maklelan wrote:Wow, that was creative.
LOL...
Not nearly as creative as the BS you tell yourself so you needn't feel the embarrassment of being so spectacularly wrong.
maklelan wrote:Wow, that was creative.
Sethbag wrote:If A = the "absurdity burden" of traditional Christianity,
and ~A is more or less the same burden, or the large subset of A shared by Mormonism,
and B = the "absurdity burden" unique to Mormonism,
then it makes perfect sense to say that (~A + B) > A.
You asking for actual numeric values is itself an absurd ploy.
Sethbag wrote:And by the way, when I criticize Mormonism, I'm criticizing the actual LDS church's teachings, not your own private interpretations, where you've pruned out a lot of the things you know the LDS church has wrong, in order to make continued belief in the LDS church more tenable to you. To the actual LDS church, by its own teachings, the talking snake and donkey, the levitating Jesus, the global Flood of Noah, Adam and Eve being the first homo sapiens a few thousand years ago, etc. is all real. They get to share the burden of the ridiculousness of those teachings with the evangelicals.
Fence Sitter wrote:Makelan,
The argument that we are just like other religions, to me, seems to be at odds with a very fundamental belief that as LDS we are unique. I find it strange that instead of touting what makes us different, we now are trying to fit in. I think the new TV adds showing how Mormons are like everyone else, are a great example of this. We also seem to be going out of our way to show other religions that we are Christians just like they are . Frankly I think that Joseph Smith would have ridiculed the notion that we are just like any other religion and claimed we are the only true Christians. Perhaps we are loosing sight of how these "whoopers" set us apart in a misguided effort to be accepted and a fear of being ridiculed for what we believe.
maklelan wrote:
I really don't care about being accepted, nor am I afraid of being ridiculed. What I'm criticizing is a rather myopic double standard. I can see the attractiveness of trying to align my methodologies with the idea of trying to sound more mainstream, but I'm the wrong guy to accuse of that. All I'm pointing out is that all religious beliefs are necessarily based on faith and not empirical evidence. That hardly constitutes an attempt to make Mormonism sound more mainstream.
maklelan wrote:This has nothing whatsoever to do with the possibility of talking donkeys and snakes.
But the exact same is true of talking donkeys and snakes. The only difference is one is unilaterally precluded by natural law, and the other is only partly so.
That's completely false. Not only did Phaedruss and Cardinal say exactly that, but it is the clear implication of arguing that Mitt Romney's faith, specifically, merits ridicule.
So there's more evidence against the Book of Mormon than against the notion of a talking donkey? Are you serious?
You seem to be saying that because we have more of a historical context around the development of Mormonism, there is more evidence to falsify the Book of Mormon than to falsify the notion of a talking donkey and a talking snake.
How much evidence do you believe is needed to arrive at the incontrovertible conclusion that a donkey and a snake did not, in fact, speak with humans? I submit that the fact that the notion is completely and totally precluded by all relevant natural laws is evidence enough. Do you insist that conclusions that are established by piles and piles of evidence are more conclusive than those that are established by simple appeals to natural law?
Fence Sitter wrote: What I am asking is how can we claim to be unique and different and at the same time want to be mainstream?
Fence Sitter wrote:Either we hold beliefs that are radically different from other religions (whoppers to them) or we are not that different from them in which case Joseph Smith didn't introduce (restore if you like) anything new. I think the double standard lies in wanting it both ways. "Yes we are different but we are the same."
maklelan wrote:
Obviously we are different in many ways and the same in many ways. I don't specifically want either way. I just want honest and objective dialogue.
maklelan wrote:
I don't reconcile the two. I don't claim that that particular belief is empirically justified. It's not. I believe it because of personal experiences that I have had. I'm aware that I accept on faith a claim that is precluded by the empirical evidence, and I am aware that many others do the same regarding talking donkeys and snakes. I'm not saying their faith is any more or less ridiculous than mine. All supernatural claims are equally at odds with what we can show about the world around us, which is why I make no accusations about atheists. There's nothing illogical or unreasonable about atheism in and of itself. To insist that one supernatural claim is somehow more ridiculous than another, or that two supernatural claims are more ridiculous than one supernatural claim, however, is ludicrous.
maklelan wrote:
I believe that Jesus rose from the dead and that he lives. I believe the scriptures are the word of God. What exactly that means, I don't know.