beastie wrote:But I think I can see what you mean with formal operational thought and concrete operational thought. People who deal only in facts can't deal with abstract concepts. People who deal with religious truths for which there aren't provable facts, must needs be at the formal operational level.
It's been years since I studied this topic, but even I recognize how completely messed up this statement is. I can only hope you stuck to the textbook as an instructor and didn't add your own strange interpretations.
Interesting. Then are you saying that all apologists are so enmeshed within the Mormon belief system, they are stuck with it, or lose their self-identities?
No, not
all.Some apologists are still working their way through all of this, and sooner or later will either abandon their former beliefs altogether or will modify and liberalize those beliefs until they'd be almost unrecognizable to mainstream LDS. This can be a long, painful process, and in the meantime, the believer will continue to act as apologist - in a way, they're trying to convince themselves as much as anyone else.
But definitely
some apologists are so enmeshed within their belief system that they cannot conceive of an "I" outside it. Their self identity IS Mormonism.
Beastie,
I think your conclusion can be applied to a wide variety of religious dogmas. The more a religious
school can indoctrinate from cradle up, the more difficult it is for people so indoctrinated to ever escape that level of
mind control.
Your point is quite valid in analysis regarding “will modify and liberalize.”
You point also is valid regarding “a long, painful process.”
Without question, information and knowledge (the real thing) is a threat to any religious dogma. Some here have thought I merely criticize LDS dogma. Such is not the case but that’s the dogma often presented on MDB. We understand from news reports that
children as young as 10 are being recruited by religious/political groups in Iraq to wear bombs and enter highly populated places as suicide bombers.
We think that’s terrible. It is. Other suicide bombers have been much older. So how does a group get people to do this? They do it through indoctrination. They capitalize on
cognitive dissidence. They indoctrinate such people
to believe something which virtually all who participate here would find abhorrent.
You’re correct in the statement: “But definitely
some apologists are so enmeshed within their belief system that they cannot conceive of an "I" outside it. Their self identity IS Mormonism.”
So we are looking at the
degree or the
level of indoctrination and just how powerful or weak it may be in particular individuals. We might also be looking at one’s propensity to be indoctrinated, to believe without question.
I know brothers and sisters in the same family who had similar rearing from cradle up. Yet one might be described as an
agnostic-atheist and the other a
faith-based member of some religious group (not necessarily LDS).
One went to the university, studied, was exposed to a variety of genuine information and is well educated. The other never attended any formal education beyond high school. While they are siblings, their
environment afforded one a larger perspective with no “painful process” of escaping religious dogma. It happened early in life (relatively speaking).
I think, on the other hand, that people who began to think, really intellectualize about religious dogma at age 40 or higher (or lower), those people have a much more difficult time, a “painful time,” as you stated in recognizing with fuller awareness a larger world of ideas.
JAK