Daniel Peterson wrote:Shades's dichotomy is, and has always been, tendentious and silly.
That's why even the folks at Sunstone rejected it.
That's news to me. The Sunstone folks rejected it?

Daniel Peterson wrote:Shades's dichotomy is, and has always been, tendentious and silly.
That's why even the folks at Sunstone rejected it.
harmony wrote:Somebody died and made Sunstone the only arbitrator of things LDS?Daniel Peterson wrote:That's why even the folks at Sunstone rejected it.
harmony wrote:What did the good people at Sunstone think of Truth Dancer's presentation? Or Addictio's?
Ray A wrote:So Paul is:
1) A Chapel Mormon.
2) An Internet Mormon.
???
That's news to me. The Sunstone folks rejected it?
Daniel Peterson wrote:That's why even the folks at Sunstone rejected it. . . I've been told, by someone who was there, that Shades's simplistic and agenda-driven dichotomy was not well received when he presented it at a Sunstone symposium some years back.
If that's incorrect, if the audience and other panelists were enthusiastically positive, Shades is welcome to correct my bad information.
Daniel Peterson wrote:See the amazing Professor Whimsy reveal the secret motivations of his enemies! Watch as he performs death-defying feats of hostile misreading! Gasp with horrified amazement as he pulls nonsense out of a hat!
Dr. Shades wrote:That's quite something, considering how few Sunstone attendees spend time in online debates and thus were hearing about the Chapel/Internet Mormon split for the very first time.
Dr. Shades wrote:Going from 0-100 against me
Dr. Shades wrote:to 50-50 in favor of me after only a 20 minute presentation is quite an accomplishment by anyone's standards.
Dr. Shades wrote:And after all is said and done, it was only one of two or three presentations that was specifically mentioned, and discussed, in the pages of the Salt Lake Tribune.
Dr. Shades wrote:Did yours and Whiting's earlier BYU panel on Lamanite DNA do much better than 50-50?
Daniel Peterson wrote:Dr. Shades wrote:Did yours and Whiting's earlier BYU panel on Lamanite DNA do much better than 50-50?
I've never been on a DNA panel at Sunstone.
Dr. Shades wrote:Notice that I said "typically" promulgated. Paul Osborne, a Chapel Mormon, promulgated his Chapel Mormon views via the Internet, a rather rare thing.
Internet Mormons tend to want to "filter" a prophet's words through both his likely cultural influences and his limited sphere of knowledge. Chapel Mormons tend to take a prophet's words at face value.
Chapel Mormons believe that a prophet is a foreordained man of the highest moral caliber. Internet Mormons believe that a prophet is not necessarily any better than his societal average.
Internet Mormons believe that the scriptures supersede the living prophets. Chapel Mormons believe that the living prophets supersede the scriptures.
Internet Mormons believe that the only real and binding doctrine in Mormonism is that found between the covers of the four Standard Works--all else is mere conjecture.
A spectrum of belief is probably common in most religious traditions, but within the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints a different dynamic is at work: Both Internet Mormonism and Chapel Mormonism have each taken on independent lives of their own. The most interesting aspect of this dichotomy is that each group claims that its views are the "true" Mormonism.
antishock8 wrote:For what it's worth, I think Dr. Shades' analogy is spot on.
Ray A wrote:Dr. Shades wrote:Notice that I said "typically" promulgated. Paul Osborne, a Chapel Mormon, promulgated his Chapel Mormon views via the Internet, a rather rare thing.
How is that a rare thing? MAD has 8,093 members, with 672 active members. Are they all Internet Mormons? Or even a majority? How would you even determine what these people really believe? Did you do a survey?
Internet Mormons tend to want to "filter" a prophet's words through both his likely cultural influences and his limited sphere of knowledge. Chapel Mormons tend to take a prophet's words at face value.
So what would you say of typical chapel Mormons who don't follow the prophet in, for example: home storage, contraception, political preferences, ear-rings, genealogy, working mothers, etc? Did mothers take the prophet's words not to work at face value? Or did couples take the prophet's teachings about contraception at face value?
Chapel Mormons believe that a prophet is a foreordained man of the highest moral caliber. Internet Mormons believe that a prophet is not necessarily any better than his societal average.
That is highly disputable, on both counts.
Internet Mormons believe that the scriptures supersede the living prophets. Chapel Mormons believe that the living prophets supersede the scriptures.
Then Joseph Fielding Smith must have been an Internet Mormon, because he told Eugene England that if anything he taught contradicted the scriptures, he would be in the wrong. He virtually admitted to England that what he was taught about blacks came from his traditional beliefs, and he couldn't justify it from the scriptures.
A spectrum of belief is probably common in most religious traditions, but within the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints a different dynamic is at work: Both Internet Mormonism and Chapel Mormonism have each taken on independent lives of their own. The most interesting aspect of this dichotomy is that each group claims that its views are the "true" Mormonism.
Again highly disputable. Did a Liahona like Richard Poll (as one example) ever claim that what he believed was "true Mormonism"?
Did Henry Eyring, with his firm belief in evolution, and his disagreements with Joseph Fielding Smith?
These categories are too simplistic. The definition attempts to make clear differences, when in real life the variety of beliefs among Mormons is far more complex.
Dr. Shades wrote:Notice that I said "BYU" panel, not "Sunstone" panel.Daniel Peterson wrote:I've never been on a DNA panel at Sunstone.
Dr. Shades wrote:Again: Did yours and Whiting's earlier BYU panel on Lamanite DNA do much better than 50-50?