Are Katherine and the others prominent advocates of Mormonism and/or theism? Are they, in the main on these boards, advocates of it at all?
LOL! So here’s your original question:
Would you care to point to any believer on this board, or at the Maxwell Institute or at FAIR, say, whose belief in Mormonism you regard as rational, honest, intelligent, and informed?
So I pointed to several believers that I stated were rational, honest, intelligent, and informed.
Now DCP changes it to PROMINENT advocates of Mormonism!!!
Katherine the Great is a frequent poster on MAD. Go check out her posts for yourself if you have doubts about her qualifications as a believer. Do the same for alter idem. Jason does have more questions about aspects of the faith, but is still a believer.
I believe that atheism can be, and, in the hands of good thinkers, often is, rationally founded, intelligent, based upon an honest survey of the evidence, and sane.
Do you believe that belief in Mormonism can be rationally founded, intelligent, based upon an honest survey of the evidence, and sane? Are there any good thinkers -- honest, sane, intelligent, rational, and well-informed -- who argue prominently and publicly (and honestly, sanely, intelligently, rationally, and on the basis of solid information) for the validity of orthodox Mormonism?
There are many different truth claims that Mormonism makes, and some can be believed based upon rationally founded, intelligent, honest survey of the evidence, and sane. There are other truth claims that are more problematic. I mention the historicity of the Book of Mormon as one I have studied and interacted with others about. Most people who believe that the Book of Mormon makes sense as an ancient Mesoamerican document do not possess a significant amount of background information in order to make that judgment based on an “honest survey of the evidence”. But they are honest and rational people. There are lots of areas I haven’t studied enough to make informed judgments about, either. There are some people who are very well informed about ancient Mesoamerica and still believe it makes sense as an ancient Mesoamerican document, and I believe they are rational, intelligent, and sane. However, I believe their preexisting bias – namely their spiritual testimonies – precludes them from an honest survey of the evidence. John Clark admitted that surveying the evidence will only be persuasive if one already believes in the Book of Mormon for “other reasons” – which is, of course, the testimony. If all that was required was an honest surveying of the evidence to be persuaded that the Book of Mormon makes sense as an ancient Mesoamerican document, then the preexisting testimony would not be required. Here is John Clark’s statement from the Q/A session of his BYU devotional:
[John Clark:] Those who choose not to believe it [i.e., the Book of Mormon] will never believe it; those who choose to believe it already do. ...
But I'm, I would never tell anybody to try to prove the Book of Mormon is true through physical evidence, just because of the way metaphysics and epistemology work—it's not possible. And so, you have to get the testimony some other way, and then the evidence will become very clear. If you're on the opposing side you can say we basically just, ah, brained washed ourselves (one or two words inaudible). You're free to think that—we're not doing anybody any harm.
[Mp3 Time: c. 26 mins.]
[John Clark:] And, no, I can't convince any of my archeology colleagues that the evidence proves the BoMor is true. They have read it, but they just read it like they're reading an archeology book, and that's not going to go anywhere.
Now other truth claims of Mormonism make a great deal of sense, such as their teachings on family, personal responsibility, fiscal responsibility and accountability, etc.
Now as to whether or not the belief in Mormonism – as a whole – can be sane, rational, based an honest survey of the evidence, and intelligent depends entirely upon how one interprets and understands Mormonism overall. And as anyone who has engaged in discussions with believers on the internet knows, there is hardly a consensus on that.
So let’s take it down to a more basic level – do I believe that people can believe that Jesus Christ was resurrected from the dead based on rationality, honesty, intelligence, and an honest survey of information? No. There is zero evidence that human beings resurrect from the dead. The only evidence we have for it is a record that is thousands of years old that contains other dubious claims. But that doesn’t mean that believers, themselves, are not sane, honest, and intelligent.
Belief is a very complex mechanism. You are over-simplifying it to try to score some imaginary point.
But let me ask this: do you believe that the belief in Scientology – as a whole – can be sane, rational, based on an honest survey of the evidence, and intelligent?