Now that I am settling down a bit, I thought I would more seriously and fairly engage Coggins' essay, which is not half bad.
Coggins7 wrote:A cosmic eugenicist would choose traits, attributes, and characteristics for his children.
If God himself represents the goal of perfection toward which his children are to yearn, doesn't that determine to a certain degree the "traits, attributes, and characteristics" his children should possess?
Coggins7 wrote:What LDS doctrine actually says is that all intelligence, eternal, uncreated, and coexistent with God, exits at vastly differentiated initial states. Our intelligence does not exist at the same level, or state, in the very beginning, and as it progresses though various stages of development, it progresses at different rates, along different trajectories, and encompassing different levels of focus, consistency, and preserverence (valiance, in LDS terminology).
Why the jump from multiple traits, attributes, and characteristics to intelligence alone?
Coggins7 wrote:The various levels of salvation, or degrees of glory (and of no glory at all), achieved by varying individuals in eternity, are manifestations, not of a cosmic eugenics program, but a cosmic obstacle course, much like those encountered in military basic training. It matters much less what one begins with,in such circumstances, as much as what one does with the characteristics and attributes one has. It may take one only a few tries to overcome some of the obstacles, while others may take far longer. In the Gospel, the potential is the same for all (in an ultimate sense, not in this life per se), even thought the initial states were varied and God did not, with forethought, choose these initial states and characteristics for us, rigging the ultimate outcome.
This is sort of how I always thought of it too: the obstacle course, that is. Are you positing progression through lower kingdoms as well?
Coggins7 wrote:The Gospel also encompasses the concept of grace, which is the power of Christ to enable and empower us to transcend our inherent mortal (and perhaps, with respect to other intelligences, initial ontological ) limitations and move beyond the intrinsic imitations on growth and progression each of us brings to our mortal experience.
And that certainly appears to be a lot kinder than a cosmic eugenics program.
Coggins7 wrote:Amantha's alternative proposal appears to have been spun from whole cloth, and bears no resemblance to actual Church doctrines on these matters. Whatever they may be, they do not reflect anything resembling a coherent, fair minded understanding of these concepts. One may disagree, of course, but one should not set up strawmen that the slightest breeze can knock down in doing so. One should engage the concepts on their merits.
I would guess that amantha's proposal is based on her experience of the LDS Church as she has lived it, instead of the doctrine taken in isolation. This is not to say that cosmic eugenics is the right way to go, but cosmic eugenics suggests something of the way that in this world a certain kind of elite usually emerges in LDS leadership. In the highest Church leadership, there is a tendency to draw from a certain narrow group of interrelated families. Still, eugenics is not an accurate description. There is, however, still a lingering idea of the royal blood, the most public vestiges of which exist in the patriarchal blessing, but again this is not eugenics.
To respond to your "engage concepts on their merits." I think it would be more correct to say that one should more fairly represent what the concept is. Sometimes our enthusiasm for drawing analogies can carry us off on a blind trail.
I am really tired, and I will not be surprised to find that much of what I wrote did not make sense, but these are the thoughts that popped in my head while I was reading.