liz3564 wrote:Darth J wrote:For 30 points, explain how insinuating that 14 million Latter-day Saints have reached different conclusions than Darth J does not suggest that among those 14 million who have access to LDS.org, they all got on, extensively researched LDS teachings, and determined that Church teachings means something other than what is meant by the plain words in front of their faces.
Wait...Darth...I need you to clarify something for me.
What is it you are actually stating here? Are you concluding that those who are aware of LDS.org and are still faithful members have simply not bothered to study what you have studied at length, and that they would all reach the exact same conclusion you reached if they did?
Liz, I know you want to relieve Simon from the fatuousness of his own statements, but that doesn't mean you have to deliberately misconstrue what is happening. Please do not insult the intelligence of people reading this thread by trying to invert Simon's fallacious statements and make it as if I am making some argument about people looking at the Church's website.
Simon says (ha ha!) this:
The Keyboard Evangelist wrote: It's not as if the other 14 million members of the Church don't have access to LDS.org -- in fact most probably do, and most come to very different conclusions than you do
This was Simon's assertion, not mine. It is a combination of the bandwagon fallacy and argument from ignorance.
The bandwagon fallacy component of this statement is that if most of the 14,000,000 alleged members of the LDS Church researched church teachings and came to different conclusions than I did, it must mean that their conclusions have superior truth value on the basis of there being more of them. That is the only reason he would make this statement.
The argument from ignorance components are as follows:
1. It assumes without proof that I am the only person who is familiar with LDS teachings and has found them to be occasionally contradictory to each other (Simon's statement above is in reference to his assertion that when I have pointed out the lack of internal consistency in certain LDS teachings, those teachings are only "seemingly" contradictory).
2. It assumes without proof that among the "most" of the 14M members that the LDS Church claims on paper to have, the component members of that "most" do not find the Church's teachings to be occasionally contradictory.
3. It assumes without proof that this "most" of the alleged membership have really thought this through, and not put it on the shelf.
4. It assumes that the "most" of the alleged 14M members are in fact believers, that they actually have a great deal of familiarity with the teachings of the organization that counts them on its membership rosters, and that they self-identify as Latter-day Saints (census data from various countries indicate that people who self-identify as Latter-day Saints are substantially lower than the members the Church claims to have).
And Liz, your question suggests that I don't know what it is like to be an active Latter-day Saint who really believes this stuff. Just because you are anxious to bail out Simon, on even the most banal of points, does not mean you have to adopt his mentality.