Can somebody please point me to all of these people who have historically refuted the possibility of the Book of Mormon’s ancient origins by claiming that ancient people did not write on metal plates? It seems quite ingrained in LDS apologetic culture and is an easy argument to refute. Problem is, I can’t find any record of anyone making this argument.
Paul Cheesman’s book Ancient Writing on Metal Plates (Bountiful: 1985) works very hard to compile examples of ancient Mediterranean peoples scratching letters onto metal sheets or tablets. The BYU’s glorious “double documents” display seems to imply as much to me as well, since it describes the artifact as “one of the world’s finest examples of ancient writing on metal plates.” Yesterday, Indy posted a similar assumption that this was a point of contention against the historicity of The Book of Mormon. This is not to call out Indy at all, but rather a plea for someone to direct me to the genesis of this criticism.
For the time being, I think it’s a straw-man, artfully constructed by apologists who wish to deflect from the larger issue: ancient Americans did not write on metal plates; at least not with any regularity. I’m sure if they had had access to metal they would have used them for important records and inscriptions. But they didn’t. (EDIT: not that this is a deal-breaker for the book's historicity or divine message; this is just the case in light of the presently established archaeological record)
I’m open to correction here. If someone can direct me to the polemics directed against The Book of Mormon that claim that ancient people did not write on metal plates, I’ll gladly revise my position. But no self-respecting historian of the ancient world would claim something so stupid. Although archaeology has discovered many examples of ancient writing on metal, there is no reason to believe that this "refutes" any type of criticism. There are plenty of literary references to ancient laws, victor-lists, religious texts, curse tablets, etc. that were easily available in the 19th century.
So, help me out here.
Paul Cheesman’s book Ancient Writing on Metal Plates (Bountiful: 1985) works very hard to compile examples of ancient Mediterranean peoples scratching letters onto metal sheets or tablets. The BYU’s glorious “double documents” display seems to imply as much to me as well, since it describes the artifact as “one of the world’s finest examples of ancient writing on metal plates.” Yesterday, Indy posted a similar assumption that this was a point of contention against the historicity of The Book of Mormon. This is not to call out Indy at all, but rather a plea for someone to direct me to the genesis of this criticism.
For the time being, I think it’s a straw-man, artfully constructed by apologists who wish to deflect from the larger issue: ancient Americans did not write on metal plates; at least not with any regularity. I’m sure if they had had access to metal they would have used them for important records and inscriptions. But they didn’t. (EDIT: not that this is a deal-breaker for the book's historicity or divine message; this is just the case in light of the presently established archaeological record)
I’m open to correction here. If someone can direct me to the polemics directed against The Book of Mormon that claim that ancient people did not write on metal plates, I’ll gladly revise my position. But no self-respecting historian of the ancient world would claim something so stupid. Although archaeology has discovered many examples of ancient writing on metal, there is no reason to believe that this "refutes" any type of criticism. There are plenty of literary references to ancient laws, victor-lists, religious texts, curse tablets, etc. that were easily available in the 19th century.
So, help me out here.

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