RayAgostini wrote:MrStakhanovite wrote:Thanks Ray! That thread reminded me why I'm glad we ran that Trevor guy off.
I couldn't agree more. He was a pain in the butt!
Boy, did that guy have a lot of skeletons in his closet. Rat.
RayAgostini wrote:MrStakhanovite wrote:Thanks Ray! That thread reminded me why I'm glad we ran that Trevor guy off.
I couldn't agree more. He was a pain in the butt!
Kishkumen wrote:Sure, Schmo, the perception of fairness varies according to perspective. One consideration I try to observe on occasion is the perception of the person with whom I disagree. If that person believes I have been unfair, I think it reasonable to consider how I might behave more diplomatically such that I do not trample all over their feelings and point of view. Obviously, if you are convinced that Mormonism is a scam, then you feel fair calling it for what it is. But this discussion is about how our LDS interlocutors might feel about our fairness. I am sure the majority of us believe ourselves to be the fairest folk on earth, no matter which side of the issue we occupy.
Kishkumen wrote:sock puppet wrote:I agree some may find social benefits from religious participation, but I fit those under the umbrella of the emotional need for paternalistic protection (my #(d) above).
The discussion we had, which I cannot locate at the moment, centered on the meaning of evidence. Some have the tendency to think of evidence as that which convincingly proves the Church true. Really evidence is that information which lends credence to one's argument. I think there are tantalizing bits of evidence in favor of the Mormon position. Perhaps the most famous by now in Book of Mormon discussions is NHM. I am also aware of its limitations as evidence. Still, I am, on the whole, inclined to call it evidence in favor of, rather than against, the Mormon argument regarding the antiquity of the Book of Mormon.
I don't view all of the evidence as being merely warm fuzzies.
Now, I could also go through all of the reasons I find the evidence of NHM not to be particularly strong. That, however, is another question.
Darth J wrote:You know another fascinating thing about this issue of the Liahona? It proves that the Book of Mormon is plausible because a couple of researchers have found what is probably Lehi's trail, including where Nahom likely was!
http://LDS.org/liahona/1977/07/in-searc ... l?lang=eng
And a year later, the Ensign published an article telling us where Nahom almost certainly was!
http://LDS.org/ldsorg/v/index.jsp?hideN ... 82620aRCRD
And it's in a different place than where the Ensign would later say Nahom almost certainly was!
http://LDS.org/liahona/2008/01/was-lehi-here?lang=eng
It's not just stabbing in the dark and finding random coincidences! It's official church publications finding evidence of the historicity of the Book of Mormon by finding the same place in two different places!
Isn't it wonderful? Isn't it marvelous?
Darth J wrote:Which NHM, Reverend?
Which of the "this is the place" articles about NHM that were printed in the Ensign is evidence that Lehi was there?
Kishkumen wrote:Darth J wrote:Which NHM, Reverend?
Which of the "this is the place" articles about NHM that were printed in the Ensign is evidence that Lehi was there?
Thanks for resurrecting the old discussion, Darth. I was not offering this as a topic I was eager to argue about. As I said, I do not think this is particularly strong evidence. But the question, again, is the perception of what qualifies as evidence. Everyone is not in agreement on that point.
Some Schmo wrote:My comments were in direct response to you saying, "Now, are the individuals who generally stick around here fair to Mormonism? No."
I probably wouldn't have said anything if you'd said something like, "Now, are the individuals who generally stick around here fair to Mormonism? Obviously, not to you, Ray."
Some Schmo wrote:It's a little difficult to be concerned with Ray perception of fairness, however, given the lunacy he's puking all over this thread. It's like being concerned with Simon's opinion of our ability to take responsibility, or stem's opinion of how much we whine, or stak's opinion of our hostility, or hoops' opinion of our logic, or a pot's opinion of a kettle's blackness. So what?
Darth J wrote:I am pretty sure you will agree with me that determining whether something is causally related or mere coincidence is a preliminary question before something is admitted as evidence---whether in law, history, science, etc.
Kishkumen wrote:Darth J wrote:I am pretty sure you will agree with me that determining whether something is causally related or mere coincidence is a preliminary question before something is admitted as evidence---whether in law, history, science, etc.
I tend to speak in terms of evidences of varying quality. I see NHM as a weak evidence. We could be arguing semantics here. There are a number of interesting coincidences in Mormon Studies that I think add up at least to weak evidence.
Mind you, I don't think that this is saying a whole lot, but I don't think that any disagreement we might have over this consigns me to the ghetto of the irrational people. I simply think it is enough to speak in terms of suggestive or weak evidence. One rarely, if ever, speaks of proof in history anyway.
I am comfortable saying that evidence exists, but not sufficient evidence to persuade me as a historian.
Darth J wrote:Just more of your agenda-driven, fundamentalist bigotry.
Kishkumen wrote:I don't understand what occasioned Ray's recent reemergence here to take us to task for how we treat Mormonism. I would not, however, characterize it as mere lunacy. Over time I think I have formed a fairly decent grasp of where you are coming from, so I am not surprised by what you are saying. I just don't happen to agree. And, speaking of myself alone, Ray is too important a person to me to dismiss out of hand. Rather, he is the kind of person I value enough to stick with even when he takes swipes at me. I am partial to people in that way. I like most of you people personally far more than I care for your opinions.