
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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===Source(s) of the criticism=== | ===Source(s) of the criticism=== | ||
+ | *{{CriticalWork:Abanes:Becoming Gods|pages=42-44}} (Citing Brodie) | ||
*{{CriticalWork:Brodie:No Man Knows|pages=}} | *{{CriticalWork:Brodie:No Man Knows|pages=}} | ||
*{{CriticalWork:Vogel:Making of a Prophet|pages=}} | *{{CriticalWork:Vogel:Making of a Prophet|pages=}} |
This article is a draft. FairMormon editors are currently editing it. We welcome your suggestions on improving the content.
Secular critics claim to be able to discern Joseph Smith's motivations, and sometimes even his thoughts and dreams, in order to explain the rise of the Church.
Secular critics, as a result of their inability to accept what they call "paranormal experiences," must come up with explanations for why Joseph Smith was able to create and grow the Church. Since many of the primary documents from Joseph and his associates accept evidence of spiritual experiences and angelic visitations as normal, secular critics look at Joseph's surrounding environment in order to deduce his thoughts and dreams, thus creating a "psychobiography" of the Prophet. A well-known critical work in which this technique is heavily employed is Fawn Brodie's No Man Knows My History. Consider the following from No Man Knows My History:
Brodie's prose is very readable, and would be well suited to a fictional novel. Unfortunately, nothing in the paragraph quoted above is referenced to any sort of a source.
Since Brodie's work is heavily referenced by critics, Brodie's opinions eventually become considered to be "fact" by those who wish to tear down the Church. Brodie's pronouncements regarding Joseph's motives are then passed along to the next anti-Mormon writer. Consider how the following claim evolves from speculation to "documented endnote," when Brodie states:
Now observe how author Richard Abanes treats this quote in his book Becoming Gods (retitled Inside Today's Mormonism):
Now we have a theory by Brodie being confirmed to "further weaken" LDS claims about the First Vision. Brodie's speculation of "was probably" and "it may have been" now becomes a cited endnote in Abanes' work. The speculation of one author has become the documented fact for the next author down the line.
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