beastie wrote:No, the sham can't. I've heard the Islamic version of heaven and even what supposedly Heaven's Gate led to. Apples and oranges. My description (inadequate though it would be) is nothing like the one they gave. Also, what I felt and saw makes me LESS likely to commit murder. So yes, my experience was nothing like theirs.
What differs is the details added to the core experience. The core experience - the power to convict the individual that the experience comes from God and shares some "truth" - remains constant.Everything I've seen and read indicates that weak-willed people have a tendency to fly to extremes. I think your examples exemplify this. I don't know enough about Heaven's Gate dogma to comment much on this. However, the Islamic extremists focus on the political goals of their God. I have seen no evidence whatsoever that those involved in promulgating it by the sword pay any heed at all to the lessons of the Koran regarding kindness, forgiveness, and the like. Why do these devout believers willing to sacrifice their lives for their God think some of his word is worthless? There is more going on there then simple devotion to God. Apples and oranges.
Is that right? You are not well informed. Part of the reason that Islamic extremists are successful is that terrorism is only a part of their agenda - they also engage in strenuous charitable acts. They build roads, schools, provide food for people who would otherwise have nothing.
Besides, this is besides the point, Nehor. The point is that you are convinced - due to the intensity of your experience that it could not be triggered by a sham. The content of what these other people believe is irrelevant to my point. The only relevance is the intensity of their conviction that their experience MUST come from something real, that it could NOT be caused by a sham.To a degree you'll find this in my own faith. Those who trumpet their faith but violate God's laws routinely or those who spend their time trying to recreate consecration or becoming cranks about the Word of Wisdom but ignore lessons on charity and sacrifice.
This is nothing but a rabbit trail to avoid the real point.
I'll try one more time: the point has to do with power of conviction.
Can people be powerfully convinced of things that are, in actually, a sham?
The obvious answer is YES, of course they can. So powerfully convinced they cut off their own genitalia.
I can't believe I'm having to argue that my religious beliefs are different then those of the insanely murderous.
Let me try a different tact here. Let's take an unreligious serial killer or a castration fetishist. How do they reach the point that they are willing to do these things without intense religious experiences? What conviction drives them? Should I assume that someone who gets some kind of perverse pleasure from doing these things has had a more intense spiritual experience then I have? Or even one of the same type?
I don't see how rewriting one's moral code requires religious experiences in the first place. I don't see how a religious experience on the types I've experienced could in any way, shape, or form lead to the kinds of madness you're suggesting. I take that back. My experiments with Satanism might compare. An interesting thought. The only time I even momentarily considered such black crimes....
Okay, I'm convinced on the point that others can gain conviction from spiritual experiences that rival or surpass mine or any other LDS believer. I would not argue that they felt any of the fruits of the Spirit of God in the process: peace, comfort, charity, etc.
I guess the conclusion I reach is this. Some of them may not have been convinced by experiences but by other things (whatever motivates the above serial killer). Those who have dark spiritual experiences may be more convinced of it then I am but they're likely morally bankrupt by that time if they can believe it totally. They will also be very messed up.