EAllusion wrote:marg wrote:
No EA, Nevo was making an argument for more than that. He said "It doesn't require me to keep an open mind about "magic stones." It requires that I be open to the possibility that Joseph actually had visions (a "seeric gift"), that he didn't simply make everything up." So nevo is talking about Smith having quite possibly "actual visions" an "actual seeric gift", in other words some sort of actual psychic ability to detect actual things hidden.
Nevo used Vogel simply to show that a famous critic like him accepts that people were convinced of Smith's ability to see treasure with his magic stone. In so far as Nevo did that, his use was proper.
Once again no, he was doing more than that. Read the quote I gave from Nevo "It requires that I be open to the possibility that Joseph actually had visions (a "seeric gift"), that he didn't simply make everything up."
If he didn't make it up, if it wasn't just by chance which would be making things up, if he actually had visions (seeric ability) then Nevo is saying that he believes Smith quite possibly did in actuality have such supernatural abilities.
Nevo isn't quoting anything that can be taken out of context. Nevo is actually even careful to point out what Vogel thinks. From the quote you can tell what option Vogel thinks is true.
And I can also see the purpose for Nevo using the quote, that purpose, acknowledge that Smith may indeed have had supernatural abilities, you fail to acknowledge.
Nevo is making it clear that Vogel does not think that Smith truly demonstrated his seeric gift. He's just using Vogel to get Smith past the hurdle of being a "self-deluded treasure seer" without any people who thought he was successful.
Once again... he's doing more than that. Nevo is arguing both that Smith believed he had actual abilities, and that there is evidence that in fact he did have such abilities, that people in his day believed he had such abilties and not only that but even Vogel supports such a notion.
Or he, like many people, thinks the Spalding theory sucks balls. One of the two.
My comment and criticism of Vogel had to do with his evalution of witness evidence on both sides and from that I'm drawing conclusions on his objectivity in the matter. My comment is not about whether the Spalding theory holds water.
He's (JAK's) a moron, a liar, and someone who is quite obviously plagiarizing frequently, usually when he sounds atypically coherent. That'd you'd condescend Nevo - someone who is often a bright, clear thinker - by berating his general "critical thinking skills" while praising someone like JAK is just too much.
Right, meanwhile read this thread again..read Nevo's obvious credulity. Regarding your comments on JAK, they show your immaturity that you would bring your feelings regarding him into this discussion.
Yes, I think Nevo is ultimately wrong in his judgment of Mormonism. And yes, I think he makes errors in argument, as demonstrated by my reply to what he said in this thread. That doesn't mean I think your general condescension of his ability to think rationally is appropriate. The problem is that you aren't very strong in the skills you are judging, which robs you of the meta-skill of being able to soundly make those judgments. If you were a better "critical thinker" you wouldn't be doing this.
So you think Nevo in this thread has demonstrated poor critical thinking but your objection is you don't like me saying so. Ok EA, meanwhile I've pointed it out, while you've taken my posts and used them to point out the same thing. So I guess you think you do have the critical thinking skills to do so. Whatever makes happy.
But to end this, Smith had no supernatural abilities, no actual... seeric ability or visions to find hidden objects and those who believe otherwise are gullible, even if they are speculating on it being a mere possibility. It simply is unreasonable, impractical to do so and a waste of people's time to do so.