Mister Scratch wrote:Let me point out, Prof. P., that this is essentially the same thing you do with Mike Quinn. You repeatedly tell TBMs that his work is "misleading" or "dishonest" and then try to claim that your statements aren't an attack on Quinn's character.
I wonder if I've ever termed his work "dishonest." It's not impossible, but I doubt it. That's not how I would choose to characterize his writing.
Mister Scratch wrote:If you get a free pass, then I do believe you are going to have to extend the same courtesy to Beastie.
I have to admit that it's striking to see a call for fair play and courtesy from my Malevolent Stalker.
Truly, this is a watershed moment in the history of apostagetics.
liz3564 wrote:Actually, they are advocates of Mormonism and theism. As far as their prominence, it depends on how you define prominence.
The point of my refinement of the question was this: I'm aware of the claim of some ex- and anti-Mormons, that, while Mormons can be rational, etc., in their ordinary life, they throw rationality to the winds when it comes to their transparently absurd religious beliefs. They are, in a sense, like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. So I wanted to know whether a well-informed Latter-day Saint can rationally, sanely, and honestly advocate Mormonism. That is, can Mormons be sane, rational, well-informed, and intelligent in the very act of asserting and arguing for their beliefs?
beastie wrote:There are many different truth claims that Mormonism makes, and some can be believed based upon rationally founded, intelligent, honest survey of the evidence, and sane. There are other truth claims that are more problematic.
Here we go.
beastie wrote:There are some people who are very well informed about ancient Mesoamerica and still believe it makes sense as an ancient Mesoamerican document, and I believe they are rational, intelligent, and sane. However, I believe their preexisting bias – namely their spiritual testimonies – precludes them from an honest survey of the evidence [emphasis mine].
Wonderful. Thanks!
beastie wrote:John Clark admitted that surveying the evidence will only be persuasive if one already believes in the Book of Mormon for “other reasons” – which is, of course, the testimony. If all that was required was an honest surveying of the evidence to be persuaded that the Book of Mormon makes sense as an ancient Mesoamerican document, then the preexisting testimony would not be required.
I think, actually, that you're misinterpreting what Professor Clark thinks.
A theory, or a name, can sometimes cause us to see things that were there all along but that were invisible to us beforehand. I like to tell of an experience I had when I was a high school kid. We went to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, to see an exhibit by the Norwegian lithographer Edvard Munch. I wandered through the exhibit and thought nothing of it. Then I heard a brief lecture on Munch from a docent, went through the exhibit again, and loved it, seeing things I hadn't noticed before.
Data is given significance by theory. The same data, on the whole, were there for Ptolemy and Tycho Brahe as for Copernicus and Kepler. But, after the latter two, astronomers saw the data, and the solar system, fundamentally differently.
A person whose interpretative framework for the Mesoamerican Pre-Classic doesn't include the Book of Mormon will view it one way. A person whose framework does include the Book of Mormon will see it slightly differently, and will place significance and stress on certain things that the other person won't.
Professor Clark is entirely correct in saying that the current data certainly doesn't entail acceptance of the Book of Mormon. But he's also saying that the data are increasingly consistent with acceptance of the Book of Mormon, but that one won't be inclined to see that without some sort of commitment to the paradigm of the Book of Mormon.
beastie wrote:So let’s take it down to a more basic level – do I believe that people can believe that Jesus Christ was resurrected from the dead based on rationality, honesty, intelligence, and an honest survey of information? No.
My point, precisely.
Incidentally, for what it's worth, I disagree. As I hope to show in a book that I plan to publish a few years from now (it's in the queue), I think that belief in the resurrection of Christ is rational, based on the historical data -- though I don't believe it's a slam dunk or logically compulsory.
beastie wrote:But that doesn’t mean that believers, themselves, are not sane, honest, and intelligent.
But, I take it, they aren't sane, honest, intelligent, and well-informed when they affirm or even argue for the resurrection of Christ. Right?
If so, again, that is precisely my point.