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|claim=How could any man, especially a man that had a slight limp run with a 50 pound weight and avoid capture by three assailants? The journey through the woods was about 3 miles as Joseph indicated above. It's inconceivable that anybody could run carrying a 50 lb. set of metal plates, jumping over logs and such and be able to outrun three men for some 1 to 2 miles that were bent on taking the plates from Joseph. And all this from a young man that had a slight limp and would have difficulty running at a high speed for a long distance -especially carrying a 50 lb. weight. | |claim=How could any man, especially a man that had a slight limp run with a 50 pound weight and avoid capture by three assailants? The journey through the woods was about 3 miles as Joseph indicated above. It's inconceivable that anybody could run carrying a 50 lb. set of metal plates, jumping over logs and such and be able to outrun three men for some 1 to 2 miles that were bent on taking the plates from Joseph. And all this from a young man that had a slight limp and would have difficulty running at a high speed for a long distance -especially carrying a 50 lb. weight. | ||
|think= | |think= | ||
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* Several people [[Book_of_Mormon/Translation/Description_of_the_plates#Weight|testified of the plates' weight]], and they all knew Joseph Smith. None of ''them'' found the story inherently impossible. None of them challenged Joseph's tale—including his family who both knew him best ''and'' handled the plates. | * Several people [[Book_of_Mormon/Translation/Description_of_the_plates#Weight|testified of the plates' weight]], and they all knew Joseph Smith. None of ''them'' found the story inherently impossible. None of them challenged Joseph's tale—including his family who both knew him best ''and'' handled the plates. | ||
* Joseph's mother (who told this story) did not say that Joseph "outran" the three men—instead, he was attacked three separate times on his way home. In each case, ''a single man'' tried to ambush him alone, and Joseph struck them and ran on. | * Joseph's mother (who told this story) did not say that Joseph "outran" the three men—instead, he was attacked three separate times on his way home. In each case, ''a single man'' tried to ambush him alone, and Joseph struck them and ran on. | ||
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− | + | * Did you know that [http://chandaodiscussion.forumcity.com/viewtopic.php?t=20&sid=8b210adaecb80251c7c58e231456babc traditional Chinese martial artists] recommend training in "hilly terrain" to build strength, and running with a rucksack containing 56 lbs for men, for a distance of at least 5 miles? (They emphasize that farmlife made such things doable anciently.) Maybe MormonThink should let them know this weight and distance is impossible. | |
− | + | * During World War II, a Canadian infantry sergeant [https://www.google.ca/search?q=%22Sergeant+Gentile+carried+the+wounded+soldier+a+half+mile+to+the+nearest+medical+aid+station%22&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a carried his friend on his shoulders for half a mile], while under continuous enemy fire. A wounded man weighs considerably more than fifty pounds, and he probably didn't loiter while under severe fire. | |
− | + | * Hitler's SS trained to run 3 km (1.87 miles) in twenty minutes with full gear.{{ref|ss.1}} | |
− | + | * Israel Defense Force officer candidates must past the "[http://www.foiwa.org.au/aggregator/sources/18 Loren test]"—"scaling a two-meter wall, climbing a three-meter wall, completing an obstacle course, running two miles, and then target-shooting — all in under 22 minutes," and done in full battle gear. | |
|link=Book of Mormon/Translation/Description of the plates/Too heavy for Joseph to run with | |link=Book of Mormon/Translation/Description of the plates/Too heavy for Joseph to run with | ||
|subject=Plates too heavy for Joseph to run with | |subject=Plates too heavy for Joseph to run with |
A FAIR Analysis of: MormonThink A work by author: Anonymous
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The positions that this MormonThink article appears to take are the following:
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Joseph's leg didn't seem to stop him from competing well in footraces and high jumping:
This doesn't sound like a man whose limp is crippling him--and Joseph was younger and likely more fit during the Book of Mormon translating period, when he was focused almost entirely on farming, rather than splitting his attention as required for Church administration.
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