Seems comparable to why so many LDS scholars think Oliver and Joseph misled everyone about the origin and setting of the Book of Mormon.
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We seek consensus about the Book of Mormon. Joseph F. Smith wrote, "If you have built for a man a better house than his own, and he is willing to accept yours and forsake his, then, and not till then, should you proceed to tear down the old structure. Rotten though it may be it will require some time for it to lose all its charms and fond memories of its former occupant. Therefore let him, not you, proceed to tear it away. Kindness and courtesy are the primal elements of gentility."
Seems comparable to why so many LDS scholars think Oliver and Joseph misled everyone about the origin and setting of the Book of Mormon.
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“There’s never been a better time to be an inventor and a pioneer than right now because the world is on fire with new ideas—and with AI and space opportunities,” Bezos said this month in Miami. “We’re in the middle of multiple golden ages right now.”
Lots of smart Latter-day Saints have worked for decades to optimize the Mesoamerican/two-Cumorah's theory of Book of Mormon geography.
Optimizing a thing that should not exist is a common error.
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The most common error of a smart engineer is to optimize a thing that should not exist.
Why would people do that?
Everyone's been trained in high school and college to answer the question. Convergent logic. You can't tell the professor 'Your question is dumb' or you'll get a bad grade. You have to answer the question.
So everyone, basically, without knowing it, has got a mental straight jacket on.
They'll work on optimizing the thing that should simply not exist.
— Elon Musk
https://x.com/DimaZeniuk/status/1980485244550860818
— Tom Brady
https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1979509450927919358