The artificial intelligence MEGATHREAD

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MG 2.0
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Re: The artificial intelligence MEGATHREAD

Post by MG 2.0 »

Morley wrote:
Mon Mar 02, 2026 11:16 pm
MG, what was the wording you used in your prompts? It’s dishonest when you paste a wall of text like this without revealing your generative process.
I went back and bolded the prompts for you. They were there.

Now, I would be interested in how the 'modernists' take issue with points that were made. Even if it was AI generated. If you want to integrate (without actually cutting and pasting the AI response, that's a no no) what has been given to chew on over in the 2 Nephi thread, that would be awesome.

I've found that thread interesting but rather one sided and limited. That's why I did some more "research". AI is a wonderful tool. It's not all "word wall" as some are wont to paint it...and then ignore it. When Philo does it, cool. When MG does it, not so cool.

And so it goes.

Regards,
MG
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Re: The artificial intelligence MEGATHREAD

Post by MG 2.0 »

From another thread:
Dr. Moore:
Not going to read 123 pages of this thread. Just stopped in to say the premise is absurd.

Who is the arbiter of straight vs crooked sublines and the final so called straight drawing? It’s a subjective framework that accomplishes only one end: infinite wiggle room for being wrong. The notion of using “crooked lines” to “draw straight” is orthogonal to virtually all pronouncements regarding the prophetic mantle in LDS theology. If prophet claims X and X is later shown to be wrong, it’s negative evidence that he is what he claims to be. It is not ambiguous evidence.
Prompt to Perplexity: Go back through this thread and create a response to Dr Moore that demonstrates that the premise is not absurd and that the overall content of the thread demonstrates this to be true.

Response:
The premise is that a morally perfect, provident God can achieve genuinely good, even “straight,” outcomes through (not merely in spite of) the free, flawed, and often sinful choices of human agents; that is not absurd, and the 123‑page thread actually illustrates how the notion has content, constraints, and implications rather than being mere wiggle room.

Clarifying the premise (not “anything goes”)
“God can write straight with crooked lines” has a long pre‑Mormon Christian pedigree as a way of talking about providence and secondary causes, not as a get‑out‑of‑jail‑free card for failed claims.

In that tradition, the sentence means roughly:

God does not cause the “crookedness” (sin, error, tragedy),

yet God can order those events toward goods that were not intended (and sometimes even opposed) by the agents themselves.

That already answers your “who is arbiter?” question in principle:

“Straight” is indexed, not to our feelings, but to God’s moral will and redemptive purposes (e.g., preservation of life, repentance, growth in charity, deeper communion), as those purposes are articulated in the canonical story (Joseph, David, the cross) and then cashed out in concrete outcomes.

“Crooked” is indexed to human intention and moral norm: betrayal, abuse, bad judgment, institutional myopia, etc.

So the framework is not “subjective”: it commits you to very specific claims about what counts as good, what counts as evil, and how the two can be related without collapsing either into the other.

How the thread gives the premise content
Across the thread people repeatedly do three things:

They use specific biblical cases (Joseph, David, the cross) as exemplars of “crooked lines” that were later seen to be “straight” in outcome.

They distinguish between God using human failure and God causing or approving it.

They argue over concrete LDS historical and pastoral cases (policy changes, personal suffering, ecclesiastical blunders) where one can point to both real harm and real downstream good.

For example, one longform Christian treatment of Joseph explicitly uses your formula: his brothers’ malice and the zigzag of slavery, false accusation, and prison are “crooked lines,” but the safeguarding of many lives during famine—combined with real moral transformation in the brothers and in Joseph himself—is the “straight” that Joseph perceives only in retrospect.

The author makes two contentful claims there:

Some outcomes (preservation of life, repentance, reconciliation) are intrinsically good and therefore count as “straight,” not because we like them but because they track the revealed moral will of God.

Those outcomes are historically and causally dependent on prior evils; without the crookedness, those particular goods (this reconciliation, this position in Egypt, this famine relief) would not have existed in that way.


Participants in the DiscussMormonism thread import that same pattern into LDS experience: they treat, say, institutional overreach, culture‑bound errors, or misguided rhetoric as “crooked,” and then ask whether identifiable goods (a more mature ecclesiology, refined doctrines of grace, greater compassion for the wounded, clearer boundaries) have in fact emerged through the painful process.

That is exactly not “infinite wiggle room”: it forces you to say, case by case, whether there is any genuinely redemptive outcome and whether it is tied in a non‑trivial way to the earlier wrong turn.

Why this does not neutralize negative prophetic evidence
You are right about one thing that most believers in that thread would grant: if a prophet confidently teaches X as revealed and X is later shown false, that is negative evidential weight against his prophetic status.

Where the “crooked lines” premise comes in is not to erase that weight but to say:

First, LDS theology already builds in non‑inerrancy; prophets can misread God, over‑state, or be shaped by their time, and the scriptures themselves present God as working through deeply flawed leaders (e.g., David as “a man after my own heart” who still abuses power and suffers severe consequences).


Second, the evidential picture is cumulative rather than binary. You do not move directly from “X was wrong” to “prophetic mantle falsified.” You ask whether, in the wake of X, there is any pattern of:

repentance, acknowledgment, and correction,

institutional learning and reform,

deeper and more coherent articulation of core Christian goods (justice, mercy, truth, charity).

When defenders in the thread say “God can write straight with crooked lines,” they are not claiming that the wrongness of X mysteriously becomes neutral with respect to evidence; they are claiming that, in addition to the negative evidential hit, there may also be positive evidence of providential ordering in how the community and its leadership respond, grow, and sometimes sharply change direction.

That is a substantive, contestable thesis, not ambiguity for its own sake.

A simple illustration:

“Crooked line”: David’s adultery with Bathsheba and the killing of Uriah are serious sins; nothing in the “God writes straight” idea suggests they are anything but damning on their own terms.


“Straight writing”: the resulting chain of events yields deep personal repentance psalms that become paradigmatic for later generations, a national reckoning with kingship and justice, and a more sober theology of power in Israel’s story.

You can reject the theological reading if you like, but it is not epistemic sleight‑of‑hand. It ties very specific “crooked” acts to very specific “straight” goods and then asks whether that sort of pattern is visible in LDS history too.

Why the premise is not orthogonal to LDS prophetic claims
You argue that “crooked lines” are orthogonal to LDS pronouncements about the prophetic mantle, but that is not how Latter‑day Saints have actually used the phrase in this and related discussions.

Instead, the thread works with at least three LDS‑internal commitments that make the premise relevant:

Prophets are real but fallible: contemporary LDS leaders explicitly deny personal or institutional inerrancy, so the live question is not “does any error falsify the mantle?” but “what kind and degree of error, and what pattern of response, would do so?”


God’s purposes are long‑horizon and communal: core LDS narratives (e.g., apostasy and restoration, line‑upon‑line revelation, Zion as a work in progress) already describe a God who tolerates significant crookedness in both individuals and institutions while still claiming to be unfolding a real, coherent plan.

History is a primary theological arena: the movement’s self‑understanding is deeply historical (from the First Vision onward), so appealing to historical patterns of fall, correction, and unexpected good is not a dodge; it is exactly the sort of evidence both sides argue about.

Within that framework, “God can write straight with crooked lines” functions as a defeasible research program:

Hypothesis: even where LDS leaders have erred, one can trace patterns of correction, refinement, and new goods that are difficult to explain on purely sociological terms but are natural on a providential reading.

Falsification condition: if, for major and enduring errors, you do not see genuine repentance, genuine reform, or any redemptive good that could not be more simply explained by human dynamics, then the appeal to “crooked lines” fails and the negative evidence piles up.

Again, that is not “infinite wiggle room”; it is a claim with clear conditions under which it would be judged a bad explanation.

A direct answer to your challenge
So to answer you succinctly:

The arbiter of “straight vs crooked” in this framework is not the apologist’s taste but the morally rich portrait of God’s aims in scripture and tradition, applied to concrete outcomes that can, in principle, be argued about publicly.

The framework is not designed to make failed prophetic claims epistemically harmless; it fully concedes that such failures count against prophetic status while insisting that the overall pattern of a community’s life—including how it responds to failure—also carries evidential weight.

The thread’s 123 pages are not a Rorschach test; they are a running attempt to test that premise against specific cases in LDS history and personal experience, which is precisely what you would expect if the premise were being treated as a substantive, falsifiable theological claim rather than as a license for endless special pleading.

You may still conclude that, in LDS history, the “crooked lines” program fails—that the negatives are too large and the alleged redemptive patterns too weak.
But that is a judgment on the truth of the premise in this concrete case, not a demonstration that the premise itself is absurd or logically incoherent.
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Re: The artificial intelligence MEGATHREAD

Post by MG 2.0 »

To clarify board rules. Is it OK or not OK to refer a poster over to this AI megathread? That is, of course, doing so without posting ANY actual content of the mega thread within any external thread/current thread.

I want to make sure I follow the rules with exactness. I do think, for the sake of argument, that it ought to be OK to point someone over to this thread and do with it (the information provided) what they will.

Ignore it, or respond.

Regards,
MG
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Limnor
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Re: The artificial intelligence MEGATHREAD

Post by Limnor »

Prompt to AI: Please confirm whether it is acceptable to confirm that it is acceptable to confirm board rule compliance.

Response: Compliance confirmed, pending confirmation.
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Re: The artificial intelligence MEGATHREAD

Post by MG 2.0 »

Limnor wrote:
Tue Mar 03, 2026 2:58 am
Prompt to AI: Please confirm whether it is acceptable to confirm that it is acceptable to confirm board rule compliance.

Response: Compliance confirmed, pending confirmation.
Almost there! Almost.

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MG
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Re: The artificial intelligence MEGATHREAD

Post by malkie »

MG 2.0 wrote:
Tue Mar 03, 2026 2:32 am
To clarify board rules. Is it OK or not OK to refer a poster over to this AI megathread? That is, of course, doing so without posting ANY actual content of the mega thread within any external thread/current thread.

I want to make sure I follow the rules with exactness. I do think, for the sake of argument, that it ought to be OK to point someone over to this thread and do with it (the information provided) what they will.

Ignore it, or respond.

Regards,
MG
Here's what you said earlier:
MG 2.0 wrote:
Sat Feb 28, 2026 5:11 pm
If you want to pull any of 'Blake AI' over into the other thread, that might add some more meat to the discussion. :)
Is this what you are claiming is about "refer[ing] a poster over to this AI megathread". As I read it, it's plainly suggesting the opposite: bringing " 'Blake AI' over into the other thread" - that is, to a non-AI thread.

Whether you intended it or not, MG, this appears to br one of two things:
  • you encouraging someone else to break the "AI" rule, or
  • you trying to muddy the water yet again about what is acceptable
No wonder you get tongue-in-cheek responses.
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Re: The artificial intelligence MEGATHREAD

Post by MG 2.0 »

malkie wrote:
Tue Mar 03, 2026 3:46 am
MG 2.0 wrote:
Tue Mar 03, 2026 2:32 am
To clarify board rules. Is it OK or not OK to refer a poster over to this AI megathread? That is, of course, doing so without posting ANY actual content of the mega thread within any external thread/current thread.

I want to make sure I follow the rules with exactness. I do think, for the sake of argument, that it ought to be OK to point someone over to this thread and do with it (the information provided) what they will.

Ignore it, or respond.

Regards,
MG
Here's what you said earlier:
MG 2.0 wrote:
Sat Feb 28, 2026 5:11 pm
If you want to pull any of 'Blake AI' over into the other thread, that might add some more meat to the discussion. :)
Is this what you are claiming is about "refer[ing] a poster over to this AI megathread". As I read it, it's plainly suggesting the opposite: bringing " 'Blake AI' over into the other thread" - that is, to a non-AI thread.

Whether you intended it or not, MG, this appears to br one of two things:
  • you encouraging someone else to break the "AI" rule, or
  • you trying to muddy the water yet again about what is acceptable
No wonder you get tongue-in-cheek responses.
I've already responded to Shades in regards to this concern of yours. There have been a couple of times recently where folks apparently aren't even reading my posts and I'm having to call it out.

Obviously, material from this thread should not be cut and pasted to any other thread.

Regards,
MG
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Re: The artificial intelligence MEGATHREAD

Post by malkie »

UR12 wrote:All A.I.-generated text may only be posted within the appropriate forums' artificial intelligence megathreads, ...
The rule concerns the use of AI-generated material, and has nothing to do with the thread that the material came from.

As far as I'm aware, there is no prohibition on copying material from this thread to any other thread as long as the copied material was not generated by an AI.

MG, I'd suggest that you don't assume that "folks apparently aren't even reading [your] posts". Perhaps people are reading your posts and finding them to be inaccurate, incomprehensible, contradictory, or illogical in other ways. In spite of your constant complaining, I don't think it's reasonable for you to imply that all of the problems are created by folks other than you.
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Re: The artificial intelligence MEGATHREAD

Post by Morley »

MG 2.0 wrote:
Tue Mar 03, 2026 1:40 am
Just one inquiry on this one. It was already bolded. I think you guys are doing a runaround from the actual content and failing to respond to that.

Regards,
MG
I had used word for word what you had bolded, and what I assumed was your prompt, but copilot’s response to me was different from what you posted that you got. Without replication the response is worthless.
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Re: The artificial intelligence MEGATHREAD

Post by Marcus »

MG 2.0 wrote:
Tue Mar 03, 2026 2:32 am
To clarify board rules. Is it OK or not OK to refer a poster over to this AI megathread? That is, of course, doing so without posting ANY actual content of the mega thread within any external thread/current thread.

I want to make sure I follow the rules with exactness. I do think, for the sake of argument, that it ought to be OK to point someone over to this thread and do with it (the information provided) what they will.

Ignore it, or respond.

Regards,
MG
Oh my goodness. One would think Shades' messages had been read....
Dr. Shades wrote:
Fri May 30, 2025 10:40 pm
[MODERATOR NOTE: I was afraid this would happen. I thought for sure it was only a matter of time, but I dared to dream. Sure enough, it only took, what, four days?

To modify the existing policy, NO LINKS to anything in the artificial intelligence megathread...

TL;DR: NO LINKS to anything in the artificial intelligence megathread...
But, apparently mentalgymnast wanted to try again. So Shades reiterated the rule again. AGAIN.
Dr. Shades wrote:
Sat May 31, 2025 2:53 am
MG 2.0 wrote:
Fri May 30, 2025 11:11 pm
...So it sounds like there is a compromise that is possible. If there is explanatory description of what the link is leading to then that would be acceptable, as long as it is not done each and every post (which by the way, I don't do).

Regards,
MG
NO.

Here is the compromise: If you want to have a.i. post a response to someone on your behalf, send that person a link VIA PRIVATE MESSAGE to the a.i.-generated post that resides within the artificial intelligence megathread. Do not post a link to that thread within any other thread, regardless of how descriptive of a, uh, description you attach to the link.

To emphasize, NO LINKS TO ANYTHING THAT RESIDES WITHIN THE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE MEGATHREAD.

And to avoid confusion, NO LINKS TO ANYTHING THAT RESIDES WITHIN THE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE MEGATHREAD.

And because I most likely wasn’t clear enough, NO LINKS TO ANYTHING THAT RESIDES WITHIN THE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE MEGATHREAD.

And in conclusion, NO LINKS TO ANYTHING THAT RESIDES WITHIN THE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE MEGATHREAD.

TL;DR: NO LINKS TO ANYTHING THAT RESIDES WITHIN THE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE MEGATHREAD.
[I bolded the part mentalgymnast must have missed. Again.]
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