Daniel Peterson wrote:truth dancer wrote:You are not suggesting True Believers will not do anything they believe God wants them to do are you? :-)
Some believers have done terrible things in the name of God, or using God as a pretext, just as some non-believers have done terrible things on behalf of
their ideologies.
truth dancer wrote:Unless you are sort of suggesting the idea that True Believers will do anything they believe God wants them to do is a wild generalization?
I'm not "sort of suggesting the idea." I'm saying it outright.
I first read Eric Hoffer when I was about thirteen, and he was a significant influence on my thinking from an early age -- even a kind of intellectual hero to me. If you want to use the term
True Believer in some restricted (even Hofferian) sense, you need to make that absolutely crystal clear every time you make so unnuanced a generalization as you've been making here. Serious readers
may, in that case, be willing to cut you a little bit of slack. Though it still seems to me that you're engaging in a form of the "No True Scotsman" fallacy.
My father is a HUGE fan of Hoffer and I grew up with him as well! ;-)
I'm sorry I didn't realize the term "True Believer" meant anything to anyone other than in the "Hoffer" sense. I still don't know how else it would be understood.
We discuss this enough on this forum that I didn't consider any other interpretation, if there are others. Nevertheless...
The point is not that people commit crimes... duh!
The point is, True Believers (in the Eric Hoffer sense of the term), will do whatever they think God is wanting them to do.
If, a group of True Believers believed, covenanted, promised, and thought God wanted them to harm or kill others, they would do so. Or if they believed the murder would bring salvation or heaven, or exaltation or glory, they would do so.
As you know the LDS temple ceremony at the time, (without going into it at all), contained some items that are quite different than they are today. I believe this may have contributed to the MMM. The foundational belief, promises, and covenants that were made, in my opinion may have influenced the murderers to do what they otherwise would not.
To not address this issue in a book about the MMM is to miss a significant point concerning the motivation of a group of people who willingly slaughtered innocent families.
I'm open to learning here if someone has a different opinion.
~dancer~