Darth J wrote:You don't have to go as far as rejecting perceived spiritual experiences entirely to dismiss Mormon epistemology. I mean, you can reject them altogether, but even if you accept spiritual experiences or proof of a God or whatever, there are some huge unquestioned assumptions in an LDS "testimony." One of them is that if there is a God, it must be at least be the Abrahamic god, and more specifically it must be the Mormon god. Another is that what you perceive as a spiritual experience is a valid way to test an empirical claim, and a third is that the spiritual experience means what the LDS Church tells you it means. The LDS Church never explains why you should agree with any of these assumptions, other than the circular reasoning of using Moroni's Promise to test Moroni's Promise.
True, but that's getting ahead of my point.
That being, all of us approach information that contradicts a core belief by asking, "MUST I believe this?" while information that supports our beliefs is approached by asking, "CAN I believe this?"
What you propose above is one example of many approaches by which a person could assess the truth of spiritual experience, but it doesn't answer the question, "MUST I believe this?" while someone outside probably wouldn't have a problem answering "yes" to the question, "CAN I believe this?"
I think it's worth considering how a person still somewhere inside the belief envelop would approach this instead of how it looks to those of us outside.