My quick thoughts.
Nahom is a similar word to places named in the Bible (Nahum, Naham). The fact that there is a site on the Arabian peninsula named NHM is hardly "astonishing." Throw out some random place names (basically from the Bible, incidentally) and there are bound to be some actual Middle Eastern sites with similar names.
Paanchi is an actual Egyption name, but Korihor is not. Pahoran is not. Hermounts is somewhat similar to Hermonthis I suppose. But so what if you can find a handful of person and place names out of hundreds that are similar to some Egyptian person and place names? What about all the other names that are completely absent from any other historical record or are only found in the Bible? Don't you have to count those other names as evidence against historicity? I don't find a few real Egyptianoid Book of Mormon names out of hundreds to be "astonishing" or convincing in the slightest.
You're quoting a BYU-employed, LDS guy in John Tvedtness to support the reality of Reformed Egyption? Really? There are no objective scholars who are convinced in the slightest that this was an actual language. There was no full written script in the New World outside of the Mayans. There have never been any Egyptian writings discovered in the New World. We have an actual record of the characters copied down by David Whitmer in the Anthon Transcript and these characters are gibberish. You're throwing out a mountain of evidence against the reality of Reformed Egyptian as a language that was used in the Americas.
Nahom is a similar word to places named in the Bible (Nahum, Naham). The fact that there is a site on the Arabian peninsula named NHM is hardly "astonishing." Throw out some random place names (basically from the Bible, incidentally) and there are bound to be some actual Middle Eastern sites with similar names.
Paanchi is an actual Egyption name, but Korihor is not. Pahoran is not. Hermounts is somewhat similar to Hermonthis I suppose. But so what if you can find a handful of person and place names out of hundreds that are similar to some Egyptian person and place names? What about all the other names that are completely absent from any other historical record or are only found in the Bible? Don't you have to count those other names as evidence against historicity? I don't find a few real Egyptianoid Book of Mormon names out of hundreds to be "astonishing" or convincing in the slightest.
You're quoting a BYU-employed, LDS guy in John Tvedtness to support the reality of Reformed Egyption? Really? There are no objective scholars who are convinced in the slightest that this was an actual language. There was no full written script in the New World outside of the Mayans. There have never been any Egyptian writings discovered in the New World. We have an actual record of the characters copied down by David Whitmer in the Anthon Transcript and these characters are gibberish. You're throwing out a mountain of evidence against the reality of Reformed Egyptian as a language that was used in the Americas.

Comment