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He has also posted a helpful YouTube video presenting his findings which you can find [https://youtu.be/Q7apGKmfWKQ here]. | He has also posted a helpful YouTube video presenting his findings which you can find [https://youtu.be/Q7apGKmfWKQ here]. | ||
− | In his own words: “Donofrio argues that this list of phrases should not be found in an English translation of an ancient document like the Book of Mormon. Nearly all of these phrases, however, can be found in 18th and 19th century English translations of ancient documents dating from 440 B.C. to 325 A.D. We therefore cannot accept that Donofrio’s list of parallels is evidence of the Book of Mormon being a work of fiction influenced by early American literature.”<ref> “Debunking Thomas Donofrio’s | + | In his own words: “Donofrio argues that this list of phrases should not be found in an English translation of an ancient document like the Book of Mormon. Nearly all of these phrases, however, can be found in 18th and 19th century English translations of ancient documents dating from 440 B.C. to 325 A.D. We therefore cannot accept that Donofrio’s list of parallels is evidence of the Book of Mormon being a work of fiction influenced by early American literature.”<ref> “Debunking Thomas Donofrio’s 'Early American Influences on the Book of Mormon',” Heavy Metal Mormon, January 9, 2020, https://heavymetalmormon.com/2020/01/09/a-response-to-thomas-donofrios-early-american-influences-on-the-book-of-mormon/.</ref> |
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+ | ===Further Reading=== | ||
+ | *Bushman, Richard L. "[https://archive.bookofmormoncentral.org/content/book-mormon-and-american-revolution The Book of Mormon and the American Revolution]." In ''Book of Mormon Authorship: New Light on Ancient Origins'', edited by Noel B. Reynolds, 189–211. Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 1982. | ||
</onlyinclude> | </onlyinclude> | ||
{{endnotes sources}} | {{endnotes sources}} | ||
+ | [[Category:Questions]] |
Former member of the Church and critic Thomas Donofrio presented what he considers evidence that the Book of Mormon plagiarizes (or was “influenced by”) sources from the colonial era of American history. He presented these arguments at the 2012 ExMormon Foundation Conference in Salt Lake City, UT.
Another Latter-day Saint pseudonymous blogger named Heavy Metal Mormon responded to Donofrio in depth. The blogger compares every phrase identified by Donofrio in Revolutionary sources to other ancient works written between the 9th century BCE and 500 CE and finds that they too have some of the same phrases contained in the Book of Mormon. The works compared include the following:
Heavy Metal Mormon found each of the phrases identified by Donofrio in these sources.
He has also posted a helpful YouTube video presenting his findings which you can find here.
In his own words: “Donofrio argues that this list of phrases should not be found in an English translation of an ancient document like the Book of Mormon. Nearly all of these phrases, however, can be found in 18th and 19th century English translations of ancient documents dating from 440 B.C. to 325 A.D. We therefore cannot accept that Donofrio’s list of parallels is evidence of the Book of Mormon being a work of fiction influenced by early American literature.”[1]
Notes
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