William Schryver wrote:Some Schmo wrote: You're confusing exmos with the folks in your ward.
Then that's a step up. I usually confuse them with a herd of sheep.
Completely understandable.
William Schryver wrote:Some Schmo wrote: You're confusing exmos with the folks in your ward.
Then that's a step up. I usually confuse them with a herd of sheep.
Mister Scratch wrote:Your "recollection" is totally beside the point. It has nothing to do with material facts. Whether or not you remembered to turn off the stove does not change the fact that said stove does in fact exist, and that, in fact, it is capable of being turned off or on.
LifeOnaPlate wrote:We may have certain writings, etc. from the past but they are products of particular people with particular preunderstanding, worldview, opinions, prejudice, etc.
Mister Scratch wrote:That may be true, but, again, none of this really alters the facts as they are.
Likewise we have witnesses who claim they literally saw an angel and golden plates. This evidence, then would be equal to the accounts of having wine at Carthage, and Joseph Smith's pepperbox pistol.
How do you figure? Probably each of us has seen, or knows about the existence of, pistols and wine. Nobody (as far as I know) would dispute the claim that these things exist, and are real. Probably, you can head down to your local Walmart and purchase both of these things. On the other hand, I doubt that many---if any of us---has seen an angel or the golden plates.
LifeOnaPlate wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:Your "recollection" is totally beside the point. It has nothing to do with material facts. Whether or not you remembered to turn off the stove does not change the fact that said stove does in fact exist, and that, in fact, it is capable of being turned off or on.
I don't know what that has to do with historical objectivity or "undisputed historical facts."
Likewise we have witnesses who claim they literally saw an angel and golden plates. This evidence, then would be equal to the accounts of having wine at Carthage, and Joseph Smith's pepperbox pistol.How do you figure? Probably each of us has seen, or knows about the existence of, pistols and wine. Nobody (as far as I know) would dispute the claim that these things exist, and are real. Probably, you can head down to your local Walmart and purchase both of these things. On the other hand, I doubt that many---if any of us---has seen an angel or the golden plates.
And we get to the real issue. Those witnesses don't count to you because "angels don't exist."
Then we'll bring out the other star witnesses, those who say they've seen Elvis, or aliens, or something like that. Even still, these witnesses and their statements would have to be compared to the statements of the witnesses of the actual physical gold plates.
I take it you believe that there is objective history, then?
Mister Scratch wrote:Well then, let's put it this way: in the above scenario, does the stove exist? Y/N? If "yes," then, at the very least, within the context of this discussion, the existence of said stove is an "undisputed historical fact."
I didn't say that "angels don't exist." I said that your analogy was false.
Um, okay. If you really want to go there. Though I have to say, it seems like rhetorical suicide to put Mormonism's foundational story on a par with alien abductees and nutty Elvis fans.
Where did I ever say that? I've merely been pointing out that some facets of history aren't really debatable except in a very abstract, non-practical, PoMo sense. Your argument, LoaP, depends pretty heavily on the "whacko factor." Sure, you might find some person somewhere who is willing to "debate" against the claim that Columbus sailed the ocean blue in 1492, but does this make that particular element of history "debatable" in any meaningful sense? No.
LifeOnaPlate wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:Well then, let's put it this way: in the above scenario, does the stove exist? Y/N? If "yes," then, at the very least, within the context of this discussion, the existence of said stove is an "undisputed historical fact."
Not really. The stove still exists in the present for all to come and see at any time.
That the same stove was always in the same place is something to be disputed on historical grounds, however.
I didn't say that "angels don't exist." I said that your analogy was false.
It wasn't false in the least.
Where did I ever say that? I've merely been pointing out that some facets of history aren't really debatable except in a very abstract, non-practical, PoMo sense. Your argument, LoaP, depends pretty heavily on the "whacko factor." Sure, you might find some person somewhere who is willing to "debate" against the claim that Columbus sailed the ocean blue in 1492, but does this make that particular element of history "debatable" in any meaningful sense? No.
Another great example. The details of that trip, destination, landing location, results, etc. have been a matter of historical debate because of the inherent difficulty in presenting "undisputed historical facts."
Mister Scratch wrote:Sure: some of the "details" are debatable. The trip itself, though? No, not really---except in a completely absurdist sense.