesita traducción]
- Mar Rojo vs Mar de Caña
- Egipcio reformado
- Sátiro [Necesita traducción]
- Serpientes y sequía [Necesita traducción]
- Shiz lucha a respirar
- Sudor y poros del piel
- Nieve
- Templo en el Mundo Nuevo
- Tres dias de oscuridad
- Errores de traducción de la versión KJV
- Arte de guerra
- Ventanas
FAIR web site
- Matthew Roper, "Right on Target: Boomerang Hits and the Book of Mormon" FAIR link
External links
- "Cement in the Book of Mormon," (Provo, Utah: FARMS). off-site (Inglés)
- Matthew G. Wells and John W. Welch, "Concrete Evidence for the Book of Mormon," Insights (May 1991), 2.
- Matthew G. Wells and John W. Welch, "Concrete Evidence for the Book of Mormon," in Reexploring the Book of Mormon, edited by John W. Welch, (Provo, Utah: FARMS, 1992), 212–214. ISBN 0875796001 off-site (Inglés) FAIR link GL direct link
Printed material
- David S. Hyman, A Study of the Calcareous Cements in Prehispanic Mesoamerican Building Construction (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University, 1970).