Themis wrote:The events around them are unclear.
This has nothing whatsoever to do with the possibility of talking donkeys and snakes.
Themis wrote:Based on the evidence, yes it is obvious as I said for outsiders and many insiders. This is of course based on outsiders and insiders who at least know the evidences. I said nothing of black and white.
But the exact same is true of talking donkeys and snakes. The only difference is one is unilaterally precluded by natural law, and the other is only partly so.
Themis wrote:No it's not. Lets be clear. You said
And why does the fact that Latter-day Saints believe some of those things too mean it's not as ridiculous for mainstream Christians to believe them?
You are making the false claim that people here, and me in particular are saying it is less ridiculous for mainstream Christian to believe the same things that LDS do. No one has made this claim.
That's completely false. Not only did Phaedruss and Cardinal say exactly that, but it is the clear implication of arguing that Mitt Romney's faith, specifically, merits ridicule.
Themis wrote:They would both be equally ridiculous. With LDS they just have a number of new ones which have more evidence against.
So there's more evidence against the Book of Mormon than against the notion of a talking donkey? Are you serious?
Themis wrote:I have never advocated for ridicule, and scrutiny should be done equally. It's just us LDS have more to scrutinize in Mormonism then Christianity, and much more evidence showing it to be whoppers. I did already say that some christian and LDS do not believe all the same whoppers from the Bible.
You seem to be saying that because we have more of a historical context around the development of Mormonism, there is more evidence to falsify the Book of Mormon than to falsify the notion of a talking donkey and a talking snake. How much evidence do you believe is needed to arrive at the incontrovertible conclusion that a donkey and a snake did not, in fact, speak with humans? I submit that the fact that the notion is completely and totally precluded by all relevant natural laws is evidence enough. Do you insist that conclusions that are established by piles and piles of evidence are more conclusive than those that are established by simple appeals to natural law?