X
XuDan
Guest
There is a link in post #2 (linkified) that explores this book and it’s parallels, you may find it interesting. Here’s the link again: wordtreefoundation.github.io/thelatewar/How wonderful. Thank, you, TOmNossor. This healthcare technologist pointed to a book I have not read before, but genuinely looks like fun: “The Late War Between the United States and Great Britain. The latter is a history of the war of 1812 deliberately written in a scriptural style. A traditional (non-statistical) comparison between this text and the Book of Mormon was apparently introduced by Rick Grunder in his 2008 bibliography Mormon Parallels.” The book is available, as so many are, at archive.org: archive.org/details/latewarbetweenun00inhunt I began reading it, then skimming through it. Even a brief glance shows There are so many phrases pre-echoing, and allusions to passages in, the Book of Mormon, that I have absolutely no doubt that this 1816 book was used by the author of the Book of Mormon.
I do hope you will give the pertinent sentences of McGuire that you believe relate to this thread. I would like to read them. But on the other hand, I am sorry, mate, I’ve reached my limit for that post of yours that contained that link. You gave links and references, and they and you alluded to further articles. It takes considerable time and effort to examine those. I have read and re-read thousands of words now, resulting from wanting to understand what you were arguing in a single post. It is frustrating when one reads a linked article, as I have a couple of times in those links, and finds that it is generally or completely irrelevant to the discussion, or so poorly argued that it is useful to neither side of a discussion.
Frankly, I enjoy research. That is why I often do read the links and do research beyond them. I am usually willing to read a person’s reasoning, and do expect them to use quotes, and present a summary or detailed explanation of their reason for their opinions (beliefs). However, I am just not willing to struggle through McGuire’s site to find what you, not I, believe is the relevant argument in all that. If you cannot quote the significant passages, or give an accurate summation of the arguments you want us to know about, from some people’s perspective (not mine) you might as well say nothing, as the effect will be about the same for a lot of people. Some people never click on links, no matter what side of a discussion they support. So a half dozen links are not a dazzling argument. They are hardly more likely to have a persuasive effect on people than is an unposted post.
Unfortunately, I doubt you’ll get TOm to actually provide anything of what you’re asking. People here have been making similar requests of him for a while now, to no avail.