Alfredo wrote:You're not working with me, subgenius. You're quibbling over ideas which are easy to figure out.
your idea is rather simple, but its foundations are flawed.
Never mind the silly way I might say things. You know exactly what I mean. The experiences which bring human beings to the limits of emotion (or any experience, for that matter) are remarkably likely to produce b***s***. This is exceptionally evident in every culture, every era, and in every person. When an experience pushes us to our limits, we should be suspicious and examine our perspectives carefully. It's unfathomably understated to suggest that humans tend to get carried away on contrary paths with their most impressive experiences.
consistently inconsistent?
We should be skeptical because we know it is human nature to make s*** up about the ideas, practices, and experiences we find can easily push ourselves to physical and mental limits. But the fact that humans make s*** up all the time is just a detail explained and brushed aside as non-threatening to the Mormon paradigm, given the presumption that Mormons have found something special and different.
you seem to bounce from the general to the specific and then back again.
Here you seem to be making assumptions without cause. I am not sure what you mean by "make s*** up" in the context of this discussion, please elaborate.
My argument is that Mormons can't explain what distinguishes their experiences from the rest without referring to concepts or explanations which serve themselves and beg the question.
again, alleging a Moroni challenge paradox that must inherently mean flaw?
I am not sure you understand the paradigm of religion. You are using a yard stick to measure weight.
The only answers Mormonism provides are founded on the presupposition that experiences and interpretations which serve the Mormon paradigm are true and those that don't are incomplete or incompatible.
i disagree with this conclusion. There may be Mormons who say one way or another, but Mormonism itself does not speak to "compatibility" in the manner you devise here.
I don't think free-will is the "essence" of our discussion. Rather, there is a disconnect between the extremely convincing perception of a religious truth and actual religious truth. The question is how do we tell the difference?
your inability to know the answer of how to "discern" between these two experiences illustrates a simple lack of experience with the practice of Faith.
The notion of distinguishing between "extremely convincing" and "actual" has never been put forth as a "turns litmus paper blue" process. That is why there is such a critical distinction when one speaks about "manifestation" versus "interpretation".
I argue there is no answer which serves Mormonism which isn't self-serving and circular to begin with. But wait, you disagree...
not necessarily - it may "seem" to be circular because of the prism you view it through, but it does not invalidate its discernment of truth.
In your case, you tell the difference by claiming some experiences are "self-evident", and by extension, other sorts of experience must not be "self-evident"... The exception to my premise that religious experience requires interpretation is that something which is "self-evident" allows us begin reasoning at a point which would otherwise be circular.
no, i have stated that religious experiences are akin to self-evident experiences.
So, in essence, we're discussing the relationship between experience and what we accept as reality or at least, our model of reality. You suggest that there are certain experiences which bear a special relationship to reality that determines some experiences, in and of themselves, are reality. In order to do discuss the suggestion that certain religious experiences "are reality", I'd like to immediately switch the term "experience" to "qualia".
more bait and switch from the story teller i see....just casually throw in qualia, eh?
So please, subgenius, explain to everyone how to determine the relevant difference between qualia which are sufficient to accept as reality and what qualia are not sufficient to accept as reality?
reality can neither be accepted nor denied. One may refuse to acknowledge reality but it is manifest unto them first and foremost.
As my example of consciousness illustrates. One can not doubt their own consciousness, correct? it is actually "known" without inspection, without interpretation, and without dissection.
Where do you draw the line?
the point is that you do not draw a line...you can not draw a line. Only through "second-guessing" or self-doubt can one relegate an experience to being "not real".
The qualia argument within the mind-body is not something that applies here, i am not convinced of your position that there is a "veil of perception" over the religious experience.
Your mistake is that you have no support for the idea that a religious experience is composed of some simple "essence".
The religious experience may very well be dependent on the individual's ability to discern it, by which case there is no distinction or "quality" of experience (as you say above actual versus convincing).
You see, i kinda agree with Nietzsche whereas qualia are un-observable in others and unquantifiable in us...a notion i consider in harmony with what is being put forth in Mormonism.