nomo wrote:Of course, compared to Einstein, Steven Jones is nothing but (I suspect) a well-meaning hack. I mean, seriously, penning a book about how Jesus purportedly visited South America 2,000 years ago isn't even remotely on the same intellectual level. So excuse me for remaining skeptical when the two champions of the so-called scientific research of Controlled Demolition are a theology professor and a Mormon.
1) Jones and another physicist wrote the 1982 (?) paper with new information on the behavior of sub-atomic particles. It wasn't just Jones. AND their findings were confirmed in 1985 by other physicists. The scientific method was used, presented in an established journal, peer-reviewed, and confirmed.
So much for your charge of "hack." You might try some research, too, nomo. Then you'd know this.
Jones quotes the Bible with this rational verse-
"Prove all things. Hold fast that which is good."
Just a reminder that there are a few things worth reading in the Bible as good advice despite lots of horrible stuff. Such are the works of men. (There's my viewpoint.)
2) No, Jones didn't "pen a book" about Jesus in South America. He wrote an essay about archaelogical evidence of Mayan cultural artifacts representing a deity figure with similar characteristics as those attributed to Jesus - hand wounds, rising from the dead, healing the sick, etc.
And he cited photographic evidence of artifacts in an examination of hypothesis using scientific methods to see if some of the claims of the Book of Mormon could be validated.
This is exactly the kind of hypothetical thinking followed by research that a scientist would use, isn't it? Yes, I know. Much more of this warranted in theology but all inquiry eventually leads to 'can't know until you die and then who can you tell?' Oh well.
Have you read this paper? I have even though the photos of the artifacts are now dead links. Too bad. It's interesting.
Here it is...allegedly. I don't have any way to authenticate it -
http://web.archive.org/web/20060114081702/http://www.physics.byu.edu/faculty/jones/rel491/handstext+and+figures.htm
I quote only non-LDS (Latter Day Saints aka Mormon-HMW) sources in this paper, by the way. And all of the artwork pre-dates Columbus by many years.
Several years ago, an idea popped into my head: Would people in the New World who also saw Jesus Christ leave memorials of this supernal experience by showing marked hands of Deity in their artwork? So I began a search with the following hypothesis-to be tested: Ancient artwork portraying a deity with deliberate markings on his hands will be found somewhere in the Americas. A crazy idea, maybe - but wait till you see the artwork of the ancient Maya!
....
The notion of a Deity who dies then is resurrected is remarkable among the Maya and reminiscent of the Christian belief. Striking indeed is the fact that the visible foot and both hands of this Deity as he died are each marked by a round spot [Figure 1].
.....
The hypothesis that started my search, that Christ's "other sheep" would have artwork depicting deliberately marked hands, has led to a remarkable conclusion: Hands (and wrists) with clear holes or marks are depicted in the art as well as the hieroglyphic writings of the Maya of Middle America, dating from within about 200 years of the time of Christ. These hands are associated with Itzamna, a kindly Deity associated with healing and teaching the people. He is shown dying in Mayan art, later to be resurrected. Finally, the Maya await the return of this great resurrected Deity in the not-distant future. [See Jones, 99]
These discoveries have provided me a deeper appreciation for the reality of the resurrection of Jesus and of His visit to "other sheep" who heard His voice and saw His wounded hands as did Thomas. My hope is that these new insights will encourage you to seriously consider the Book of Mormon, Another Testament of Christ. Why don't you start reading right away? The Apostle Paul said: "Prove all things. Hold fast that which is good." (I Thessalonians 5:21) Why not? I've done this and for me, the Book of Mormon is a remarkable new witness for Christ, standing as a companion to the Bible.
Appendix: Excerpts from a beautiful Mesoamerican poem that I believe is relevant, providing further insights into the beliefs of the Maya:
The kettle drums color of jade resound,
Brilliant dew has fallen over the earth.
In the house of yellow feathers
it pours down with force.
His son has come down, descended there in the springtime.
He is the Giver of Life.
His songs make flourish, he adorns himself.
O friends, let us rejoice, let us embrace one another.
We walk the flowering earth.
Nothing can bring an end here to flowers and songs,
they are perpetuated in the house of the Giver of Life.
Friendship is a rain of precious flowers.
We are here, we are living here,
but we are only beggars O my friends.
Where do we go, oh! Where do we go?
Are we dead beyond, or do we yet live?
Will there be existence again?
Will the joy of the Giver of Life be there again?
Where is the source of light, since that which gives life hides itself?
Let our hearts not be troubled.
One day we must go, one night we will descend into the region of mystery.
We will have gone to His house,
but our word shall live here on earth.
Remove trouble from your hears, O my friends.
Indeed one must go elsewhere; beyond, happiness exists.
O Lord of the close vicinity, it is beyond, with those who dwell in Your house,
that I will sing songs to You, in the innermost of heaven.
My heart rises; I fix my eyes upon You, next to You, beside You, O Giver of Life!
So Jones shows here and effort to validate a comprehensive explanation for even his spirituality whether you think he succeeds or not. When determining someone's abilities and motives, as we are here, it really is "the thought that counts." And Jones shows his work, just as my math teacher urged me to when I was a kid.
Personally, I'm not happy about the irrational side of mystery religions myself and it is only from experience with many humans that I've seen that people aren't critical of religious ideas and books in the same way they are with other things.
Example:
Having a new president of the US take an oath to "defend the Constitution" by using a Bible is already a violation of that very oath and creates an intellectual and legal schizophrenia in our culture which is being exploited ruthlessly by theo-fascists called Dominionists.
So, nomo, I understand where you are coming from and even empathize but people are (usually) more complex than 'religion vs. science.'
Jones passes for rational and knowledgable in my book.