Talk:Mormonism and history: Difference between revisions
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{{Old AfD multi|page=Faith-promoting history (LDS)|result='''keep'''}} |
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{{WikiProject Latter Day Saint movement|importance=mid}} |
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| [[Image:Evolution-tasks2.png|50px|Articles for deletion]] |
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| This article was nominated for '''''[[Wikipedia:Deletion policy|deletion]]''''' on December 30, 2005. |
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The result of the discussion was '''KEEP'''. <!-- please do not add bolding to '''KEEP''' here: this breaks many places where it is already specified --> |
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An archived record of this discussion can be found [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Faith-promoting history (LDS)|here]]. |
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* [[/Archive 1|Archive 1]] — Apr 2006-Oct 2006 |
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== Merge with ''Mormon apologetics''? == |
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Should this article be merged with [[Mormon apologetics]]? The two articles seem to be germane to one another, and I'm not sure that ''faith-promoting history'' is the most NPOV way to describe the issue. Who says, for example, that this type of history is in fact "faith promoting"? [[User:COGDEN|''<font color="#0000FF">CO</font><small><font color="#6000BF">GD</font><font color="#A0007F">EN</font></small>'']] 10:28, 2 November 2006 (UTC) |
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: I support this merge - as I have been unsure how to proceed on this article. --<font color="#06C">[[User_talk:Trödel|Trödel]]</font> 14:22, 2 November 2006 (UTC) |
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One other possibility I was thinking about is to rename this article to something like [[Mormon hagiography]]. The reason I suggest this is because, while I think this article and the [[Mormon apologetics]] article ''could'' be merged, there are some aspects of "faith-promoting history" that aren't ''technically'' apologetics. For example, while most "faith-promoting history" published by FARMS or in journals like ''BYU Studies'' is apologetics, the type of "faith-promoting history" you find in church handbooks is better-described as [[hagiography]], since the church handbooks aren't usually trying to ''defend'' or ''explain'' the lives of church leaders, they are just trying to sing their praises. I haven't decided which option I prefer: ''apologetics'' or ''hagiography''. [[User:COGDEN|''<font color="#0000FF">CO</font><small><font color="#6000BF">GD</font><font color="#A0007F">EN</font></small>'']] 18:56, 2 November 2006 (UTC) |
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:How about "Mormonism and History" as a new title? This larger article could cover Mormon interest in frontier diaries, the simultaneous creation of the church and the Church Historian, early LDS purchase of historic sites like Carthage jail, the handcart recreations, Mormon documentaries and glossy picture books, and the outdoor pageants as recruiting tools. It would also cover Mormon suspicion of academic history, the attempt to limit knowledge of Mormon history among the faithful, the founding of Mormon historical periodicals, a tip of the hat to Mark Hofmann, Camelot under Leonard J. Arrington, the "New Mormon History,” as well as everything else that's already in the article. As a religion, Mormonism has a unique relationship with history that deserves a separate article. --[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] 21:19, 2 November 2006 (UTC) |
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::: I think we should be careful about our use of the X (Mormonism), X (Latter Day Saints) Mormonism and X, etc naming convention when the issue is primarily or (nearly entirely) one involving The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, like I think this one is. When we do so, it complicates matters unnecessarily, as some of the smaller denominations do not have a theology (or, in some cases, there are claims of a theology but that theology is not verifiable from reliable sources). This is one of the main problems with the articles on Mormonism - it is very confusing to someone who doesn't know or want to learn about all the different denominations and their relationships. --<font color="#06C">[[User_talk:Trödel|Trödel]]</font> 21:27, 2 November 2006 (UTC) |
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:Maybe I'm missing something here. Why are "Mormon apologetics" and "Mormon hagiography" acceptable terms but "Mormonism and History" is not? --[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] 21:45, 2 November 2006 (UTC) |
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{{Archives|bot=Lowercase sigmabot III|age=180}} |
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::: Sorry to give that impression - I think the problem needs to be addressed for articles named that way too; however, they have been named that way for some time - so I feel overwhelmed in addressing them. Mormon apologetics, at least on the surface, can include the apologetics of other denominations, like Church of Christ and FLDS, which have verifiable apologetic writing. If you mean to include a broader subject than the claim of "faith promoting" history, then I would be equally overwhelmed ;) --<font color="#06C">[[User_talk:Trödel|Trödel]]</font> 22:22, 2 November 2006 (UTC) |
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If that's the direction we want to take the article, then maybe we should call it [[Historiography of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] to cover the history of Mormon history in the LDS Church, and then [[Historiography of the Latter Day Saint movement]] to cover the history of Mormon history during the lifetime of Joseph Smith. Both articles could be very substantial. [[User:COGDEN|''<font color="#0000FF">CO</font><small><font color="#6000BF">GD</font><font color="#A0007F">EN</font></small>'']] 00:40, 3 November 2006 (UTC) |
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::"Historiography" is the principles, methodology, or history of writing history. An excellent historiography of Mormonism is Walker, Whittaker, and Allen, ''Mormon History'' (2001). Mormonism's ''relationship'' to history is something other. (And if those guys can call Mormonism "Mormonism," why can't we?) --[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] 11:08, 3 November 2006 (UTC) |
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The historical historiography aspect is what I was getting at: the history of the framing of Mormon history. That would certainly include this article, as one point in that historiography. I would see it including all of the following: |
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*early historical revisionism by Joseph Smith |
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*Hurlbut and Howe in the 1830s |
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*hagiography of Joseph and Hyrum |
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*hagiography of later church leaders |
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*the "Utah" edition of Lucy Mack Smith's history |
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*B.H. Roberts |
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*Fawn Brodie |
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*New Mormon history |
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*Historical Packerism |
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*Hoffman forgeries |
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*apologetic histories |
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*New Apologetic history |
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I'm not sure what you mean by Mormonism's "relationship" with history, if you don't mean Mormon historiography. [[User:COGDEN|''<font color="#0000FF">CO</font><small><font color="#6000BF">GD</font><font color="#A0007F">EN</font></small>'']] 12:38, 3 November 2006 (UTC) |
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::Yes, those things but also those I mentioned above, "interest in frontier diaries, the simultaneous creation of the church and the Church Historian, early LDS purchase of historic sites like Carthage jail, the handcart recreations, Mormon documentaries and glossy picture books, and the outdoor pageants as recruiting tools"--combined with Mormon need to control the acceptable past because the faith is so intimately tied to history. As I implied in the article, there's really nothing like the Mormon relationship to history in any other religion. I think it's unique.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] 13:58, 3 November 2006 (UTC) |
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:::The CJC version of early Mormon history is much more realistic than any current Catholic history on the early fathers. I think there is plenty to compare it to - and most not favorably. --<font color="#06C">[[User_talk:Trödel|Trödel]]</font> 16:19, 3 November 2006 (UTC) |
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::That only points up the difference in the way the Catholic Church relates to history. For instance, the church doesn't sponsor reenactments of the Council of Nicaea, and the Immaculate Conception could be declared dogma more than 1850 years after Mary's birth with not even a nod toward historicity. I'm not referring to accuracy, realism, or reliability but rather Mormonism's intimate love-hate relationship with history. As I said above, I think it's unique--nothing like it anywhere in the religious world. --[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] 19:37, 3 November 2006 (UTC) |
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:::I see what you mean - agree - Histiography would be a good place to cover this. I would go with COGDEN's proposal of [[Historiography of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]]. --<font color="#06C">[[User_talk:Trödel|Trödel]]</font> 19:47, 3 November 2006 (UTC) |
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::::Our love-hate relationship probably has something to do with family history as well. So many of us come from a long line of members, and often have access to journals and materials from the early Church and pioneer periods. So, perhaps, we see ourselves reflected in any church history presentation. I would vote "Yes" for a merge into a historiography article. This sounds like the beginning of a great article! I would be happy to help, if time permits if and when the real world settles down for me. Best to all. [[User:WBardwin|WBardwin]] 19:41, 3 November 2006 (UTC) |
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::I respect your opinions, gentlemen, but I'm still not thrilled about the proposed title. It sounds stuffy, and it's too exclusive. Ask folks in your ward or workplace what "Historiography of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints" means. Most will be clueless. The most knowledgeable will understand it as a kind of a summary of Walker, Whittaker, and Allen, ''Mormon History''. Nothing wrong with that (though it's not what I had in mind), but why not at least call it "Mormon Historiography" and cover all the groups.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] 15:36, 4 November 2006 (UTC) |
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I understand what you're saying about nobody knowing what the word ''historiography'' means, but there is an aspect of what we're talking about for which I can't think of a better word. I have no problem with calling it ''Mormon historiography'' it it's about "Brighamite" historians. Just a thought, but what about ''Latter Day Saint historiography''? Of course, I know next to nothing about the work of [[Community of Christ]] historians, so I don't know what non-"Brighamite" elements of a broader article might include. What we might want to do is separate the material into three different articles: |
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*[[Mormon apologetics]] -- This would cover apologetics, including a section on the history of apologetics, with a link to ''Mormon historiography''. |
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*[[Mormon historiography]] -- This would cover the detailed history of Mormon historical thinking, and include a section on [[apologetics]] as applied to history, with a link to ''Mormon apologetics''. |
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*[[Mormonism and history]] -- This would cover all intersections between Mormonism and history, as [[User_talk:Trödel|Trödel]] suggested, with a major summary section linking to the main article ''Mormon historiography'', but also discussions of topics like Mormon [[family history]], Mormon historic sites, handcart recreations, pageants, etc.—history-related things that aren't included in the ''Mormon historiography'' article because they haven't been concerned primarily with compiling, analyzing, or criticizing history—just possessing it, selling it, keeping it out of the "wrong hands", recreating it, using it as a tool for political or religious power, or whatever other strange postmodern things we Mormons do to our history. I think this would include the Hoffman forgeries, too, but an argument could be made that this belongs in the [[historiography]] article. [[User:COGDEN|''<font color="#0000FF">CO</font><small><font color="#6000BF">GD</font><font color="#A0007F">EN</font></small>'']] 05:15, 5 November 2006 (UTC) |
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::::I don't like the three article ideas - we open a can of worms if we get into what historical "revisions" reasons why, if the church is "open" with its archives, etc. I like your outline above starting with early historical revisionism by Smith and ending with New Apologetic history (And believe we should add in a "Nibley-ism history" somewhere. But think it belongs within the Mormon Apologetics article as a sub-section. OR as a sub-section of Mormon History. OR as a part of a new article titled of Mormon studies. -[[User:Visorstuff|Visorstuff]] 22:40, 7 November 2006 (UTC) |
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== Lack of structure == |
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As I put my hand to the task of improving this article, I noticed that it has very poorly defined structure. I would appreciate any contributions, which addressed this shortcoming. I notice there have been several suggestions made on this page, but none have been incorporated as yet. [[User:ErinHowarth|ErinHowarth]] 12:50, 12 November 2006 (UTC) |
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==Moved to talk page== |
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After reading the re-structured article, I realized that the following text has nothing to do with the topic "Faith Promoting History". Instead these are discussions of historians that do NOT engage in "Faith Promoting History". It's like giving a list of popes when discussing atheists. Makes no sense. --[[User:Blue Tie|Blue Tie]] 15:19, 12 November 2006 (UTC) |
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=== Juanita Brooks and Fawn Brodie === |
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[[Fawn Brodie]] wrote a biography of Joseph Smith in 1945 entitled, ''[[No Man Knows My History]]'' which portrayed the Mormon founder as a gifted fraud. As a result, she was excommunicated. Although her work was embraced by non-Mormons it also received the attention of Church leadership.<ref>{{cite web |
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| first = Michael R. |
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| last = Ash |
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| title = The Impact of Mormon Critics on LDS Scholarship |
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| publisher = The Foundation for Apologetic Information and Research (FAIR) |
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| date = 2002 |
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| url = http://www.fairlds.org/FAIR_Conferences/2002_Impact_of_Mormon_Critics_on_LDS_Scholarship.html#en72 |
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| accessdate = 2006-11-11}}</ref> |
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[[Juanita Brooks]] published [[The Mountain Meadows Massacre (book)|a history of]] the [[Mountain Meadows Massacre]] in 1950. Instead of being excommunicated she said "around here, my crime is either overlooked or ignored".<ref>Letter to Dale Morgan, 28 Sept 1951 as reported by Newell Bringhurst in ''Juanita Brooks and Fawn Brody: Sisters in Mormon Dissent'', Dialog a Journal of Mormon Thought, Summer 1994</ref> It might be overstating the situation to say that Brooks "received an ecclesiastical blacklisting."<ref name="ostling">{{cite book |
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| last = Ostling |
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| first = Richard |
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| coauthors = Joan K. Ostling |
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| title = Mormon America: The Power and the Promise |
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| publisher = Harper Collins |
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| date = 1999 |
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| pages = 252}}</ref> "Unlike Brodie, Brooks continued to affirm her faith in public and, perhaps for that reason, she managed to retain her membership in the church."<ref>{{cite book |
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| last = Shipps |
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| first = Jan |
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| title = Sojourner in the Promised Land: Forty Years Among the Mormons |
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| publisher = University of Illinois Press |
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| date = 2000 |
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| location = Urbana |
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| pages = 165}}</ref> |
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=== Leonard J. Arrington === |
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From 1972 to 1982 the Church maintained a relatively open door policy to its historical records and installed [[Leonard J. Arrington]], as Church Historian. He was the first academically trained scholar to hold that post.{{Talkfact}} Many historical projects were started and completed at this time. A new, 16-volume history of the Church was also planned.{{Talkfact}} However, after a number of years, the department came under suspicions for improperly released information and suspicions of disloyalty.{{Talkfact}} Arrington, along with his hired staff were gradually transferred to various other departments or organizations. The 16-volume history was never completed.<ref> Davis Bitton, "Ten Years in Camelot: A Personal Memoir," ''Dialogue'' 16 (Fall 1983), 19. </ref> Access to many materials in the church archives—including some that had earlier been made available to non-LDS scholars—was thereafter restricted or denied.<ref name="ostling"/>. |
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=== D. Michael Quinn === |
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[[D. Michael Quinn]] is an accomplished historian who first became controversial in 1981 when he gave a speech answering a speech by Elder [[Boyd K. Packer]].<ref name="anderson">{{cite web |
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| last = Anderson |
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| first = Lavina Fielding |
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| title = DNA Mormon: D. Michael Quinn |
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| work = Mormon Mavericks: Essays on Dissenters |
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| publisher = Signature Books |
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| date = 2002 |
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| url = http://www.supportmikequinn.net/biography/ |
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| location = Salt Lake City |
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| accessdate = 2006-11-11 }}</ref> Elder Packer had addressed [[Church Educational System]] personnel at [[BYU]] and included several statements about how church history should be taught.<ref name="anderson"/> Quinn took issue with much of what Elder Packer said as a matter of professional integrity.<ref name="anderson"/> In 1985, Quinn wrote an article entitled "LDS Church Authority and New Plural Marriages, 1890-1904." It was published by ''Sunstone'' in the spring issue. Quinn's [[stake president]] confided in him that three apostles, including Elder Packer, contacted him and ordered him to confiscate Quinn's temple recommend for "speaking evil of the Lord's anointed."<ref name="anderson"/> In 1986, he wrote ''Early Mormonism and the Magic World View'', which described the world in which Joseph Smith lived to be a world full of folk magic, treasure digging and occultist traditions including astrology, divining rods, the study of skull contours to understand personality traits and the wearing of talismans.<ref>{{cite web |
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| title = Book Review of "Early Mormonism and the Magic World View" by D. Michael Quinn |
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| url = http://lds-mormon.com/ematmwv.shtml |
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| accessdate = 2006-11-11 }}</ref> In response, his dean questioned him in an interview about his future at BYU.<ref name="anderson"/> Quinn took the hint and resigned in 1988.<ref name="anderson"/> In 1992, Quinn contributed an essay entitled ''Mormon Women Have Had the Priesthood since 1844'' which "argued that the temple endowment conferred priesthood authority, though not priesthood office, on women and that male ecclesiastical officers could not constrain women's exercise of spiritual gifts as long as women did not trespass on male administrative assignments."<ref name="anderson"/> In response, Quinn's stake president made several attempts to meet with him, but Quinn always refused.<ref name="anderson"/> Quinn was excommunicated [[26 September]], [[1993]].<ref name="anderson"/> Officially, the reason for Quinn's excommunication was "conduct contrary to the laws and order of the Church" referring to his refusal meet with his stake president.<ref name="anderson"/> (''See also:'' [[September Six]].) |
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===Grant Palmer === |
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The recent response of Church leaders to the writing of scholarly history by LDS members has been mixed. [[Grant H. Palmer]], who wrote the openly critical ''[[An Insider's View of Mormon Origins]]'' was [[disfellowshipped]] in 2004. On the other hand, the biography of respected historian [[Richard Bushman]], ''[[Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling]]'' was much more even-handed, and it achieved a greater level of acceptance within the Church--even being sold in the BYU campus store, for instance. |
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===W.E. Riter question === |
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In 1921, W.E. Riter, a young member of the Church, wrote to apostle [[James E. Talmage]] asking questions about the historical accuracy and authenticity of the Book of Mormon.<ref>{{cite journal |
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| last = Smith |
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| first = George D. |
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| coauthors = Dan Vogel and Brent Metcalfe (editors) |
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| title = B.H. Roberts: Book of Mormon Apologist and Skeptic |
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| journal = American Apocrypah |
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| pages = 125 |
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| publisher = Signature Books |
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| date = 2002 |
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| location = Salt Lake City}} as quoted by {{cite web |
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| first = Michael R. |
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| last = Ash |
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| title = The Impact of Mormon Critics on LDS Scholarship |
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| publisher = The Foundation for Apologetic Information and Research (FAIR) |
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| date = 2002 |
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| url = http://www.fairlds.org/FAIR_Conferences/2002_Impact_of_Mormon_Critics_on_LDS_Scholarship.html#en72 |
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| accessdate = 2006-11-11 }}</ref> Elder Talmage forwarded the letter to [[B.H. Roberts]], church historian. Roberts researched the questions and wrote to the Twelve:<blockquote>I am most thoroughly convinced of the necessity of all the brethren herein addressed becoming familiar with these Book of Mormon problems, and finding the answer for them, as it is a matter that will concern the faith of the Youth of the Church now as also in the future, as well as such casual inquirers as may come to us from the outside world.<ref>{{cite book |
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| last = Roberts |
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| first = B.H. |
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| title = Studies of the Book of Mormon |
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| publisher = Signature Books |
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| date = 1992 |
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| pages = 60 |
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| id = ISBN 1560850272}} as quoted by {{cite web |
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| first = Michael R. |
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| last = Ash |
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| title = The Impact of Mormon Critics on LDS Scholarship |
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| publisher = The Foundation for Apologetic Information and Research (FAIR) |
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| date = 2002 |
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| url = http://www.fairlds.org/FAIR_Conferences/2002_Impact_of_Mormon_Critics_on_LDS_Scholarship.html#en72 |
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| accessdate = 2006-11-11}}</ref></blockquote> |
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===Notes=== |
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<references/> |
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::I appriciate that my contributions were moved here instead of deleted outright. I believ they will need to be worked by in somehow. Although they are not examples of historians being censured for failing to write faith-promoting history; therefore they serve to illustrated the great importance which the Brethern place on this sort of thing. [[User:ErinHowarth|ErinHowarth]] 07:02, 13 November 2006 (UTC) |
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==Still Problems with this article== |
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1. This article looks like cruft to me. (I have said this before, but it was objected to) |
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:::I know that you have said this before, but I still don't know what it means. [[User:ErinHowarth|ErinHowarth]] 07:02, 13 November 2006 (UTC) |
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2. Do we have any articles that are "Faith Promoting History (Roman Catholic)"? Or "Faith Promoting History (Bahai)"? And many more? This seems to be too specific to one religion when it really extends across all religions and faiths. |
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:::I believe that this issue affects others faiths in other ways. For example, evangelical Christians try to re-write parts of pre-history in order to reconcile the creation sotry found in Genesis. I think it would be approprate to include links to such pages, but a single page could not adequately discuss all the issues faced by all faiths, and there are precious few contributors who would know enough about all the faiths to create a balanced article.[[User:ErinHowarth|ErinHowarth]] 07:02, 13 November 2006 (UTC) |
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3. After looking and looking at it, that first quote does not appear to be about "History". It may not be appropriate. I am trying to find the original context. It doesn't appear in original context on the net and I may have to go to the library on this one. |
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:::Which quote is the "first quote." [[User:ErinHowarth|ErinHowarth]] 07:02, 13 November 2006 (UTC) |
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4. If you are going to do something about LDS Faith promoting history, can't we give any examples? Or is this an insinuation without substance? --[[User:Blue Tie|Blue Tie]] 16:10, 12 November 2006 (UTC) |
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==Biblical Historicity== |
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The reasons the phrase ", and much of what ''has'' survived tends to support the biblical record." was removed is as follows: |
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1. It is disputed. Although many people who believe the Bible to be true accept the statement as valid, there are many who believe it to be true who are ancient historians, archaeologists, geologists and cosmologists and recognize that many things do not agree with the Biblical Account. There are also many people who are atheist, agnostic or in other beliefs who do not believe that science supports it at all. Jews frequently criticize the Gospels as being utterly ridiculous by historical standards. And on and on and on... It is a disputed statement and cannot be expressed as a "fact" but only an opinion held by of some of the interpreters of the record. |
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2. By expressing it in that manner, it is establishing a POV of saying "Well the Bible is so great, but what the Mormons believe, on the other hand is baloney". One might as well put a phrase in the opening paragraph of Hinduism saying "Hindus believe things that are silly compared with the Christian Bible". Ok, its not quite that bad, but it is in the same vein. |
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--[[User:Blue Tie|Blue Tie]] 21:07, 12 November 2006 (UTC) |
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:I was referring only to incontrovertible things like geographical locations, general historical outlines, and such. No matter whether you're a Bible believer or no, there is a Jerusalem and a Jericho where one can do archaeology. There were Assyrian and Babylonian Empires, and they're covered in every secular History of Civ book. Book of Mormon places, on the other hand, are simply matters of faith. There are no BoM places to do archaeology; none of its great kingdoms and battles are covered in any secular History of Civ book. --[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] 22:13, 12 November 2006 (UTC) |
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::I don't think you are entirely right, but even if you were, that is a different matter than the subject of this article. However, there are other articles that discuss this in more and better detail. What is more, even the "General Outlines" do not support the entire Bible according to some folks. As I said, it is contested. --[[User:Blue Tie|Blue Tie]] 22:48, 12 November 2006 (UTC) |
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:::I agree. The debate regarding the historical accuracy of the Book of Mormon is very differnt from the debate regarding how historians should portray historical figures such as Joseph Smith and Brigham Young. Therefore I take exception withthe opening sentence as it is currently written.<blockquote>''Unlike other 19th-century religious movements such as Bahai, Shakerism, and Christian Science, Mormonism is a religion predicated on both the historicity of a prophet's testimony and a sacred book that describes a detailed pre-Columbian history of North America. Like traditional Christianity Mormonism is likewise a history religion and few primary sources survive from two or three millennia ago, and the general outlines, at least, of biblical and Mormon history can be documented through both archaeology and historical records''</blockquote>As I have already mentioned here, I think the references to ther religions are misleading and should be avoided. Let's stick to what we know and what we are talking about. We don't need to compare Mormonism to other faiths on this topic. |
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::::I'm convinced that the Mormon religion is unique in its relationship to history.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] 20:38, 13 November 2006 (UTC) |
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== A semi-new start == |
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I agree with Blue Tie that the title "Faith-Promoting History" was a handicap from the beginning. Let us move on with this more inclusive title. As Cogden suggested above, I anticipate that this page will "cover all intersections between Mormonism and history, as Trödel suggested, with a major summary section linking to the main article Mormon historiography, but also discussions of topics like Mormon family history, Mormon historic sites, handcart recreations, pageants, etc.—history-related things that aren't included in the Mormon historiography article because they haven't been concerned primarily with compiling, analyzing, or criticizing history—just possessing it, selling it, keeping it out of the "wrong hands", recreating it, using it as a tool for political or religious power, or whatever other strange postmodern things we Mormons do to our history. I think this would include the Hoffman forgeries, too, but an argument could be made that this belongs in the historiography article. COGDEN 05:15, 5 November 2006 (UTC)" |
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--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] 20:00, 12 November 2006 (UTC) |
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::Although I changed some of what John Foxe added, I believe his idea is an ingenious improvement and that the title is more encyclopedic. And if this is an agreed upon way to go, I think the removed sections above should go back in, though I have not looked again to see if they should be re-edited. But, though I think this is better, here are two or three things that I have some concerns about: |
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:::1. What about Catholics and History? Or Baptists and History (I am thinking of Landmarkist theories)? Do these articles exist? If not, should they? If there are no such articles that is not to say that there should not be any, but if there aren't it suggests that this is a whole area overlooked by wikipedia or it is an invalid topic. |
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:::::It is a very interesting question, but not one that needs to be answered in this article. I think we should add links if we find any, but we can write this article without them. [[User:ErinHowarth|ErinHowarth]] 07:02, 13 November 2006 (UTC) |
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:::2. To me, this is a little bit like the article about the Historical Jesus (I do not recall its exact name). It seems to me to be an opportunity to attack a belief more than anything else and I generally do not think that is a good use of wikipedia space. I would not want it to devolve that way. |
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:::::There is a valid debate over whether or not Jesus actually lived or if he was a literary device used by Peter to expalin a new theology. Likewise the debate regarding the Book of Mormon. Is it an authentic ancient record or a invention of Joseph Smith? I don't know how we can write this page without discussing this topic. Presently, the historical evidence regarding the Book of mormon is just as inconclusive: theres nothing to suggest that it is true and nothing concret to refute it completly. [[User:ErinHowarth|ErinHowarth]] 07:02, 13 November 2006 (UTC) |
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:::3. Is this "Mormonism and History" or "Mormonism and Historians"? I think it is properly named the former, but I believe there has already been a tendency to highlight personalities rather than the subject of history from the Mormon perspective. I would not like to see it devolve in that manner. |
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:::4. Finally I think it would be easy for the article to also devolve into "History of the Mormons" and if necessary that should be an article, but I don't think it belongs here. Maybe as "See also" though. --[[User:Blue Tie|Blue Tie]] 20:56, 12 November 2006 (UTC) |
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:::Oh, I also got a database of Mormon Resources. Not sure how good. I still can't quite find some things but I can do a better job of quoting some sources. --[[User:Blue Tie|Blue Tie]] 20:58, 12 November 2006 (UTC) |
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==A restructuring of the article?== |
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I've been thinking about another restructure of the article -- in light of confusion evidenced by the recent "merge" effort. What we are really debating out here is not "Faith Promoting History" of "Mormonism and history" but the difference between faith and intellectual understanding. L.Arrington gave a lecture on this dicotomy in the early LDS movement. Using his ideas, I think we could create a different pattern for the article, perhaps including some of the "original" material below. Also note the following perspective on the History of Religion: ''The [[history of religions]] is not concerned with theological claims apart from their historical significance. Some topics of this discipline are the [[historicity]] of religious figures, events, and the evolution of doctrinal matters.'' Opinions? Will draft an outline and/or create an introduction asap. [[User:WBardwin|WBardwin]] ([[User talk:WBardwin|talk]]) 01:11, 26 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:First, I apologize for moving your post. I realize that's not usually done, but I thought it would make discussion easier. |
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:Although I'm not opposed to what you've proposed, my own notion for the article is less philosophical, more along the lines of the chapter "Faithful History" in the Ostlings' book. In other words the article should cover the intense interest Mormonism has always had in history: a church historian from the foundation, the Church use of historic sites, reenactments and films, the emphasis on church history in the seminaries and institutes—to be followed by D. Michael Quinn, the Tanners, Mark Hofmann, and Arrington's Camelot and its denouement.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 21:39, 26 January 2008 (UTC) |
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I really don't get this article. I tried doing a summarization of what I thought was the definition, and objective of this article, but it was reverted - and I wonder if I am missing the point. Can anyone give me a 1 to 2 sentence definition of what we are actually describing here? When I read it, I feel hopelessly mired in disorganized references as to how the LDS church only teaches faith promoting history. Perhaps someone can look at my recent edit and tell me what was wrong with it? See my original edit below: |
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<blockquote> |
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According to Mormon leaders, [[Mormonism]] is predicated on the alleged historical reality of the [[First Vision|First Vision of Joseph Smith]], and the historicity of the [[Book of Mormon]], which describes a detailed pre-Columbian history of North America. Due to this stance by many churches in the [[Latter Day Saint movement]], critics not that only faith-promoting history has been published and taught to many [[Mormons]]. Further, critics of Mormonism note historical inconsistencies in the Book of Mormon, and suspect details of Joseph Smith's past, as evidences that cast doubt upon the truthfulness of the message of Mormonism. |
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</blockquote> |
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--[[User:Descartes1979|Descartes1979]] ([[User talk:Descartes1979|talk]]) 22:41, 26 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:Here's what I think our subject is: <blockquote>Mormons emphasize history in a unique way, a way in which other religions do not. "For Mormonism more than other religions, history evolves as part of the church's canon." (Ostling, 247) The Book of Mormon and the D&C are largely history—unlike the Bible, the Koran, or the scriptures of any other major religion. Mormon seminary and institute students take required church history classes while Protestant fundamentalists and Jewish synagogue students of the same age do not.</blockquote> |
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:--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 23:29, 26 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:::While you are certainly right, John, I believe LDS emphasis on history goes even farther. In the very early years, Joseph Smith envisioned and taught that the LDS movement was a part of the vast pattern of human history, a continuation of God's long interaction with men. Ancient biblical history and New Testament history was seen as a "type" of the emerging traditions and practices of the Church. In the earliest years of the Church, there was great excitement over the intellectual events of the day. New discoveries, new theories and new ideas were wonderful in light of the restored mission of the Church. People were encouraged to learn and study in all areas, and the history of the emerging Church was seen as part of a larger pattern. As the church's experiences in the world became darker, and practical considerations became more important (i.e. western colonization), new ideas and interaction with current human history were downplayed. However, when Mormonism became more mainstream in the 20th century, church history came to be ever more important in defining the Church and distinguishing it from other evangelical movements. Then -- if I can postulate - the Church was faced with a history based challenge they did not know how to address. [[Mark Hoffman]]'s forgeries seemingly fit into the historic pattern but made little real sense in light of the Church's image of itself and it's history. The reaction by Church authorities was extreme, even after Hoffman's crimes were revealed. The idea of "faith-based history" re-emerged from some earlier teachings and "intellectuals revising" church history were targeted. Competent LDS historians were stunned, as were some more "liberal" GA's. I believe that the pendulum has now swung back more than a little and that the church will be more open to inquiry and publication in the immediate future. Certainly, access to Church archives and other materials has relaxed. ..........well, that was long winded. Hope this is helpful. [[User:WBardwin|WBardwin]] ([[User talk:WBardwin|talk]]) 02:48, 27 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:::[[Mormonism and historiography]] or [[Mormonism and the study of history]] -- possible titles? From the [[Historiography]] article - ''Approaches to history: The question of how a historian approaches historical events is one of the most important questions within historiography. It is commonly recognised by historians that, in themselves, individual historical facts are not particularly meaningful. Such facts will only become useful when assembled with other historical evidence, and the process of assembling this evidence is understood as a particular historiographical approach.'' Historiography was always a difficult subject for me, personally, but it comes close to what we are talking about. The Wikipedia article has some standard views and structures. Ideas? Sorry, getting passionate about the "new" article, and rambling........[[User:WBardwin|WBardwin]] ([[User talk:WBardwin|talk]]) 03:41, 27 January 2008 (UTC) |
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I agree with WBardwin - if I am capturing the spirit of this article correctly, it should be titled [[Mormonism and historiagraphy]], or [[Mormon historiography]] or something like that. I am also trying to get a sense of past discussion on this topic (see the "Merge with apologetics" discussion above....--[[User:Descartes1979|Descartes1979]] ([[User talk:Descartes1979|talk]]) 08:40, 27 January 2008 (UTC) |
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::I have no objection in principle to renaming the article once again except that the average reader will not have a clue what historiography means. Even an informed reader will have to be told what we mean by the term. As I said above, fourteen months ago, an excellent historiography of Mormonism is Walker, Whittaker, and Allen, ''Mormon History'' (2001). And they call their subject "history." Nevertheless, I agree with most of what [[User:WBardwin|WBardwin]] has written in his "passionate" paragraph above. I bow to your pleasure in the renaming.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 12:22, 27 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:::Even though my image of the article is really Mormon historiography -- the Mormon "world view" on history -- I agree with John that our average user would not understand. I think we can stick with [[Mormonism and history]] as long as we define the article well in the lead paragraph and tie it to the study of [[historiography]]. I have added a couple of sources (I recently read) to the article and will look for Walker, Whittaker, and Allen's ''Mormon History''. In spite of my "passion" above, do you agree we should present a time based view of the topic, starting with JSmith's viewpoint? Or should we present the more modern issue, and have a history section? [[User:WBardwin|WBardwin]] ([[User talk:WBardwin|talk]]) 21:52, 28 January 2008 (UTC) |
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::::As you've said, I believe that we should have a solid lede that well introduces the subject of Mormon interaction with history--''[[Weltanschauung]]'' for sure, but also how history has proven to be a double-edged sword for the LDS church. (Even I'm surprised to see, a day after his death, an article about GBH and history in the [http://origin.sltrib.com/news/ci_8096895 Salt Lake Tribune].) And I certainly agree that the article should be time-based, beginning with Joseph Smith and proceeding in roughly chronological order.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 23:16, 28 January 2008 (UTC) |
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This all seems a bit fuzzy to me. As I review the history of the article, it started out as an article that distinguished historical facts from "faith-promoting" history. The premise was that the LDS church had too much of the latter and not enough of the former. Foxe has indicated that the LDS church uses history uniquely different from all other churches. This is where I get confused...having studied religions for many years I have yet to find one religion that does not use faith-promoting stories. I just returned from Rome and while I was there I was surprised to find that one of the guides I worked with at the St. Peter's was very clear that there is no historical facts that support the story of Peter's death in Rome; that it was Tradition only. Catholicism and Orthodoxy if rife with stories of pure faith. So, I still don't have the objective for this article; at the end of the day what is the reader to have understood from it? --[[User:Storm Rider|Storm Rider]] [[User talk:Storm Rider|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 23:53, 28 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:::Storm, as I recall, the article started out as a modestly negative report on the reaction of Church leaders to historic challenges by a small group of Mormon intellectuals, who were exploring a new historical dynamic. Some pushed the envelope too far for GA comfort, and the reaction (interestingly, tied to the JSmith period) was church discipline for heresy and criticising church leadership. This "revisionist" history issue emerged in the same basic time as the Hoffman issue. In my opinion, and the observations of several other BYU alumni, historians who were not disciplined felt threatened as well and emotions ran pretty high. |
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:::However, the editors of the article quickly realized that focusing on this one incident in the Church's relationship with history placed the issue out of context. They began to look for other historians, like [[Fawn Brodie]] who had also challenged the church's view of history. My proposal would strive to point out that "faith-based history" is a way of looking at the world, a viewpoint that is individual to all faiths and cultures. Mormon's have always had some "faith-based" perspectives and some "intellectual" perspectives about history. The article would look at the way Mormons themselves view the LDS movement within history, how mainstream Mormon historians strive to balance the viewpoints (i.e. Arrington, Bushman), and would address how "outside" scholars view and report on Mormons (WStegner, maybe). As John points out, Mormons have on occasion had "history" strike a unexpected blow. But that problem is not unique to Mormons, as other religious movements face similar challenges. We could talk about that challenge here as well. [[User:WBardwin|WBardwin]] ([[User talk:WBardwin|talk]]) 06:58, 29 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:I tend to agree with StormRider, it is quite fuzzy - there is a phrase at the beginning of this article that always struck me as strange: "Although traditional Christianity is likewise a history religion...". Maybe I am new to the realm of historiography and religion, but aren't all religions based in what they think is history? For example, although there are no historical facts that support Peter's death in Rome, I would wager there are millions of Catholics that believe it actually happened, even if they can't prove it. If I follow this line of thought, a lot of things in this article start to sound like original research. I do think there is some good content here, but unless there is a really solid definition of where we are going, this article will always have problems.--[[User:Descartes1979|Descartes1979]] ([[User talk:Descartes1979|talk]]) 05:06, 29 January 2008 (UTC) |
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::As for original research, I have an article by [[Leonard Arrington]], one by [[Jan Shipps]], and a book by Catholic historiographer Gary Topping as quite recent sources. Bushman's recent Joseph Smith biography offers some insight. John has offered another source. Even the 2008 Church manual on the teachings of Joseph Smith talks a little about Smith's view of history. Brigham Young has a few known quotes as well. So I don't think we would go too far wrong if we stuck to the sources. Maintaining a balanced pov would be the hardest part, as the very idea of "faith-based" history may rub more secular scholars the wrong way. But we are still discussing, of course. Opinions? [[User:WBardwin|WBardwin]] ([[User talk:WBardwin|talk]]) 06:58, 29 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:::Most religions are ''not'' history based. To the practicing Buddhist, it makes little difference how, or even whether, Gautama Sidhartha lived and died. Judaism and Christianity are history based—and to a lesser degree Islam—but most world religions are not. For instance, Hinduism and Confucianism have plenty of "faith-promoting" stories, but they're not "historical" in the sense that their faith-promoting qualities rest on whether or not they actually happened. Traditional Christianity absolutely rests on history ("If Christ be not raised, ye are yet in your sins"), but unlike Mormonism its history is so far in the past that attacks on its historicity are often reduced to [[DaVinci Code]] level. Mormonism is different because it's so recent and because so much non-faith-promoting information has survived. GBH's ''grandfather'' was a member of the Church when Joseph Smith was assassinated.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 14:41, 29 January 2008 (UTC) |
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::I'm no Buddhist, but that is news to me. You are saying that Buddhists acknowledge that [[Siddhartha Gautama]] may not have been a historical figure? That seems absurd. I would wager that if you talked to a Buddhist that he would argue vehemently that [[Siddhartha Gautama]] was an actual person that lived. Maybe he couldn't prove it, but he would believe that his religion is based on historical facts as far as he knew them - but again, like I said, I am not a Buddhist, and maybe I just don't know. I would be more persuaded if you had some references that speak to that effect - showing that religions other than Christianity and Mormonism are not "history religions". My study of world religions is limited to a few classes in college, and some random books here and there, so again, my knowledge is meager - but the whole idea here seems to be a thesis that was derived specifically to criticize Mormonism. Every single religion that I know of has garnered criticism because its opponents dispute the historicity of its genesis, or provenance of doctrinal claims. All religions have faith promoting stories, and there are even some in Mormonism that Mormons would recognize maybe are not actually historical (half of the stories in [[Especially for Mormons]] are a perfect example). I think that older religions largely shed this criticism because as you said, their history is hard to prove or disprove because it happened so long ago. Mormonism and newer religions are not as impregnable to such criticism. I guess what I am saying, is this: I think "history religion" is a [[misnomer]], and I suspect that the whole concept is part of the research of a couple of select authors that are critical of Mormonism specifically. Now let me clarify - I am no Mormon apologist, and I think that there is some good content here regarding Mormonism's treatment of history. And of course, once again - a disclaimer - I am a little unfamiliar with the subject, so I might be just talking out of my butt. So consider this a challenge to convince me of what you are saying, I would love to see some quotes and references that support your arguments. --[[User:Descartes1979|Descartes1979]] ([[User talk:Descartes1979|talk]]) 16:49, 29 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:::I still don't know the objective for the article. What is the reader supposed to understand when having read the article? Are we trying to prove that there have been times where the LDS church has been perceived as detrimental to intellectual research? Or is it that the LDS church attempts to limit history to faith-based stories? The second one I reject as silliness because it is a criticism against all religion; do have your research that shows the LDS church is excessively bad at it? Please just tell me what this article is supposed to describe and why it is important. --[[User:Storm Rider|Storm Rider]] [[User talk:Storm Rider|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 19:05, 29 January 2008 (UTC) |
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::::For [[User:Descartes1979|Descartes1979]]: <blockquote>"Jewish theology is sacred history par excellence, but in this it is not unique....Most obviously this is true of Christianity, which advances an alternative sacred history [which] makes the crucial addition of the Incarnation of God in Jesus, an historical figure of first-century Palestine....The idea of 'sacred history' has its origins in these two religions, and their prominence in Western culture has made its conceptions highly influential in the subsequent development of historical and cultural self-understanding...." Gordon Graham, ''The Shape of the Past: A Philosophical Approach to History'' (New York: Oxford University Press, 1997), 3-4.</blockquote> |
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::::<blockquote>"History was part and parcel of the religion of Israel....A 'history religion' such as that of the Jews must see in the historical process some purposeful direction and final goal." Paul Conkin and Roland N. Stromberg, ''Heritage and Challenge: The History and Theory of History'' (Arlington Heights, IL: Forum, 1989), 5-6.</blockquote> |
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::::<blockquote>"The search for histories of early India by modern scholars began in the eighteenth century. European scholars, specifically seeking histories, found it difficult to locate such texts from the Sanskrit tradition. Indian culture, and particularly the Sanskrit articulation of Indian culture, came to be defined, therefore, as ahistorical." ''A Global Encyclopedia of Historical Writing'' (Garland, 1998), I, 455.</blockquote> |
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::::For [[User:Storm Rider|Storm Rider]]: <blockquote>"Mormons remember, and they remember in detail. The remembrances bind them as a people....There is a very real sense in which the church's history is its theology....And just as creedal churches have official statements of faith, the Mormon Church tends to have official versions of sacred history....For Mormonism more than other religions, history evolves as part of the church's canon....The church has always tried to retain a proprietary hold over the telling of its own history." Richard N. Ostling and Joan K. Ostling, ''Mormon America: The Power and the Promise'' (HarperSanFrancisco, 1999), 239, 245, 247, 250.</blockquote> |
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::::--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 21:37, 29 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:::Interesting quotes - thx for the posts John --[[User:Descartes1979|Descartes1979]] ([[User talk:Descartes1979|talk]]) 01:00, 30 January 2008 (UTC) |
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So then the objective of this article is what? I still am not hearing the purpose and what its value will be. --[[User:Storm Rider|Storm Rider]] [[User talk:Storm Rider|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 02:48, 30 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:::If John Foxe's premise, "Mormons emphasize history in a unique way, a way in which other religions do not" is the basis or foundation for this article and its existence, that idea should be verifiable from some objective source. I do not see it likely that will happen and right now, this article is sort of a [[WP:COATRACK]] or [[WP:SOAPBOX]] article. I notice the list of things that are said to make mormons special :"a church historian from the foundation, the Church use of historic sites, reenactments and films, the emphasis on church history in the seminaries and institutes". As though other religions do not [[Maitreya Project |build shrines]] on [http://bmaps.wordpress.com/2007/03/21/the-mother-of-all-buddhism-bodh-gaya historical places] -- so that they actually [[Dome of the Rock |threaten]] the [[Western Wall | peace of the world]]. Or as though other religions do not have [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke+1-3 histories right from the start]. Or as though other Churches do not use [http://www.christiancinema.com/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=49 films] or [[Oberammergau Passion Play | plays]] or [http://www.sacred-destinations.com/france/images/lourdes/bernadette-mary-painting.jpg other media]. Or that they ignore [http://www.hartsem.edu/ACADEMIC/COURSES/summer2005/hi565.htm theological history in their seminaries]. Or that they do not [http://www.greatpassionplay.com/ sponsor huge] re-enactments [http://www.haj-umra.co.uk/pics/kabe_kaba_1.jpg from history]. To me the premise is nonsensical. And if the article is supposed to be a re-hashing of the [[History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]], isn't there already an article about that? I mean.. the one I just linked to? And the idea that because Mormonism is relatively new... it is somehow a more legitimate target for historical revisionism or criticism is [[Jesus myth hypothesis | simply not true]] -- and certainly not deserving of an article. That would be a pov article anyway -- much like an article about Hinduism and why its ridiculous because it has [http://www.puppstheories.com/forum/images/BabyWith3Arms.jpg multi-armed] [[Ganesha |Elephant Gods]]. Of course the article would be NPOV titled [[Hindu Dieties and Biological Science]] and chock full of reliable sources declaring that elephants with many trunks and arms would likely die and have no special powers. But maybe, if the article is about some way that the Mormons view history differently from other people, maybe there is something that could be written. But do they? I have never heard of such a thing. If Mormons have some unique concept of history then perhaps that could be covered. Or maybe they view themselves as holding some special place in the history of the world. But that is starting to sound a bit crufty now that I think about it.--[[User:Blue Tie|Blue Tie]] ([[User talk:Blue Tie|talk]]) 07:48, 30 January 2008 (UTC) |
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::::I've provided quotations from the Ostlings, and the Ostlings are experts. I base my premise that Mormons approach history in a unique way on those quotations. Unless experts who disagree with their views are cited, they remain authoritative.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 10:57, 30 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:::::Hmmm. Are you saying that one source.. basically one opinion source ... is the whole basis for this article? That seems awfully like [[WP:COATRACK]]. --[[User:Blue Tie|Blue Tie]] ([[User talk:Blue Tie|talk]]) 13:06, 30 January 2008 (UTC) |
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::::::There are more, but the Ostlings will do for now. Provide expert evidence that disputes the Ostlings or their expertise remains unchallenged.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 14:04, 30 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:::::I went back and re-read your quotes John Foxe, and I am starting to agree with BlueTie - and coming full circle, I think this article should be merged with [[History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] as I originally proposed. The way I see it, what we are really dealing with here is a criticism of the official history advocated by the LDS church. There should be a good sized section in the main History of the Church article that talks about these criticisms. The way I understand it, the histories of many religions may be considered "ahistorical", but that doesn't mean their adherents don't believe in what they think are historical facts, it just means that there are no verifiable historical facts. This whole idea that there are some religions that are "history religions" and some that aren't still seems like a hypothesis that is being advocated by a few authors recently. --[[User:Descartes1979|Descartes1979]] ([[User talk:Descartes1979|talk]]) 16:16, 30 January 2008 (UTC) |
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(newindent) The Ostling's are a reputable source for some things, but a masters degree in relgion and being a journalist for Time hardly makes their position "the truth"; it remains opinion. What has not been stated or provided is the objective of the article. How does position of the LDS differ from Christianity believing in the Garden of Eden and the entire creation story, Noah and the ark, Jonah and the whale, and Moses and the exit from Eygpt. Is there a fundamental difference between the two; does Christianity not want to take a propriatary position in telling its story? Either the objective is not clear to those of you are presenting it or it is not easy described to the rest of us. I hope that something more can be provided; just answer the simple questions I asked above because as it has been stated I don't think this article has any value.--[[User:Storm Rider|Storm Rider]] [[User talk:Storm Rider|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 16:34, 30 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:I wouldn't go quite that far StormRider. Remember, according to official Wikipedia policy, [[WP:Verifiability|"The threshold for inclusion in Wikipedia is verifiability, not truth."]]. --[[User:Descartes1979|Descartes1979]] ([[User talk:Descartes1979|talk]]) 18:00, 30 January 2008 (UTC) |
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::I also think this article does have value, we just need to figure out where and how to present this information most appropriately. --[[User:Descartes1979|Descartes1979]] ([[User talk:Descartes1979|talk]]) 18:03, 30 January 2008 (UTC) |
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Boy, you guys kind of jumped off the deep end in my brief absence!! Strikes and parries already and we haven't even put up a definition. Everyone put aside the definsiveness, if you would. Please read the [[historiography]] article for a fair basic definition. I propose that we place Mormonism and history in the same context as Christianity in history. John Foxe is correct, in that our faith's recent emergence makes debates on faith based approaches to history more immediate and more contentious. In terms of content for the article, please review the following section from "historiography". If we place "Mormon" in applicable places, these are the kind of questions we would be seeking to ask and answer as we evaluate sources and develop our presentation. I've highlighted those which are often particularly applicable in Mormon history: |
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Some of the common questions of historiography are: |
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#''' Reliability of the sources used, in terms of authorship, credibility of the author, and the authenticity or corruption of the text.''' |
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#Historiographical tradition or framework. Every historian uses one (or more) historiographical traditions, some of which are Marxist, or [[Annales School]], ("total history"), [[political history]], etc. |
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#Moral issues, guilt assignment, and praise assignment |
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#'''Revisionism versus orthodox interpretations''' |
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Issues engaged by [[critical historiography]] includes topics such as: |
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*What constitutes an historical "event"? |
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*In what modes does a historian write and produce statements of "truth" and "fact"? |
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*How does the medium (novel, textbook, film, theatre, comic) through which historical information is conveyed influence its meaning? |
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*''What inherent [[epistemological]] problems does archive-based history possess?'' |
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*'''How do historians establish their own objectivity or come to terms with their own subjectivity?''' |
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*What is the relationship between historical theory and historical practice? |
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*'''What is the "goal" of history?''' |
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==New WBardwin Outline== |
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As far as a basic outline, my initial ideas include: |
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*define Mormonism and history - i.e. Mormonism is a history based faith, as is Christianity and Judaism, believing int a God-directed pattern of events which leads to the ultimate culmination of human history. |
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*define Mormonism' place in a Christian faith based history, by |
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::defining points of Mormon doctrine, practice and culture that support a unique "latter-day" view of history, including but not limited to the [[Plan of Salvation]], [[Geneology]] and family history, [[Mormon pioneer]] history, temple work, church history/D&C, history within the Book of Mormon, church history as a regular subject in doctrinal discussions and teachings, etc...... |
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*a "history" section, beginning with the teachings of Joseph Smith on history, and followed by the attitudes and perspectives of subsequent generations |
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*a "historian" section, pointing out the differences between the perspective of Mormon apologists, Mormon critics, and those who sought a more balanced presentation. Both in historic time and how those perspectives have changed over time. |
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----- |
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There are many sources we can draw upon, some are LDS faith oriented, some quite critical, some neutral. Some of these sources deal with historiograpy and "world view, in a focused and comprehensive way. Other sources could include articles on broader topics or refined LDS topics, as explaining the "historic world view" of Mormonism is common in introductions and summaries. |
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But, please, my intention is to create a balanced NPOV article on a recognized (but admittedly little known)historical research category. Historiographers, in general, get little press and also receive little credit. But I think, if we come up with common goals, we can do a great job here. |
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Face it, Mormons love religious history and feel we have a unique and important place in it. We are proud of our ancestors, their efforts and sacrifices. We look forward to a biblically based future and see our place in it as well. There, more ranting............ Please think it through. [[User:WBardwin|WBardwin]] ([[User talk:WBardwin|talk]]) 02:43, 31 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:All western religions would appear to value history; they all seem to point to stories about X that did Y and how those actions inspire the present day adherent. The study of LDS historiography, as written both within and outside the organization, would seem to offer potential. The fact that LDS history has both a pro and con "history" seems to have been left out of your outline above. Should they not go in the same article? References will be of much stronger value than the typical article. This area could easily evolve into innuendo and original research. |
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:One critical historian that comes immediately to mind is Howe. Quoting from the Historiography article, "Reliability of the sources used, in terms of authorship, credibility of the author, and the authenticity or corruption of the text" seems particularly applicable. W, you seem to miss the value of how history has been written by those outside of the movement. Their work has had a significant impact on the field of study. This particular version of history has also evolved significantly from its very beginnings until today. Of course there are several other of the early critical historians that would be interesting to analyze. My question is has this really been studied or has the only analysis been on LDS historians? --[[User:Storm Rider|Storm Rider]] [[User talk:Storm Rider|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 07:33, 31 January 2008 (UTC) |
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::The outline describes an article that is better than the current one and seems, for now, to be unique. I do not understand Storm Rider's comment about pro and con history. History is just history. Interpretations might have different perspectives but those are not history they are reviews of history. I would not be particularly in favor of an article about LDS and Non-LDS Historians. Seems like a category or a list rather than an article. --[[User:Blue Tie|Blue Tie]] ([[User talk:Blue Tie|talk]]) 13:14, 31 January 2008 (UTC) |
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::As I reviewed the article on [[historiography]] I got the impression that one is not writing an article about history, but about how history is/was written. Did I miss something? |
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::In the LDS movement there have been very, very few historians; it has been a area of apologists, critics, and anti-Mormons. As Foxe said above there was a "historian" from the beginning of the church's history. On the other side there were a group of early "historians" who wrote what they believed was the history of the movement; I gave the example of Howe above. These individuals who wrote history about the movement wrote from vastly different perspectives and both are worthy of analysis. |
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::The outline above seems to address the movement only from the inside of the movement. IMHO, that seems like writing half a story. I reject any concept of lists and do not see any relationship between that and historiography. The concept is to write an article about how the history of this movement was written. The picture between the two has very little correlation. To understand that all you have to do is read any article that Foxe edits and compare his position to that of an editor in the movement. |
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::Based upon the outline above I am not sure if Historiography of the movement is what is being proposed, but something different. I may be completely off base and really be talking about another article entirely. If my understanding of historiography is correct then the outline does not match the title proposed. --[[User:Storm Rider|Storm Rider]] [[User talk:Storm Rider|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 14:38, 31 January 2008 (UTC) |
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::::Storm Rider, I do not really understand your comments very well, but it seems to me that the article you are describing would be a sort of original research and synthesis. I do not see how the outline is only half a story, and I am not clear how looking at how Foxe writes vs how other people write is enlightening -- except that Foxe tends to write better than most others. But that seems different than what you are saying and I do not understand what you are saying. As I said, it looks like you are advocating some degree of original research. --[[User:Blue Tie|Blue Tie]] ([[User talk:Blue Tie|talk]]) 01:32, 1 February 2008 (UTC) |
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::::I haven't a clue where you are getting your comments; it is totally over my head. OR? We are talking about bloody proposals in how to write this article. In the context of making sure we have a clear outline there can be no such thing as OR. Just put the preconceptions aside and read my words. --[[User:Storm Rider|Storm Rider]] [[User talk:Storm Rider|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 18:36, 1 February 2008 (UTC) |
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::::::My apologies to [[User:WBardwin|WBardwin]] if I make the situation more contentious by saying that his working outline looks fine to me.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 21:29, 31 January 2008 (UTC) |
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I must be failing at explaining myself. The proposal [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Talk%3AMormonism_and_history&diff=187172947&oldid=187163193 above] was to write an article on Mormonism and historiography. Historiography states "historiography examines the writing of history and the use of historical methods, drawing upon such elements such as authorship, sourcing, interpretation, style, bias, and audience." Put another way and quoting from the same article, ""the study of the way history has been and is written — the history of historical writing... When you study 'historiography' you do not study the events of the past directly, but the changing interpretations of those events in the works of individual historians." My recent comments have centered on this proposal to title it historiography and the outline above. |
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Could you please explain how the above proposed outline by WBardin fits within this title? If we are proposing to write an article on historiography then we must address how the history of Mormonism has been written. There are only two kinds of historians about the subject, those who write within the movement and those who have written outside of the movement. These historians have addressed the topic differently and their methods have changed over time. As I stated above, "that seems like writing half a story". Maybe the easy solution is drop the proposed title and more clearly identify the objectives that will then allow you to more accurately create a title. --[[User:Storm Rider|Storm Rider]] [[User talk:Storm Rider|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 18:36, 1 February 2008 (UTC) |
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:How can you write and article on Mormonism and Historiography, if you have no sources that discuss Mormonism and Historiography, unless you put other sources together and synthesize the article?--[[User:Blue Tie|Blue Tie]] ([[User talk:Blue Tie|talk]]) 00:55, 2 February 2008 (UTC) |
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::Blue Tie -- I've given several sources and there are others. Try this one, then: ''Mormons and Their Historians''. By Davis Bitton and Leonard J. Arrington. (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1988). Or see Gary Topping, an archivist and historiographer who looks at Utah Historians, LDS and not. See also [http://sc.lib.byu.edu/bibliographies/historiography.php]. Many books on Mormon and Utah history also provide an analysis/historiography of the sources they use and or reject. So, what exactly are you looking for? Something that simply says "Mormonism and Historiography"? [[User:WBardwin|WBardwin]] ([[User talk:WBardwin|talk]]) 03:02, 8 February 2008 (UTC) |
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Obviously I am coming in after a lot of revision, but upon my first (and second) reading of the article, it is apparent that the tone of the article (as it stands now) is not exactly neutral in its presentation of how Mormons treat their history. The quote at the end of the opening section sums up well the tone of the rest of the article: "there is no place to hide....There is little protection for Mormon sacredness." |
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One easy piece of evidence for this is the fact that there is one source from which nearly half the references in the article are taken. Additionally, the neutrality of this source is disputable (statements such as "truth 'supposedly embedded in history'", and "Mormon high school and college students take required church history courses as part of their training, and their required study of the Mormon scripture Doctrine and Covenants 'is largely history as well.'") These (and other) statements, while containing parts of reality, are not completely accurate, and serve to mislead the reader. The title of the article as it currently stands could be, "Criticisms of Official Mormon History", or "Ways That Mormon Leadership is Perceived to be Oppressive in Relation to History". If the true intent of the article (as StormRider apparently has been searching for) is to present an unbiased collection of facts about the way that the LDS Church presents and deals with history, then there needs to be an equal amount of weight in the article positively presenting information on the subject as well. [[User:Rgisraelsen|R. G. Israelsen]] ([[User talk:Rgisraelsen|talk]]) 05:39, 23 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Major restructuring proposal in a related article == |
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[[Image:Nuvola apps important.svg|48px|left]]A major restructuring proposal for all polygamy articles related to Mormonism has been made at [[Talk:Joseph Smith, Jr. and polygamy#Series and Restructuring proposal]]. Please visit and give your two cents. --[[User:Descartes1979|Descartes1979]] ([[User talk:Descartes1979|talk]]) 04:54, 30 June 2008 (UTC) |
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== Clarification on this sentence? == |
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I'd like some clarification on this sentence, found in the beginning of the section after the "Mormons Remember" section: |
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"Mormon high school and college students take required church history courses as part of their training." |
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Is this referring to Seminary and Institute classes? If it is, that kind of training is hardly required, and the statement is inaccurate. Both are quite optional. That said, at the church owned institutions (the BYUs, LDS Business College, etc) part of the required curriculum is a series of religious classes. In that sense, the statement is correct, but it explicitly should reflect that. Otherwise, the sentence is misleading as it implies that all Mormon students ''must'' take religious courses, even at other, secular schools, which is simply not true. Just a thought. Cheers! [[User:Mwinslett|SinisterMatt]] ([[User talk:Mwinslett|talk]]) 00:05, 2 September 2008 (UTC) |
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:Thanks. I hope I've eliminated the confusion by quoting the Ostlings.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 10:02, 2 September 2008 (UTC) |
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== WP:SYN and WP:OR in the intro == |
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I moved the following information to this page from the introduction: |
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:In contrast to other [[19th-century]] religious movements such as [[Shakerism]], the [[Bahá'í Faith]], and [[Christian Science]],<ref>Shakers believed that "the carnal human" existed on a plane of existence a great deal lower than spiritual humans whom they represented, a belief reflected in their [[celibacy]]. Those who found solace in the termination of humanity obviously had little interest in its past. Holley Gene Duffield, ''Historical Dictionary of the Shakers'' (Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2000), xvi. Bahá'ís stress the unity of all world religions as well as the "mystical journey of the soul" and therefore also have little religious interest in history. J. Gordon Melton and Martin Baumann, ''Religions of the World: Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices'' (Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio, 2002), 102-04. Finally, Christian Science emphasizes "metaphysical religion with a spiritual healing component," again a non-historical way of viewing religion. Melton and Baumann, 314.</ref> |
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My reasons for doing so is that none of the references support the statement being made. This makes a comparison without any explanation in the article. The references also are weak. The article on Baha'i faith is really an article about the Bab and following leaders. You are using a conclusion you have made rather than the references that support the statement. |
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This kind of statement fits better in the body, if it is developed and shown why the others are different. --<sup>[[user:Storm Rider|'''''<font color="01796F">Storm</font>''''']]</sup>[[User talk:Storm Rider#top|'''''<font color="1C39BB">Rider</font>''''']] 00:21, 4 September 2008 (UTC) |
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:As an aside, I don't disagree with the deduction being made, but the topic is not developed in the article. Maybe it could be developed in another article that is more appropriate for the fuller treatment of the statement. This article should be more focused on the topic and not a comparative religion article. --<sup>[[user:Storm Rider|'''''<font color="01796F">Storm</font>''''']]</sup>[[User talk:Storm Rider#top|'''''<font color="1C39BB">Rider</font>''''']] 00:37, 4 September 2008 (UTC) |
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::I'd be glad to help you develop the distinction right here. Mormonism is a "history religion"; Shakerism, Bahá'í, and Christian Science are not. I've provided evidence that that statement is true; you've not provided any evidence that it's false—or even controverted. The article is about Mormonism; logically, a discussion of other religions should be confined to the notes. Further,if you'd like to bring in a neutral party to judge between our points of view, that would be fine as well.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 14:27, 4 September 2008 (UTC) |
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:::I have no problem with others commenting; never have had an issue with such. To the contrary, I have always encouraged it. |
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:::IMHO, when you use this language as a beginning you need to explain the differences in the text, which is not done. I suspect the reason it is not done is that doing so is not the topic of the article, which then brings us to the question of its merit here. Additionally, you provided references, but not one of them supports the statement. Not one references comparing Mormonism to these groups and stating they were different because of the way they treat history. To get to the point you are trying to make with these references, the reader has to synthesize the information to come to your deduction, which is against Wikipedia policy. |
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:::Mormonism is unique among the Restorationist groups because it claims an actual restoration. Stone-Campbells, JWs, Christian Science, etc. claim no actual restoration other than of thought or teaching, i.e. a more pure reading of the Bible. Shakerism is slightly different in that Lee professed revelation, but not a restoration of the church founded by Christ. In that Mormonism teaches an actual restoration, the telling of that story, or history, takes on importance. Where there is a telling of history, historians will be there to gain a better, accurate understanding of it. I think this is what you are trying to say, but making a comparison unsupported by references is not a good way to start. |
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:::As an aside, I just read an article in the Spring edition of the ''Journal of Mormon History'' entitled "The Sanctification of Mormonism Historical Geography" about the evolution of sacred places and how they are treated in Mormon history. Where once places such as the grove where Joseph Smith prayed held no significance, the event was sacred not the location. That process has changed over time and now the LDS Church makes a concerted effort to make the grove and similar locations sacred. Interesting article that may bring additional information to this article. --<sup>[[user:Storm Rider|'''''<font color="01796F">Storm</font>''''']]</sup>[[User talk:Storm Rider#top|'''''<font color="1C39BB">Rider</font>''''']] 17:44, 4 September 2008 (UTC) |
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:::Why are you saying it is not OR; if the references do not clearly say that Mormonism is different from x, y, and z religions and why, then the references you provided are worthless in supporting your language. Why are you fighting over this? Why are you trying to say there is no OR or SYN? --<sup>[[user:Storm Rider|'''''<font color="01796F">Storm</font>''''']]</sup>[[User talk:Storm Rider#top|'''''<font color="1C39BB">Rider</font>''''']] 18:11, 4 September 2008 (UTC) |
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::::The reason that the statement should remain is that it is not controverted. There's no difference of scholarly opinion about the matter. No one has argued that Shakerism, Bahá'í, and Christian Science are history religions, and every scholar—Mormon or non-Mormon—who's pronounced on the subject says that Mormonism is. (Actually Shakerism, Bahá'í, and Christian Science all include revelations.)--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 19:07, 4 September 2008 (UTC) |
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:::::The problem is that you are making a deduction that is not supported by the current references. What is needed is a reference that supports the statment you are proposing. If what is supportable is saying Mormonism is a history religion then that is all that can be said, which is btw what my edit does. |
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:::::Wikipedia is never placed in the position of stating something as fact, that is the place of reputable references. Just because you and I may agree does not mean that it can be said in the article. You are missing the importance and value of what a reference is and you are placing Wikipedia in an unacceptable position. The language you propose may sound good, but it is not supported by RS. Do you understand the distinction I am trying to make? --<sup>[[user:Storm Rider|'''''<font color="01796F">Storm</font>''''']]</sup>[[User talk:Storm Rider#top|'''''<font color="1C39BB">Rider</font>''''']] 19:26, 4 September 2008 (UTC) |
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::::::I concede unconditionally. Ironically, the idea almost certainly arises from something in print, although I haven't a clue where or when I may have read it. (I don't think I'm clever enough to have put Shakers, Bahá'í, and Christian Science together.) It's a notion that struck me as self-evident; I just said, "Right," and moved on. Maybe I'll run into the source again, or maybe like [[The Lost Chord]], it will remain forever a memory and a mystery.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 09:52, 5 September 2008 (UTC) |
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:::::::When we tussle so much over the such a small thing, exactly what is it supposed to be like over the significant issues? Come on Foxe; and you thought it was I thought you were competent.:) A competitive nature combined with the pride of all mortal man can lead us down very unnfortunate paths indeed. --<sup>[[user:Storm Rider|'''''<font color="01796F">Storm</font>''''']]</sup>[[User talk:Storm Rider#top|'''''<font color="1C39BB">Rider</font>''''']] 16:54, 5 September 2008 (UTC) |
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==Image copyright problem with Image:Lds legacy.jpg== |
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The image [[:Image:Lds legacy.jpg]] is used in this article under a claim of [[WP:NFC|fair use]], but it does not have an adequate explanation for why it meets the [[WP:NFCC|requirements for such images]] when used here. In particular, for each page the image is used on, it must have an [[Wikipedia:Non-free use rationale guideline|explanation]] linking to that page which explains why it needs to be used on that page. Please check |
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:* That there is a [[Wikipedia:Non-free use rationale guideline|non-free use rationale]] on the image's description page for the use in this article. |
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:* That this article is linked to from the image description page. |
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<!-- Additional 10c list header goes here --> |
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This is an automated notice by [[User:FairuseBot|FairuseBot]]. For assistance on the image use policy, see [[Wikipedia:Media copyright questions]]. --09:15, 18 September 2008 (UTC) |
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== OR/SYNTH issues with image caption == |
== OR/SYNTH issues with image caption == |
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:On what authority can't illustrations be used here to make a point? Textbooks are filled with such things, and they're very effective at grabbing the attention of students. Why not here?--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 22:33, 16 September 2013 (UTC) |
:On what authority can't illustrations be used here to make a point? Textbooks are filled with such things, and they're very effective at grabbing the attention of students. Why not here?--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 22:33, 16 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::It is a general Wikipedia norm that images need to be directly relevant to the article, and captions shouldn't be presenting new information that's not already in the text. (I was ignoring that when I made my edit, for the sake of compromise.) As for using illustrations to make a Point, I dunno...I keep getting the nagging feeling that there is some sort of [[WP:NOTADVOCATE|soapboxing]] at the heart of all this, and language like that doesn't help. <span style="font-family:times; text-shadow: 0 0 .2em #7af">~[[User:Adjwilley|Adjwilley]] <small>([[User talk:Adjwilley|talk]])</small></span> 00:09, 17 September 2013 (UTC) |
::It is a general Wikipedia norm that images need to be directly relevant to the article, and captions shouldn't be presenting new information that's not already in the text. (I was ignoring that when I made my edit, for the sake of compromise.) As for using illustrations to make a Point, I dunno...I keep getting the nagging feeling that there is some sort of [[WP:NOTADVOCATE|soapboxing]] at the heart of all this, and language like that doesn't help. <span style="font-family:times; text-shadow: 0 0 .2em #7af">~[[User:Adjwilley|Adjwilley]] <small>([[User talk:Adjwilley|talk]])</small></span> 00:09, 17 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::@John Foxe: Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, not a textbook: one very important difference is that textbooks by their very nature contain [[wp:OR]]/[[wp:SYNTH]]. The basic "criteria for a good caption", from [[wp:Manual of Style/Captions]]: "1. clearly identifies the subject of the picture, without detailing the obvious. 2. is succinct. 3. establishes the picture's relevance to the article. 4. provides context for the picture. 5. draws the reader into the article". From [[wp:Manual of Style/Accessibility#Images]] "2. Images should contain a caption, either using the built in image syntax or a secondary line of text. The caption should concisely describe the meaning of the image, the essential information it is trying to convey. ... 5. Images should be inside the section they belong to (after the heading and after any links to other articles), and not in the heading nor at the end of the previous section, otherwise screen readers would read the image (and its textual alternative) in a different section; as they would appear to viewers of the mobile site." The purpose of captions are to succinctly describe what is depicted by images, and the purpose of images are to illustrate article text: leave the apoligetics & polemics to the article text itself. -- [[Special:Contributions/208.81.184.4|208.81.184.4]] ([[User talk:208.81.184.4|talk]]) 00:14, 17 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::A short addition to the caption would do everything mandated in the MoS, especially "establish the picture's relevance to the article" and "draw the reader into the article." No soapboxing going on at all. We're all agreed that the LDS Church has never portrayed Joseph Smith translating the BoM while looking into his hat despite what Givens and Bushman say.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 21:47, 17 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::::I don't think the question has been whether Smith ever looked into his hat, although it's not out of the question that he tried to study them without the hat, particularly near the beginning of the translation process. I'm a bit confused, by the way, by the reference to Givens and Bushman. There's a good article on the subject that I had occasion to read recently, and I think you'd find it interesting. [http://www.mormoninterpreter.com/the-spectacles-the-stone-the-hat-and-the-book-a-twenty-first-century-believers-view-of-the-book-of-mormon-translation/] That article seems to indicate that 19th century newspapers usually took the Martin Harris route (spectacles and curtain, not stone in hat) influencing people's perceptions on the matter, and that most people saw it that way until the 1980s. Anyway, if you feel like reading I'd be interested in hearing your thoughts on the article. <span style="font-family:times; text-shadow: 0 0 .2em #7af">~[[User:Adjwilley|Adjwilley]] <small>([[User talk:Adjwilley|talk]])</small></span> 04:23, 19 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::::That's a fine apologetic article that I think can be cited as a source for the addition to the caption that I've suggested: "One thing seems certain based upon witness accounts—during the period of the translation process after the loss of the 116 pages, Joseph sat in [Page 148] the open, without a curtain, dictating to his scribe while looking into his hat." |
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::::::As you say, it's not out of the question that Smith used a different translation method when he was behind the curtain dictating to Martin Harris; but none of the dictation taken by Harris became part of the Book of Mormon anyway.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 17:50, 19 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::::::Again, the question is not whether Smith looked into his hat, nor is it whether the pictures in ''Ensign'' portrayed that. The question is whether it is important and relevant enough to ''this'' article to highlight it in the image caption. Did church members actively try to rewrite history in this instance, or were they influenced by the majority of newspapers reporting that Smith used "spectacles"? Do sources agree on this point? (Nicholson argues the latter, Palmer the former, presumably...I don't have access to the full text.) Does the "translation" method even matter at all? (Nicholson says no, and I can't see why it would matter to a skeptical source, since from an unbeliever's perspective whether Smith used a stone, hat, glasses, or nothing, it's still fabrication instead of translation.) If it doesn't matter to anybody, why the big push to highlight it here? <span style="font-family:times; text-shadow: 0 0 .2em #7af">~[[User:Adjwilley|Adjwilley]] <small>([[User talk:Adjwilley|talk]])</small></span> 23:16, 19 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::::::The way the LDS Church has tried to ignore the hat is a remarkable illustration of a previous paragraph in the article: |
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::::::::<blockquote>Historian D. Michael Quinn, later excommunicated from the LDS Church, noted that traditional "Mormon apologists discuss such 'sensitive evidence' only when this evidence is so well known that ignoring it is almost impossible." In an oft-quoted speech to Church educators in 1981, Apostle Boyd Packer warned them from the temptation "to tell everything, whether it is worthy or faith-promoting or not....In an effort to be objective, impartial, and scholarly, a writer or a teacher may unwittingly be giving equal time to the adversary....Do not spread disease germs!"</blockquote> |
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::::::::Here's a case in which anti-Mormons, non-Mormons, Mormon scholars, Mormon apologists, and every other knowledgeable person is agreed: Joseph Smith buried his face in his hat while translating the Book of Mormon. Yet the Church chooses to portray the event otherwise. The difference in presentation is an excellent example of what "faithful history" can mean in practice.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 20:54, 20 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::::::::Then write a paragraph or two that is neither [[wp:OR]] nor [[wp:SYNTH]], which describe this specific example of "faithful history" that you want to highlight and put that in the text of that section. That's where such text belongs; you can't "draw someone into the article" with an image where there is no clearly related text in the section where the image is placed. -- [[Special:Contributions/208.81.184.4|208.81.184.4]] ([[User talk:208.81.184.4|talk]]) 16:57, 23 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::::::::Why not? Can you provide a Wikipedia rule that prohibits it?--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 19:02, 23 September 2013 (UTC) |
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[[File:Sprit of '76.2.jpeg|thumb|right|upright=0.5]] |
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:::::::::::It's a Wikipedia norm, and it's common sense. Image captions, like the Lead section, should reflect what's in the article. Sorry I've been slow to respond here, I've got a lot going on in real life, and I felt this conversation was distracting me from more important things. Speaking of importance, you still haven't answered my question about why ''this'' is important, and I've asked it twice. To me this image caption issue is roughly on the level of trying to use the caption for an image of Yankee Doodle to criticize A.M. Willard for having portrayed Doodle without a hat, when everyone knows he had a hat and even stuck a feather in it. The problem is, you are right about the hat, but you are wrong about the article. Simply restating your case over and over in different ways isn't going to make you right about the article. Until you can demonstrate that this is important (i.e. [[WP:N|Notable]]), relevant, and generally representative of the sources, there's probably not a lot you can do with this, although as 208 suggested, framing a non-OR/synth paragraph to go into the section is probably your best bet. I realize this is something you feel strongly about, and I've been trying to help you find a compromise, but I feel like things are going in circles again, and I don't have the time for that. <span style="font-family:times; text-shadow: 0 0 .2em #7af">~[[User:Adjwilley|Adjwilley]] <small>([[User talk:Adjwilley|talk]])</small></span> 20:05, 23 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::::::::::Could someone provide a Wikipedia rule that says the image captions have to explicitly illustrate what's already in the article? If there's no such rule, then we could take this disagreement to an appropriate dispute resolution forum. |
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::::::::::::Sorry that I've been unclear about the purpose of my proposed addition. I want to add a phrase to the picture caption stating that the LDS Church magazine ''Ensign'' has never portrayed Joseph Smith translating the Book of Mormon while staring into his hat because that fact so well reflects the subject of the article: the ambivalent relationship between Mormonism and history.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 20:37, 23 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::::::::::::<s>Since when does [[wp:Wikilawyering]] matter to you? Does "Frankly, Les, every time you start citing Wikipedia rules, I tune them out as Mormon smokescreen..." ring any bells? ([http://www.deseretnews.com/article/700105517/Wiki-Wars-In-battle-to-define-beliefs-Mormons-and-foes-wage-battle-on-Wikipedia.html?pg=all Here's] a refresher in case it slipped your mind.) -- [[Special:Contributions/208.81.184.4|208.81.184.4]] ([[User talk:208.81.184.4|talk]]) 17:58, 24 September 2013 (UTC)</s> |
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::::::::::::::Sorry for the cheep shot; it's obvious that I've become more than a little frustrated with this situation, and I should probably withdraw from further comment on this topic for awhile. -- [[Special:Contributions/208.81.184.4|208.81.184.4]] ([[User talk:208.81.184.4|talk]]) 18:16, 24 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::::::::::If there's no rule that image captions have to illustrate what's already in the article, could someone else compose a short compromise phrase to be added to the caption indicating that the ''Ensign'' has never portrayed Joseph Smith translating the Book of Mormon while staring into his hat? We all agree it's true, and I think that course would be preferable to dragging the question through dispute resolution.--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 20:35, 26 September 2013 (UTC) |
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:::::::::::::Why don't you try asking the question at [[WP:Village pump (policy)]]? That's not dispute resolution, and there are plenty of voices there who could probably answer the question for you. I expect the answer will be something along the lines of what I said: that there's no specific rule, but it's a general Wikipedia norm that image captions should reflect the article text. It's worth a shot, no?. (Replying to your comment earlier, I already understood ''what'' you want to do, I'm just not clear on why it's important, notable, relevant, representative of the sources, etc.) <span style="font-family:times; text-shadow: 0 0 .2em #7af">~[[User:Adjwilley|Adjwilley]] <small>([[User talk:Adjwilley|talk]])</small></span> 05:20, 27 September 2013 (UTC) |
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::::::::::::::I sincerely appreciate that thought, but I know the answer to the question as you've framed it without asking. The question "Do image captions generally reflect the article text?" is like asking a [[nisi prius]] judge, "Are most people indicted for crimes guilty as charged?" In both cases, it's easy to reply, "Certainly." And we would not want it any other way. The real question here is "Is it possible to include in a caption of an image a phrase not otherwise mentioned in the text?" (Or, to return to the legal parallel, "Is it possible that someone indicted for a crime might be innocent?") |
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::::::::::::::The reason the additional information in that caption is important, notable, and relevant is that it visually demonstrates the ambivalent relationship between Mormonism and history, which after all, is the emphasis of the article. (Of course, it would be better to compare ''both'' images: the historically incorrect picture of Joseph Smith studying the plates like a scholar and the religiously incorrect one of him staring into his hat.)--[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 19:03, 27 September 2013 (UTC) |
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===(not so) arbitrary break=== |
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Because there's been a very extensive Talk discussion about the caption, I wanted to post this first before making the edit. I think the edit I'm proposing runs along a bit of a different track than what's been said above, though, since I'm not proposing removing the image or caption, but rather adjusting it to be clearer to readers and more in line with the totality of what can be verified. |
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Joseph Smith's use of seer stones in translation has been discussed openly in official church publications as early as 1974, in [https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/friend/1974/09/a-peaceful-heart?lang=eng this ''Friend'' article], a publication meant for children. The seer stone being specifically placed in a hat appears in ''Ensign'' articles from [https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/ensign/1977/09/by-the-gift-and-power-of-god?lang=eng 1977] and[https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/ensign/1993/07/a-treasured-testament?lang=eng 1993]. I am not sure it is accurate to broadly say "The LDS Church magazine ''Ensign'' instead depicts Smith 'studying the plates much like an archaeologist or classicist.'" "Depict" isn't clearly describing art (written narratives are a "depiction" of things), and a reader might get the impression from the text that the quote comes from an ''Ensign'' article, and would only realize otherwise by specifically checking the footnote. (Though even that doesn't completely clear up the confusion, as I am still wondering if the quote might be from an ''Ensign'' article cited in ''Insider's View'', or if it's quoting Palmer himself from ''Insider's View''.) |
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This is not to discount the church's [https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/media/image/joseph-smith-translating-mormon-parson-25a0446?lang=eng divergent] [https://knowhy.bookofmormoncentral.org/sites/default/files/knowhy-img/users/user19/joseph-smith-breastplate.jpg artistic] [https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/church/news/viewpoint-testimonies-of-the-book-of-mormon?lang=eng portrayals], which were probably much better known than the articles were. (Perhaps what's most curious is that only one, from a church-produced children's picture book I think, actually includes the Urim and Thummim, which was central to the long-standing, sans-stone, traditional church narrative, but I digress.) But I do still think the caption could be worded better, as it makes it sound like ''Ensign'' has always, continues to always, and in the immediate present always depicts the translation process without the seer stone and hat. As above discussed, that can be verified as not being the case. I think the more accurate and better point to make is to focus on how and specify that the seer stone and hat are absent from official church-produced ''art'' from before the early-twenty-first century.* And that is a claim which can definitely be verified as ''being'' the case. |
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I propose this revised caption (change italicized): |
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"A''n independently created'' 21st-century representation, based on eye-witness accounts, of Joseph Smith translating the golden plates by examining ''seer'' stones in his hat. ''Church-produced artistic depictions of Smith's translation process did not include the stones or hat until the early-21st century''.'<sup>[23][24]</sup>" |
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Footnote 23 would be the same footnote that's in the article as of this writing: Palmer's ''An Insider's View of Mormon Origins'', pages 1–2. Footnote 24 could be [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKiJOAWNyAk this video], which provides an additional and accessible corroboration of the claim and specifically attests there being no official church art including the seer stone and hat (0:00–0:22, "For a long time [this is where we can get the 'from before the early-twenty-first century' claim], church art tended to depict the translation of the Book of Mormon as Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdrey sitting around a table, sometimes with the gold plates on the table, but that's not really the best match for what we know about the translation process [this, plus the rest of the video discussing the seer stone and hat technique and its absence from official church art, is where we can get the 'did not include the stones or hat' claim]."). [[User:Hydrangeans|Hydrangeans]] ([[She (pronoun)|she/her]] | [[User talk:Hydrangeans#top|talk]] | [[Special:Contributions/Hydrangeans|edits]]) 07:26, 14 May 2021 (UTC) |
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:I modified the caption, eliminating the Grant Palmer reference to ''Ensign''. Looking through Google images for "Joseph Smith translating the Book of Mormon," I noted a hat in some recent LDS portrayals, but they look nothing like what we would expect to see from the testimony of eye witnesses, for instance, [https://knowhy.bookofmormoncentral.org/knowhy/why-new-testament-words-and-phrases-are-in-the-book-of-mormon-part-8-were-these-expressions this very nicely drawn illustration] that shows Smith with one hand on a hat and another on the covered golden plates.[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 15:06, 14 May 2021 (UTC) |
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::The new caption does eliminate the previous confusion, though it also loses the sense of direct relevance to the article. You didn't provide an objection to the proposed revision; may I ask why you preferred your modification over the revision above I proposed in my message? |
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::For clarity on the talk page, I'd note that Robert Pack's piece is high production, but I believe it's an independent piece rather than a church-produced piece. Book of Mormon Central, the independent nonprofit, seems to have commissioned it from Pack. (When they use church-produced art, Book of Mormon Central usually references it as "via lds.org" or "via churchofjesuschrist.org.") Additionally, I'm not sure one could say Pack's art looks ''nothing'' like one would expect from witnesses, as it still aligns descriptions of the process in which Joseph Smith looks at the hat while the plates lie covered on the table (Richard Bushman, ''Rough Stone Rolling'', 71, 578n54). Though the hand-on-the-covered-plates is not specifically attested, and while witnesses say the plates covered up were sometimes on the table, witnesses also say that in plenty of cases Smith didn't have the plates on the table at all, linen cloth or no. |
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::The earliest ''church''-produced visual art of Smith with the seer stones and hat are likely [https://pool.fairlatterdaysaints.org/images/thumb/6/60/Anthony_Sweat_The_Seer_Stone.jpg/1000px-Anthony_Sweat_The_Seer_Stone.jpg these] [https://pool.fairlatterdaysaints.org/images/e/e0/Anthony_Sweat_Translating_with_Martin.jpg five] [https://pool.fairlatterdaysaints.org/images/thumb/5/53/Anthony_Sweat_Translating_with_Emma.jpg/1000px-Anthony_Sweat_Translating_with_Emma.jpg pieces,] [https://pool.fairlatterdaysaints.org/images/thumb/4/4e/Anthony_Sweat_Translating_with_Oliver.jpg/1000px-Anthony_Sweat_Translating_with_Oliver.jpg all] [https://pool.fairlatterdaysaints.org/images/thumb/3/37/Anthony_Sweat_Gift_and_Power_of_God_Scan_4mb.jpg/1000px-Anthony_Sweat_Gift_and_Power_of_God_Scan_4mb.jpg by] Anthony Sweat in 2015 ([https://www.fairlatterdaysaints.org/answers/Question:_What_Church_sources_discuss_either_the_use_of_the_seer_stone_or_the_stone_and_the_hat_as_part_of_the_Book_of_Mormon_translation_process%3F this page] can serve as secondary source verification of the pieces' dates and church-production provenances), and they're also the first church-produced visual art to show the sans-plates process with Smith's face close to the hat. These appeared in the BYU Religious Studies Center book ''From Darkness Unto Light: Joseph Smith's Translation and Publication of the Book of Mormon''. |
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::Probably the only other church-produced visual art showing Smith with the hat (though perhaps his face isn't as close to the hat as ought to be) is [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKiJOAWNyAk the previously linked video at 2:00] (released in 2015 on the church's Media Library and in 2018 on YouTube). [[User:Hydrangeans|Hydrangeans]] ([[She (pronoun)|she/her]] | [[User talk:Hydrangeans#top|talk]] | [[Special:Contributions/Hydrangeans|edits]]) 16:44, 14 May 2021 (UTC) |
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:::Right. His face should be right in the hat, blocking the light, which is why I preferred my own edit to your proposal. LDS are now willing to include a hat in the illustration so long as the portrayal doesn't really communicate how Smith used it--to translate the (usually) non-present golden plates by staring into a darkened space. |
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:::I realize my edit no longer makes a contrast between eye-witness reports and how the translation has traditionally been portrayed by the Church, but I thought the vast number of article readers would understand the implication anyway. I'm certainly willing to add a comparison though.[[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 15:05, 15 May 2021 (UTC) |
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::::In [https://pool.fairlatterdaysaints.org/images/e/e0/Anthony_Sweat_Translating_with_Martin.jpg these] [https://pool.fairlatterdaysaints.org/images/thumb/5/53/Anthony_Sweat_Translating_with_Emma.jpg/1000px-Anthony_Sweat_Translating_with_Emma.jpg pieces] [https://pool.fairlatterdaysaints.org/images/thumb/4/4e/Anthony_Sweat_Translating_with_Oliver.jpg/1000px-Anthony_Sweat_Translating_with_Oliver.jpg produced] for the church-sponsored Religious Studies Center, Joseph Smith's face indeed is portrayed as buried right in the hat to block out the light. |
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::::I'm still somewhat confused by the reticence toward the proposed edit, as the proposal seemed to do exactly what you said: "make a contrast between eye-witness reports and how the translation has traditionally been portrayed by the Church." Article readers may understand this by implication if they're familiar with the history of church artwork of the translation, but that's just one of many potential topics that would draw a reader to the Wikipedia page. I've made an edit on the page with some adjustments that I think captures the main thrust of the sources, which is that in the last 200 years, the vast majority of church-produced art depicting Smith's translation process has not accurately reflected eyewitness descriptions of the process. |
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::::''Independently-made art representing Joseph Smith translating the golden plates by examining seer stones in a hat. Eyewitnesses described this as Smith's primary dictation method, but very little church-produced visual art portrays this specific process.'' |
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::::I specify that the art on the Wikipedia page was independently made in order to clarify that it was ''not'' church-produced. I realize it's a lot of footnotes, but given the past controversy (even if eight years old), it seems worthwhile to rigorously cite everything in the sentence. Palmer, Sweat, Taves, and Goble all confirm the absence of visual art depicting Smith's seer-stones-in-hat translation process; the other two references confirm that such visual art is non-zero but still highly limited in number. [[User:Hydrangeans|Hydrangeans]] ([[She (pronoun)|she/her]] | [[User talk:Hydrangeans#top|talk]] | [[Special:Contributions/Hydrangeans|edits]]) 20:29, 15 May 2021 (UTC) |
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:::::I like what you did, though I tweaked the wording some. See what you think. [[User:John Foxe|John Foxe]] ([[User talk:John Foxe|talk]]) 19:47, 16 May 2021 (UTC) |
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OR/SYNTH issues with image caption
[edit]A couple of different iterations of the caption have been inserted in the last couple of days. I'm agreeing with anon208 that they all still suffer from a WP:SYNTH problem. In particular, it seems that the synthesis goes like this: A) A number of accounts describe the translation process with JS looking at the seerstones/U&T in the hat, B) an image on the LDS website has it a different way (a way that is based on a few other accounts), therefore C) the LDS Church is ignoring the accounts that mention the hat and promoting "faithful history" (the section of the article where this image appears). Beyond the OR/SYNTH issues, the conclusion that the church is ignoring those accounts is actually faulty because the accounts of using a seerstone (as opposed to the U&T) with and without the hat do appear in articles in the LDS "Ensign" magazine in the 70s, 80s, and 90s, (for example this article) and also in other publications by LDS church leaders around the same time. --FyzixFighter (talk) 00:09, 12 September 2013 (UTC)
- I'll concede on the seer stones, but not on the picture of the hat. The Church has never issued a picture of Smith translating with the hat because it's, well, so weird and would be a public relations disaster. So, what can I say or cite on that subject you wouldn't consider original research/synthesis?--John Foxe (talk) 20:10, 12 September 2013 (UTC)
- How about a reliable source that discusses the Church's choice of depictions of the translation process and speaks to this particular question? If no such reliable source exists, then on what/whose authority would Wikipedia be relying on to assert its significance to the topic? Also, your statement "The Church has never issued a picture of Smith translating with the hat because it's, well, so weird and would be a public relations disaster" is not only complete conjecture, but also soapboxing—it has no bearing on how the caption should be worded, so it's just a gratuitous dig at the LDS church. Given the tendency for soapboxing from any perspective to disrupt collaborative efforts, I think you need to be more circumspect in that regard. "Article talk pages should not be used by editors as platforms for their personal views on a subject." alanyst 23:06, 12 September 2013 (UTC)
- Let the Church publish such an image, and I'll repent in dust and ashes.--John Foxe (talk) 20:41, 13 September 2013 (UTC)
- I should probably explain my revert... I've been watching this for a bit, and while this iteration definitely had better sourcing, it still had lots of problems. First, it was way too long. In my browser the image caption was poking through three sections. Also, if lengthy quotes are discouraged in the article prose, what about captions? Lastly, while Grant Palmer probably deserves some weight, this was way over the top. (As far as I know, he is not widely regarded as a NPOV source and those are the sources we should be trying to represent in the article...I wish we could just cut out the bickering between apologetics and polemics and focus on making good articles.) I think that what you're trying to write belongs in the text of the article somewhere, and merits about a sentence of weight, paraphrasing what Palmer says instead of extensively quoting him. Also, as I said in my edit summary, it would be best to agree on a wording here before making any more "Bold" edits to the article. ~Adjwilley (talk) 00:19, 14 September 2013 (UTC)
- I'd be happy for you to suggest a compromise. As for Palmer, his book was peer-reviewed and has proper scholarly apparatus. On what authority can his work be excluded as POV?--John Foxe (talk) 19:56, 14 September 2013 (UTC)
- I'm not saying that it must be excluded as POV, I'm just saying it's not the best source. It's out there on the fringes and it's not something that mainstream scholars cite a lot (at least positively). As for being peer-reviewed and having "proper scholarly apparatus", one could say the same thing of any number of apologetic works. But you know this already. I'd suggest something along the lines of "Grant Palmer has criticized the church of publishing images that portray the Book of Mormon translation process without the seer stone or "interpreters" that witnesses say Smith placed in his hat." As for where that would go in the article, I'm not sure. It feels like it doesn't really fit anywhere and is being shoehorned in, which is probably why you highlighted it in the image caption in the first place. ~Adjwilley (talk) 00:25, 15 September 2013 (UTC)
- How about "Grant Palmer has noted that the LDS church magazine never depicted Smith looking into a hat but rather 'studying the plates much like an archaeologist or classicist might'"? That sentence is short enough to include in the caption—even the mention of Palmer might be dropped to make it shorter—but the footnote can include the references to the seven Ensign articles cited by Palmer. (Think of the picture and its caption as a "box" within the text.)
- No apologetic work published by the LDS Church is peer-reviewed. If a work by a Mormon about Mormonism can be peer-reviewed by say, historians of American religion generally, even the church would urge that it be published elsewhere because of the increased credibility that the publication would gain among non-believers. Terryl Givens' work is a good example.
- It really doesn't make a difference whether Palmer is someone whom scholars quote or not. No one here has argued that what Palmer says about this matter isn't true.--John Foxe (talk) 19:59, 15 September 2013 (UTC)
- Re: rephrase, that could possibly work with a couple tweaks, such as substituting the word noted for said. Lemme see if I can make an edit to that effect.
- Re: "No apologetic work published by the LDS Church is peer-reviewed." Perhaps, but that still doesn't invalidate my point. There are plenty of peer-reviewed apologetic works not published by the LDS Church.
- RE: "It doesn't make a difference whether Palmer is someone whom scholars quote or not..", Of course it makes a difference. Look at it this way: there are millions of "true" facts out there that can be used by scholars in their works. Good scholars are the ones who choose their facts wisely, and these are the ones who are well-respected and are cited by other scholars. The partisan "scholars" who are out to push a POV or agenda choose to publish the "true" facts that support their agenda. They might get cited positively by a few other partisan scholars who agree with them, will get a few negative reviews, and will then be ignored by the good, mainstream scholarly community. So if we want to write a good, neutral encyclopedia article, which scholars should we use to determine how much weight to give to all of the available "true" facts we have available? ~Adjwilley (talk) 20:32, 16 September 2013 (UTC)
- My point is that Palmer is stating what we agree to be true. No one's argued that Palmer is wrong, that Ensign did indeed publish an image of Joseph Smith looking in a hat. Palmer's just a convenient secondary source for citing the obvious—which I can't do on my own because it's considered OR/SYNTH here at Wikipedia.--John Foxe (talk) 22:33, 16 September 2013 (UTC)
- I'm not saying that it must be excluded as POV, I'm just saying it's not the best source. It's out there on the fringes and it's not something that mainstream scholars cite a lot (at least positively). As for being peer-reviewed and having "proper scholarly apparatus", one could say the same thing of any number of apologetic works. But you know this already. I'd suggest something along the lines of "Grant Palmer has criticized the church of publishing images that portray the Book of Mormon translation process without the seer stone or "interpreters" that witnesses say Smith placed in his hat." As for where that would go in the article, I'm not sure. It feels like it doesn't really fit anywhere and is being shoehorned in, which is probably why you highlighted it in the image caption in the first place. ~Adjwilley (talk) 00:25, 15 September 2013 (UTC)
- I'd be happy for you to suggest a compromise. As for Palmer, his book was peer-reviewed and has proper scholarly apparatus. On what authority can his work be excluded as POV?--John Foxe (talk) 19:56, 14 September 2013 (UTC)
- I should probably explain my revert... I've been watching this for a bit, and while this iteration definitely had better sourcing, it still had lots of problems. First, it was way too long. In my browser the image caption was poking through three sections. Also, if lengthy quotes are discouraged in the article prose, what about captions? Lastly, while Grant Palmer probably deserves some weight, this was way over the top. (As far as I know, he is not widely regarded as a NPOV source and those are the sources we should be trying to represent in the article...I wish we could just cut out the bickering between apologetics and polemics and focus on making good articles.) I think that what you're trying to write belongs in the text of the article somewhere, and merits about a sentence of weight, paraphrasing what Palmer says instead of extensively quoting him. Also, as I said in my edit summary, it would be best to agree on a wording here before making any more "Bold" edits to the article. ~Adjwilley (talk) 00:19, 14 September 2013 (UTC)
- Let the Church publish such an image, and I'll repent in dust and ashes.--John Foxe (talk) 20:41, 13 September 2013 (UTC)
- How about a reliable source that discusses the Church's choice of depictions of the translation process and speaks to this particular question? If no such reliable source exists, then on what/whose authority would Wikipedia be relying on to assert its significance to the topic? Also, your statement "The Church has never issued a picture of Smith translating with the hat because it's, well, so weird and would be a public relations disaster" is not only complete conjecture, but also soapboxing—it has no bearing on how the caption should be worded, so it's just a gratuitous dig at the LDS church. Given the tendency for soapboxing from any perspective to disrupt collaborative efforts, I think you need to be more circumspect in that regard. "Article talk pages should not be used by editors as platforms for their personal views on a subject." alanyst 23:06, 12 September 2013 (UTC)
I still think that none of that should be added to the description of this illustration. Images (and the descriptions of them) are not used here on WP for directly making a point; instead they are used for further illustrating information that is already described in the text, especially when it which can't be adequately described exclusively only in text — the point is that images are complementary to the text in the article body, and image descriptions are not a viable battleground. If John Foxe wants to describe what he sees as an issue with the artistic depictions of how JSJr dictated the text of the Book of Mormon, fine, lets write a balanced wp:NPOV paragraph or two with multiple wp:RS that describes this, but that still would not mean we need to change the image description. -- 208.81.184.4 (talk) 21:31, 16 September 2013 (UTC)
- On what authority can't illustrations be used here to make a point? Textbooks are filled with such things, and they're very effective at grabbing the attention of students. Why not here?--John Foxe (talk) 22:33, 16 September 2013 (UTC)
- It is a general Wikipedia norm that images need to be directly relevant to the article, and captions shouldn't be presenting new information that's not already in the text. (I was ignoring that when I made my edit, for the sake of compromise.) As for using illustrations to make a Point, I dunno...I keep getting the nagging feeling that there is some sort of soapboxing at the heart of all this, and language like that doesn't help. ~Adjwilley (talk) 00:09, 17 September 2013 (UTC)
- @John Foxe: Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, not a textbook: one very important difference is that textbooks by their very nature contain wp:OR/wp:SYNTH. The basic "criteria for a good caption", from wp:Manual of Style/Captions: "1. clearly identifies the subject of the picture, without detailing the obvious. 2. is succinct. 3. establishes the picture's relevance to the article. 4. provides context for the picture. 5. draws the reader into the article". From wp:Manual of Style/Accessibility#Images "2. Images should contain a caption, either using the built in image syntax or a secondary line of text. The caption should concisely describe the meaning of the image, the essential information it is trying to convey. ... 5. Images should be inside the section they belong to (after the heading and after any links to other articles), and not in the heading nor at the end of the previous section, otherwise screen readers would read the image (and its textual alternative) in a different section; as they would appear to viewers of the mobile site." The purpose of captions are to succinctly describe what is depicted by images, and the purpose of images are to illustrate article text: leave the apoligetics & polemics to the article text itself. -- 208.81.184.4 (talk) 00:14, 17 September 2013 (UTC)
- A short addition to the caption would do everything mandated in the MoS, especially "establish the picture's relevance to the article" and "draw the reader into the article." No soapboxing going on at all. We're all agreed that the LDS Church has never portrayed Joseph Smith translating the BoM while looking into his hat despite what Givens and Bushman say.--John Foxe (talk) 21:47, 17 September 2013 (UTC)
- I don't think the question has been whether Smith ever looked into his hat, although it's not out of the question that he tried to study them without the hat, particularly near the beginning of the translation process. I'm a bit confused, by the way, by the reference to Givens and Bushman. There's a good article on the subject that I had occasion to read recently, and I think you'd find it interesting. [1] That article seems to indicate that 19th century newspapers usually took the Martin Harris route (spectacles and curtain, not stone in hat) influencing people's perceptions on the matter, and that most people saw it that way until the 1980s. Anyway, if you feel like reading I'd be interested in hearing your thoughts on the article. ~Adjwilley (talk) 04:23, 19 September 2013 (UTC)
- That's a fine apologetic article that I think can be cited as a source for the addition to the caption that I've suggested: "One thing seems certain based upon witness accounts—during the period of the translation process after the loss of the 116 pages, Joseph sat in [Page 148] the open, without a curtain, dictating to his scribe while looking into his hat."
- As you say, it's not out of the question that Smith used a different translation method when he was behind the curtain dictating to Martin Harris; but none of the dictation taken by Harris became part of the Book of Mormon anyway.--John Foxe (talk) 17:50, 19 September 2013 (UTC)
- Again, the question is not whether Smith looked into his hat, nor is it whether the pictures in Ensign portrayed that. The question is whether it is important and relevant enough to this article to highlight it in the image caption. Did church members actively try to rewrite history in this instance, or were they influenced by the majority of newspapers reporting that Smith used "spectacles"? Do sources agree on this point? (Nicholson argues the latter, Palmer the former, presumably...I don't have access to the full text.) Does the "translation" method even matter at all? (Nicholson says no, and I can't see why it would matter to a skeptical source, since from an unbeliever's perspective whether Smith used a stone, hat, glasses, or nothing, it's still fabrication instead of translation.) If it doesn't matter to anybody, why the big push to highlight it here? ~Adjwilley (talk) 23:16, 19 September 2013 (UTC)
- The way the LDS Church has tried to ignore the hat is a remarkable illustration of a previous paragraph in the article:
Historian D. Michael Quinn, later excommunicated from the LDS Church, noted that traditional "Mormon apologists discuss such 'sensitive evidence' only when this evidence is so well known that ignoring it is almost impossible." In an oft-quoted speech to Church educators in 1981, Apostle Boyd Packer warned them from the temptation "to tell everything, whether it is worthy or faith-promoting or not....In an effort to be objective, impartial, and scholarly, a writer or a teacher may unwittingly be giving equal time to the adversary....Do not spread disease germs!"
- Here's a case in which anti-Mormons, non-Mormons, Mormon scholars, Mormon apologists, and every other knowledgeable person is agreed: Joseph Smith buried his face in his hat while translating the Book of Mormon. Yet the Church chooses to portray the event otherwise. The difference in presentation is an excellent example of what "faithful history" can mean in practice.--John Foxe (talk) 20:54, 20 September 2013 (UTC)
- Then write a paragraph or two that is neither wp:OR nor wp:SYNTH, which describe this specific example of "faithful history" that you want to highlight and put that in the text of that section. That's where such text belongs; you can't "draw someone into the article" with an image where there is no clearly related text in the section where the image is placed. -- 208.81.184.4 (talk) 16:57, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
- Why not? Can you provide a Wikipedia rule that prohibits it?--John Foxe (talk) 19:02, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
- Then write a paragraph or two that is neither wp:OR nor wp:SYNTH, which describe this specific example of "faithful history" that you want to highlight and put that in the text of that section. That's where such text belongs; you can't "draw someone into the article" with an image where there is no clearly related text in the section where the image is placed. -- 208.81.184.4 (talk) 16:57, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
- Again, the question is not whether Smith looked into his hat, nor is it whether the pictures in Ensign portrayed that. The question is whether it is important and relevant enough to this article to highlight it in the image caption. Did church members actively try to rewrite history in this instance, or were they influenced by the majority of newspapers reporting that Smith used "spectacles"? Do sources agree on this point? (Nicholson argues the latter, Palmer the former, presumably...I don't have access to the full text.) Does the "translation" method even matter at all? (Nicholson says no, and I can't see why it would matter to a skeptical source, since from an unbeliever's perspective whether Smith used a stone, hat, glasses, or nothing, it's still fabrication instead of translation.) If it doesn't matter to anybody, why the big push to highlight it here? ~Adjwilley (talk) 23:16, 19 September 2013 (UTC)
- I don't think the question has been whether Smith ever looked into his hat, although it's not out of the question that he tried to study them without the hat, particularly near the beginning of the translation process. I'm a bit confused, by the way, by the reference to Givens and Bushman. There's a good article on the subject that I had occasion to read recently, and I think you'd find it interesting. [1] That article seems to indicate that 19th century newspapers usually took the Martin Harris route (spectacles and curtain, not stone in hat) influencing people's perceptions on the matter, and that most people saw it that way until the 1980s. Anyway, if you feel like reading I'd be interested in hearing your thoughts on the article. ~Adjwilley (talk) 04:23, 19 September 2013 (UTC)
- A short addition to the caption would do everything mandated in the MoS, especially "establish the picture's relevance to the article" and "draw the reader into the article." No soapboxing going on at all. We're all agreed that the LDS Church has never portrayed Joseph Smith translating the BoM while looking into his hat despite what Givens and Bushman say.--John Foxe (talk) 21:47, 17 September 2013 (UTC)
- @John Foxe: Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, not a textbook: one very important difference is that textbooks by their very nature contain wp:OR/wp:SYNTH. The basic "criteria for a good caption", from wp:Manual of Style/Captions: "1. clearly identifies the subject of the picture, without detailing the obvious. 2. is succinct. 3. establishes the picture's relevance to the article. 4. provides context for the picture. 5. draws the reader into the article". From wp:Manual of Style/Accessibility#Images "2. Images should contain a caption, either using the built in image syntax or a secondary line of text. The caption should concisely describe the meaning of the image, the essential information it is trying to convey. ... 5. Images should be inside the section they belong to (after the heading and after any links to other articles), and not in the heading nor at the end of the previous section, otherwise screen readers would read the image (and its textual alternative) in a different section; as they would appear to viewers of the mobile site." The purpose of captions are to succinctly describe what is depicted by images, and the purpose of images are to illustrate article text: leave the apoligetics & polemics to the article text itself. -- 208.81.184.4 (talk) 00:14, 17 September 2013 (UTC)
- It is a general Wikipedia norm that images need to be directly relevant to the article, and captions shouldn't be presenting new information that's not already in the text. (I was ignoring that when I made my edit, for the sake of compromise.) As for using illustrations to make a Point, I dunno...I keep getting the nagging feeling that there is some sort of soapboxing at the heart of all this, and language like that doesn't help. ~Adjwilley (talk) 00:09, 17 September 2013 (UTC)
- It's a Wikipedia norm, and it's common sense. Image captions, like the Lead section, should reflect what's in the article. Sorry I've been slow to respond here, I've got a lot going on in real life, and I felt this conversation was distracting me from more important things. Speaking of importance, you still haven't answered my question about why this is important, and I've asked it twice. To me this image caption issue is roughly on the level of trying to use the caption for an image of Yankee Doodle to criticize A.M. Willard for having portrayed Doodle without a hat, when everyone knows he had a hat and even stuck a feather in it. The problem is, you are right about the hat, but you are wrong about the article. Simply restating your case over and over in different ways isn't going to make you right about the article. Until you can demonstrate that this is important (i.e. Notable), relevant, and generally representative of the sources, there's probably not a lot you can do with this, although as 208 suggested, framing a non-OR/synth paragraph to go into the section is probably your best bet. I realize this is something you feel strongly about, and I've been trying to help you find a compromise, but I feel like things are going in circles again, and I don't have the time for that. ~Adjwilley (talk) 20:05, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
- Could someone provide a Wikipedia rule that says the image captions have to explicitly illustrate what's already in the article? If there's no such rule, then we could take this disagreement to an appropriate dispute resolution forum.
- Sorry that I've been unclear about the purpose of my proposed addition. I want to add a phrase to the picture caption stating that the LDS Church magazine Ensign has never portrayed Joseph Smith translating the Book of Mormon while staring into his hat because that fact so well reflects the subject of the article: the ambivalent relationship between Mormonism and history.--John Foxe (talk) 20:37, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
Since when does wp:Wikilawyering matter to you? Does "Frankly, Les, every time you start citing Wikipedia rules, I tune them out as Mormon smokescreen..." ring any bells? (Here's a refresher in case it slipped your mind.) -- 208.81.184.4 (talk) 17:58, 24 September 2013 (UTC)- Sorry for the cheep shot; it's obvious that I've become more than a little frustrated with this situation, and I should probably withdraw from further comment on this topic for awhile. -- 208.81.184.4 (talk) 18:16, 24 September 2013 (UTC)
- If there's no rule that image captions have to illustrate what's already in the article, could someone else compose a short compromise phrase to be added to the caption indicating that the Ensign has never portrayed Joseph Smith translating the Book of Mormon while staring into his hat? We all agree it's true, and I think that course would be preferable to dragging the question through dispute resolution.--John Foxe (talk) 20:35, 26 September 2013 (UTC)
- Why don't you try asking the question at WP:Village pump (policy)? That's not dispute resolution, and there are plenty of voices there who could probably answer the question for you. I expect the answer will be something along the lines of what I said: that there's no specific rule, but it's a general Wikipedia norm that image captions should reflect the article text. It's worth a shot, no?. (Replying to your comment earlier, I already understood what you want to do, I'm just not clear on why it's important, notable, relevant, representative of the sources, etc.) ~Adjwilley (talk) 05:20, 27 September 2013 (UTC)
- I sincerely appreciate that thought, but I know the answer to the question as you've framed it without asking. The question "Do image captions generally reflect the article text?" is like asking a nisi prius judge, "Are most people indicted for crimes guilty as charged?" In both cases, it's easy to reply, "Certainly." And we would not want it any other way. The real question here is "Is it possible to include in a caption of an image a phrase not otherwise mentioned in the text?" (Or, to return to the legal parallel, "Is it possible that someone indicted for a crime might be innocent?")
- The reason the additional information in that caption is important, notable, and relevant is that it visually demonstrates the ambivalent relationship between Mormonism and history, which after all, is the emphasis of the article. (Of course, it would be better to compare both images: the historically incorrect picture of Joseph Smith studying the plates like a scholar and the religiously incorrect one of him staring into his hat.)--John Foxe (talk) 19:03, 27 September 2013 (UTC)
- Why don't you try asking the question at WP:Village pump (policy)? That's not dispute resolution, and there are plenty of voices there who could probably answer the question for you. I expect the answer will be something along the lines of what I said: that there's no specific rule, but it's a general Wikipedia norm that image captions should reflect the article text. It's worth a shot, no?. (Replying to your comment earlier, I already understood what you want to do, I'm just not clear on why it's important, notable, relevant, representative of the sources, etc.) ~Adjwilley (talk) 05:20, 27 September 2013 (UTC)
- It's a Wikipedia norm, and it's common sense. Image captions, like the Lead section, should reflect what's in the article. Sorry I've been slow to respond here, I've got a lot going on in real life, and I felt this conversation was distracting me from more important things. Speaking of importance, you still haven't answered my question about why this is important, and I've asked it twice. To me this image caption issue is roughly on the level of trying to use the caption for an image of Yankee Doodle to criticize A.M. Willard for having portrayed Doodle without a hat, when everyone knows he had a hat and even stuck a feather in it. The problem is, you are right about the hat, but you are wrong about the article. Simply restating your case over and over in different ways isn't going to make you right about the article. Until you can demonstrate that this is important (i.e. Notable), relevant, and generally representative of the sources, there's probably not a lot you can do with this, although as 208 suggested, framing a non-OR/synth paragraph to go into the section is probably your best bet. I realize this is something you feel strongly about, and I've been trying to help you find a compromise, but I feel like things are going in circles again, and I don't have the time for that. ~Adjwilley (talk) 20:05, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
(not so) arbitrary break
[edit]Because there's been a very extensive Talk discussion about the caption, I wanted to post this first before making the edit. I think the edit I'm proposing runs along a bit of a different track than what's been said above, though, since I'm not proposing removing the image or caption, but rather adjusting it to be clearer to readers and more in line with the totality of what can be verified.
Joseph Smith's use of seer stones in translation has been discussed openly in official church publications as early as 1974, in this Friend article, a publication meant for children. The seer stone being specifically placed in a hat appears in Ensign articles from 1977 and1993. I am not sure it is accurate to broadly say "The LDS Church magazine Ensign instead depicts Smith 'studying the plates much like an archaeologist or classicist.'" "Depict" isn't clearly describing art (written narratives are a "depiction" of things), and a reader might get the impression from the text that the quote comes from an Ensign article, and would only realize otherwise by specifically checking the footnote. (Though even that doesn't completely clear up the confusion, as I am still wondering if the quote might be from an Ensign article cited in Insider's View, or if it's quoting Palmer himself from Insider's View.)
This is not to discount the church's divergent artistic portrayals, which were probably much better known than the articles were. (Perhaps what's most curious is that only one, from a church-produced children's picture book I think, actually includes the Urim and Thummim, which was central to the long-standing, sans-stone, traditional church narrative, but I digress.) But I do still think the caption could be worded better, as it makes it sound like Ensign has always, continues to always, and in the immediate present always depicts the translation process without the seer stone and hat. As above discussed, that can be verified as not being the case. I think the more accurate and better point to make is to focus on how and specify that the seer stone and hat are absent from official church-produced art from before the early-twenty-first century.* And that is a claim which can definitely be verified as being the case.
I propose this revised caption (change italicized):
"An independently created 21st-century representation, based on eye-witness accounts, of Joseph Smith translating the golden plates by examining seer stones in his hat. Church-produced artistic depictions of Smith's translation process did not include the stones or hat until the early-21st century.'[23][24]"
Footnote 23 would be the same footnote that's in the article as of this writing: Palmer's An Insider's View of Mormon Origins, pages 1–2. Footnote 24 could be this video, which provides an additional and accessible corroboration of the claim and specifically attests there being no official church art including the seer stone and hat (0:00–0:22, "For a long time [this is where we can get the 'from before the early-twenty-first century' claim], church art tended to depict the translation of the Book of Mormon as Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdrey sitting around a table, sometimes with the gold plates on the table, but that's not really the best match for what we know about the translation process [this, plus the rest of the video discussing the seer stone and hat technique and its absence from official church art, is where we can get the 'did not include the stones or hat' claim]."). Hydrangeans (she/her | talk | edits) 07:26, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
- I modified the caption, eliminating the Grant Palmer reference to Ensign. Looking through Google images for "Joseph Smith translating the Book of Mormon," I noted a hat in some recent LDS portrayals, but they look nothing like what we would expect to see from the testimony of eye witnesses, for instance, this very nicely drawn illustration that shows Smith with one hand on a hat and another on the covered golden plates.John Foxe (talk) 15:06, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
- The new caption does eliminate the previous confusion, though it also loses the sense of direct relevance to the article. You didn't provide an objection to the proposed revision; may I ask why you preferred your modification over the revision above I proposed in my message?
- For clarity on the talk page, I'd note that Robert Pack's piece is high production, but I believe it's an independent piece rather than a church-produced piece. Book of Mormon Central, the independent nonprofit, seems to have commissioned it from Pack. (When they use church-produced art, Book of Mormon Central usually references it as "via lds.org" or "via churchofjesuschrist.org.") Additionally, I'm not sure one could say Pack's art looks nothing like one would expect from witnesses, as it still aligns descriptions of the process in which Joseph Smith looks at the hat while the plates lie covered on the table (Richard Bushman, Rough Stone Rolling, 71, 578n54). Though the hand-on-the-covered-plates is not specifically attested, and while witnesses say the plates covered up were sometimes on the table, witnesses also say that in plenty of cases Smith didn't have the plates on the table at all, linen cloth or no.
- The earliest church-produced visual art of Smith with the seer stones and hat are likely these five pieces, all by Anthony Sweat in 2015 (this page can serve as secondary source verification of the pieces' dates and church-production provenances), and they're also the first church-produced visual art to show the sans-plates process with Smith's face close to the hat. These appeared in the BYU Religious Studies Center book From Darkness Unto Light: Joseph Smith's Translation and Publication of the Book of Mormon.
- Probably the only other church-produced visual art showing Smith with the hat (though perhaps his face isn't as close to the hat as ought to be) is the previously linked video at 2:00 (released in 2015 on the church's Media Library and in 2018 on YouTube). Hydrangeans (she/her | talk | edits) 16:44, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
- Right. His face should be right in the hat, blocking the light, which is why I preferred my own edit to your proposal. LDS are now willing to include a hat in the illustration so long as the portrayal doesn't really communicate how Smith used it--to translate the (usually) non-present golden plates by staring into a darkened space.
- I realize my edit no longer makes a contrast between eye-witness reports and how the translation has traditionally been portrayed by the Church, but I thought the vast number of article readers would understand the implication anyway. I'm certainly willing to add a comparison though.John Foxe (talk) 15:05, 15 May 2021 (UTC)
- In these pieces produced for the church-sponsored Religious Studies Center, Joseph Smith's face indeed is portrayed as buried right in the hat to block out the light.
- I'm still somewhat confused by the reticence toward the proposed edit, as the proposal seemed to do exactly what you said: "make a contrast between eye-witness reports and how the translation has traditionally been portrayed by the Church." Article readers may understand this by implication if they're familiar with the history of church artwork of the translation, but that's just one of many potential topics that would draw a reader to the Wikipedia page. I've made an edit on the page with some adjustments that I think captures the main thrust of the sources, which is that in the last 200 years, the vast majority of church-produced art depicting Smith's translation process has not accurately reflected eyewitness descriptions of the process.
- Independently-made art representing Joseph Smith translating the golden plates by examining seer stones in a hat. Eyewitnesses described this as Smith's primary dictation method, but very little church-produced visual art portrays this specific process.
- I specify that the art on the Wikipedia page was independently made in order to clarify that it was not church-produced. I realize it's a lot of footnotes, but given the past controversy (even if eight years old), it seems worthwhile to rigorously cite everything in the sentence. Palmer, Sweat, Taves, and Goble all confirm the absence of visual art depicting Smith's seer-stones-in-hat translation process; the other two references confirm that such visual art is non-zero but still highly limited in number. Hydrangeans (she/her | talk | edits) 20:29, 15 May 2021 (UTC)
- I like what you did, though I tweaked the wording some. See what you think. John Foxe (talk) 19:47, 16 May 2021 (UTC)
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