cksalmon wrote:If a worldview is deemed to be absolutely true no matter what, then said worldview is unfalsifiable. As I just posted on MADB, this is an insight into LDS belief that I was, frankly, lacking until now. The fundamental worldview is simply unfalsifiable. It is not even possible that it is incorrect, fundamentally.
Well, you not "getting" this is not because it hasn't been said before, by many of us on the LDS and ex-LDS critic side, and I don't mean that with any disrespect at all. You had to "understand" it yourself before you could hear us saying it. I've said many times before that the turning point for me was when I allowed the church, finally, to even possibly not be true. It wasn't until I allowed the very possibility of the church not being true, to enter the equation, that I was able to start seeing the puzzle pieces go together to see the "big picture" that, in fact, the church isn't true. It took the better part of four decades in my life before I could even reach the point where I considered, seriously, the very possibility of the church's not being true.
And this is what you see in the diehard apologists, and with people like Charity. To Charity, the church's not being true is simply impossible. The very phrase "LDS church is not true" simply does not compute. It's like a null instruction in their brain, or something to be responded to with testimony, not seriously considered on its own merits. To a TBM, the church being true is absolute bedrock axiomatic truth, and any questions or aspects of reality are judged and viewed through that lens. Indeed, as I've said often in the past, the church's being true is the fundemental "Truth" upon which the entire LDS virtual reality is built. Within that virtual reality, all things are judged by reference to the fundemental truths of that reality, which include the church being true.
David is just publicly admitting that he lives in this particular LDS virtual reality, and that he is incapable of, or unwilling to, take seriously a worldview that doesn't assume that the LDS church is true.
This also explains some of Charity's more bizarrre statements and assumptions. We all need to be "charitable" enough to recognize that whatever she says is underpinned in her mind by the obvious truth of Mormonism, and that to her it all makes perfect sense.
It's apparently a privileged worldview that applies only to LDS thinking. No one else could think this way and possibly be a potential convert to Mormonism.
Well, probably every religion has its adherents who have their own particular version of this worldview. Even evangelical Christians. :-) But you are right that while Mormons accept this as normal for themselves, they absolutely abhor it in those they are trying to convert. To a Mormon, someone ought to be willing to consider that their religious beliefs aren't true, and that it's in fact the Mormon religion that's true, and be willing to walk away from their religion and embrace the Mormon religion instead. But it's entirely one-sided. As seriously as Mormons believe everyone else should take the possibility that their religion is not true, Mormons will not, and cannot, take seriously the possibility that Mormonism isn't true.
Everyone else does it too. The born-again Christians all assume, and know, that their religious beliefs are true and that the Mormon beliefs aren't true, and I bet that most die-hard EVs and born-agains simply cannot contemplate seriously the possibility that their religious beliefs aren't true either. And it's the same with the really strong TBMuslims, TBHindus, and TBeveryone else. A true believing Scientologist cannot really even comprehend the possibility that Scientology isn't true.
This is one of the things Dawkins talks about, actually, and some others. Religious belief is almost like a virus. It comes in, takes over, and then won't leave or even give up the remote for a few minutes.
If the LDS missionary endeavor is any indication, no one else in the world is allowed the possibility that his or her worldview is utterly and unassailably immune to any sort of contrary evidence.
I don't get it, frankly.
CKSalmon, how likely is it that your own religious beliefs are actually not true? Not very? Well there ya go. If you can understand that, you can "get it" with respect to the Mormons. If you admit the very real possibility that your religious beliefs might not actually be true, then good for you, and hopefully you know enough others who can't admit that, to be able to relate to the TBM phonomenon.