Difference between revisions of "Criticism of Mormonism/Books/By His Own Hand upon Papyrus: A New Look at the Joseph Smith Papyri/Larson "restoration" of Facsimile 1"

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=An analysis of the Charles M. Larson restoration of Facsimile 1 compared against the original papyrus=
 
=An analysis of the Charles M. Larson restoration of Facsimile 1 compared against the original papyrus=
 
==Hand versus bird wing==
 
==Hand versus bird wing==
 +
The Larson restoration presumes that the upper hand represented in Facsimile 1 is instead the wing of a bird. There are several elements which disprove this.
 +
*It is clear that the Egyptian artist drew wings in a specific manner, as can be observed by the wing of the bird on the right.
 +
*The two hands have distinct thumbs.
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*The assumption that ink spots on the hand represent spots on the birds wing is disproven by close examination of the original, which shows ink traces that indicated that the lines were originally connected. It is also clear that the missing ink correlates with cracks in the papyri.
 +
 
[[File:Larson.restoration.comparison.to.original.hand.detail.1.jpg|1000px]]
 
[[File:Larson.restoration.comparison.to.original.hand.detail.1.jpg|1000px]]
  

Revision as of 19:47, 15 March 2013

  1. REDIRECTTemplate:Test3


A FAIR Analysis of:
By His Own Hand upon Papyrus: A New Look at the Joseph Smith Papyri
A work by author: Charles Larson

An analysis of the Charles M. Larson restoration of Facsimile 1 compared against the original papyrus

Hand versus bird wing

The Larson restoration presumes that the upper hand represented in Facsimile 1 is instead the wing of a bird. There are several elements which disprove this.

  • It is clear that the Egyptian artist drew wings in a specific manner, as can be observed by the wing of the bird on the right.
  • The two hands have distinct thumbs.
  • The assumption that ink spots on the hand represent spots on the birds wing is disproven by close examination of the original, which shows ink traces that indicated that the lines were originally connected. It is also clear that the missing ink correlates with cracks in the papyri.

Larson.restoration.comparison.to.original.hand.detail.1.jpg

Clothing on the reclining figure

Head of the priest