beastie wrote:You can read Ben McGuire's postmodernism on this thread:
http://pacumenispages.yuku.com/topic/89 ... etics.html
I was posting as seven of niine.
The problem in following the argument is that Ben is now listed as "unregistered". Once ezboard switched to yuku, unless posters took the time to register again, their comments are listed as "unregistered".
You can see me refer to him as Ben throughout the thread, however. Ben labels himself a postmodernist openly.
He does say what Tal attributes to him. The difference is that he doesn't believe it causes problems for Mormonism.
Here's one of his statements from that thread:This is right. But I think that this is only a part of that issue. There cannot exist a "True" church, primarily because Truth is largely inaccessible in such a sense. In the same way, this is only one view of the church (which does make such procclamations, I admit).
i did not read the entire thread. However, I did read the post from which you extracted the quip above. i don't think he says what Bachman attributed to him. Bachman's attribution is much broader, i.e. we cannot actually "know" the truth about anything at all.
McGuire said,
This is right. But I think that this is only a part of that issue. There cannot exist a "True" church, primarily because Truth is largely inaccessible in such a sense. In the same way, this is only one view of the church (which does make such procclamations, I admit). The other view, which can also be found in official sources is that the church does not have all Truth, that new revelations can be received at any moment which can overturn even thigns formerly held as being True, and so on. The foundational notions of Truth, of the revelation of Truth, and so on, particularly in its canonized sources tend to take a distinctly different view on authority (as I noted in my first set of comments here), and so I, as a postmodernist, tend to see these authortitative claims as more of a social construction than as an expression of Truth in the church. And the Church is a social construct. It is a social construct even if we accept claims of divinely assisted leadership. And so the Church needs to be viewed as distinct from the Gospel, and so on.
More to the point, while the church claims to be able to provide the ordinances to obtain salvation, it admits that it is not the final arbiter of who gets into heaven. It cannot be the final arbiter, and so it isn't athoritative in that regard.
What I see McGuire saying is that certain, discrete truths may change, based on continuing revelation. However, i do not see him saying that all truth is subject to such modification. If Joseph Smith was God's prophet, that is a truth that is not subject to change based on some future revelation.
So, no, I don't see any support for Bachman's accusation yet.