T
Tarquin
Guest
It is inconsistent with the description of the culture of the people described in the Book of Mormon.The theory that horses could have existed in a small numbers as an elite status symbol is one possibility and is not inconsistent with the archeological record.
It is also possible that the horses were taken up in UFOs. I have no evidence of this however. What evidence do you have that small numbers of Pleistocene or whatever age horses survived into Book of Mormon “times”?… but we know that horses existed in the Americas and were not alive here when Columbus arrived. … So, large populations of ancient horses in America died, it is not inconceivable that small numbers of horses could have survived/existed during BOM times and went extinct without leaving much of evidence.
I believe this is called a “straw man” argument. Unless someone here has claimed that Joseph got the idea of horses from plains Indians riding horses. Whether Smith knew that some Indians rode horses or not, he did know that there were horses in America, in his time. Coe can postulate all he wants. If we are going to talk about great Americans, however, we will need specifics, not unsubstantiated assertions.Michael Coe postulated that Joseph Smith (again who Coe finds to be one of the greatest Americans to ever live) naturally included horses in his made up book, but Coe is wrong on two accounts here. First, Coe claims Joseph Smith would be familiar with Indians riding horses, that is not likely to be true as the plains Indians where little known in Joseph time (a few articles about Lewis and Clark were likely available, but Lewis and Clark only became the phenomena we know today much after the BOM). Second, if Joseph was aware of plains Indians and their horses, his BOM horse culture is nothing like that (it is nothing like any known horse culture).
I know you are going to provide us with some citations for this, I just know it.Alternatively, explorers called animals “horses” that were not and Mesoamericans call horses animals they were familiar with that were quite unrelated to horses. This theory postulates that whatever was translated as “horse” was not a horse.
The Book of Mormon claims the existence of horses in the Americas, North and South, with equipage of some sort, and with chariots, in fact a great number between 600 BC and 400 AD.Again, horses IMO are negative evidence for the BOM. I do not believe either explanation empties this criticism of its impact.