bcspace wrote:
Notice how well m theory dovetails with LDS doctrine and science.
We always notice that, BC. You should be the Prophet.
bcspace wrote:
Notice how well m theory dovetails with LDS doctrine and science.
I kind of imagined it as two "non-spirit" homo-sapiens (or Spirit version .9) having children who grew to maturity, and then were "called" by God to become Adam and Eve when they were teenagers or adults.
It would be at that time that their spirits were upgraded from version .9 to version 1.0,
Of course, all those .9 spirit people would continue living and dying outside the Garden, so I'm not sure what would happen to them after the fall.
Maybe God exterminated them as "works-in-progress" to give Adam and Eve a clean slate.
But then we might expect to see some evidence of that in the fossil record, and we have created more logistical problems.
I've never read Nibley's opinion on this.Well it's what the OP was all about. And since you didn't read it, it's pretty much the same as yours.
So now I present the opportunity for those who believe the idea once promulgated by some noted Mormon apologists, that there were "pre-Adamites", to offer a reasoned defence of this idea.
bcspace wrote:
There does not appear to be a requirement to respond directly to Nibley's opinion.
It would help to read Nibley's opinion, since that was what the OP was about. But as "luck" would have it, both you and Nibley give almost identical grounds for believing in "pre-Adamites".
bcspace wrote:Does he give 2 Nephi 2:22?
Interestingly, ETB said something to the effect that the Book of Mormon was good for combating false doctrines (and he lists some) such as evolution. BRM later made the same statement about the Book of Mormon combating evolutionary theory but added the caveat... "that denies the Fall". I don't deny the Fall.
Adam becomes Adam, a hominid becomes a man, when he starts keeping a record. What kind of record? A record of his ancestors—the family line that sets him off from all other creatures. Such records begin very early, to judge by the fabulous genealogic knowledge of the Australian aborigines (A. P. Elkin) or the most "primiitive" Africans (L. Frobenius). Even written records go back to ages lost in the mists of time—the Azilian pebbles, the marking of arrows, and the identity of individuals in their relationships with each other.48 Whether former speculation about life on other worlds is now to be upgraded to life from other worlds remains to be seen, but Adam is wonderful enough without that. That gap between the record keeper and all the other creatures we know anything about is so unimaginably enormous and yet so neat and abrupt that we can only be dealing with another sort of being, a quantum leap from one world to another. Here is something not derivative from anything that has gone before on the local scene, even though they all share the same atoms. (emphasis added)
So ETB sees the Book of Mormon as "combatting evolution", but you accept it.
Steve Benson's recollections about this indicate that his grandfather was lenient to his (Steve's) views about evolution, but as far as I know never accepted it.
Nibley does not directly address 2 Ne. 2:22, as far as I can see,
but what you need to address is how "immortal beings" can evolve from mortal pre-homo sapiens.
I take it you believe that the first true homo sapiens were immortal?
Then "fell"? Nibley writes about this "evolution", but I don't think he addresses the point you make, that is, how can previously mortal beings become immortal through "evolution"? Though he hints at it.
bcspace wrote:
He comes from the older generation (confused with the non existent chapel Mormon hypothesis) who fill in the gaps differently.
Nibley does not directly address 2 Ne. 2:22, as far as I can see,
bcspace wrote: As far as I know, I'm the first one who's noticed this out.
bcspace wrote:but what you need to address is how "immortal beings" can evolve from mortal pre-homo sapiens.
Not sure I understand here.
bcspace wrote: I don't think or claim evolutionary processes as we know them have anything to do with becomming immortal. To me, homo sapiens evolved just as science describes. When the time was right, God placed two of them into a different state (a state of no death) to await the outcome of their choices (the Fall).
Why would his personal beliefs conflict with his "prophetic understanding"? Does this not greatly mitigate his "prophetic understanding"? Why, for example, would you be more privy to a "better understanding" than a prophet?
As far as I know, I'm the first one who's noticed this out.What happened to the "prophets, seers and revelators"?
If Adam was originally created immortal, until he ate the forbidden fruit, how could an immortal being evolve from mortal beings? How does a "quantum leap" (as per Nibley) become not just genetically evolved - but immortal?
How did the state of "no death" arise from millions of years of death?
In this evolutionary chain, a species "evolved" which death could not claim, until "the fall"? Mormon doctrine is that if Adam had not partaken of the fruit, he would have "lived forever".
And none have ever been immortal, or created immortal, as Genesis and the Book of Mormon suggests.
bcspace wrote:Nibley does not directly address 2 Ne. 2:22, as far as I can see,
As far as I know, I'm the first one who's noticed this out.