Franktalk wrote:Are you guys done yet?
I have explained it all in my post which you have not read and have not understood. That is expected. The spiritual path is personal and as such can not be used to provide evidence of the experience or evidence that another is in error. However people who have had the experience know quickly when they meet another. I have met several people of different Christian faiths that are on a spiritual walk. I have not found any people that are not Christian on that walk. I am not to choose and I can not choose who the Holy Ghost embraces. This simple truth makes the world go nuts. Your posts are an indication of that nutty reaction. Of course this will just be used for you to ratchet up the rhetoric. That is expected as well.
Then I'll do what you don't expect. I won't "ratchet" anything you just said, because I am eager to
grant that religious experience is mysteriously
too personal to be used as evidence against another experience and ask you the same questions because, as expected, you still don't get it. I'll even color code the most important parts so you know where to direct your distractions to pretend you understand me.
At this point, I seriously doubt you'll give any direct response; neither an explicit dispute with the question or the most unlikely option, to answer it... so if you insist on more distractions, I hope you realize that you, with God on your side, are suspiciously averse to comprehending and acknowledging these very simple arguments.
!----------INCOMING CHALLENGE----------!
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!If we grant that religious experience is
too personal to be used as evidence against another experience or interpretation,
then what justifies the rejection of "twisted" experience and interpretation except for very particular Mormon religious concepts?If the
basis for several
very particular Mormon religious concepts is an
even more limited set of religious experiences, then why do you not acknowledge that this
demonstrates there is a serious and gory flaw in your reasoning about which concepts and experiences should be acted upon.
The
only reason you can provide for
rejecting a contrary experience or interpretations
is unequivocally predicated upon the experiences you just admitted don't count as evidence against them.!
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!----------PLEASE GIVE DIRECT RESPONSE OR EXPLICIT DISPUTE----------!Are you reading this in your mind with emphasis? Could I make it any more clear that I am waiting for you to expose the flaw in thought which dooms my argument and
question it directly using reference to my argument? A formal debate...?Are you really just going to
give up trying to provide convincing answers to the questions which would fully unhinge the epistemic point at which your faith and life revolves? I haven't been anything but extremely willing to engage direct challenges to my critique, yet you fail to show that you
understand any challenge and you won't even clearly explain why you reject it.
You're accepting the Mormon paradigm and all that overlaps like a child accepts indoctrination. It seems embarrassingly clear that you've yet to break your mind free from any idea which doesn't serve the paradigm you are most emotionally invested in.
To simply trust the paradigm explains virtually anything... especially the question of whether it's clear and exposed foundation can be trusted. In every religious case but your own, you would find this is something to be seriously concerned about. You just have to switch those emotional switches which produce feelings of conviction and the rest safely follows. The patterns of behavior relating to strong cognitive dissonance we observe in all religions explain the failure for any Mormon to question their conviction that the Mormon omni-model explains every criticism. It's effectively and clearly
designed to emotionally delude your reasoning.
Given the severity of your belief I can only suppose there is too much dissonance between fully examining your own experience reasonably against any other, because you've already invested so much faith and emotion.
It's the best explanation (hence the colorful post) until you show that the purpose your life is cemented in is actually justified by the extremely specified interpretation you gave for your own particular experience.
That is to say...
Understand that unequivocally... every statement I've made in this post is contingent upon my argument and I'm ultimately interested in your direct challenge..
Answer me or give up. I'll never quit pointing out that I've made it way too simple and straight forward. Challenge the argument.
I don't think it can be explained any more clearly. It is just as embarrassing for every Apologist when it is simply confirmed again and again that
strong believers are incapable of giving the most simple defense of their faith with any idea which doesn't, at its foundation, serve itself. As far as can be told concerning the
entire and profoundly varied history of religious experience, Apologists have yet to wrap their heads around the fact that
many other people believe exactly as Mormons do, but not what Mormons do.