Decent Post on Proof and Evidence at Sic et Non

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_RayAgostini

Re: Decent Post on Proof and Evidence at Sic et Non

Post by _RayAgostini »

Darth J wrote:You don't need to put silly beliefs in scare quotes, Ray. The belief, for example, that having a cup of coffee in the morning will preclude you from going into a multimillion dollar trophy building to learn Masonic handshakes that will help you become a god is silly. I make no apologies for calling things like that silly. Nor do I apologize for mocking silly beliefs. Silly beliefs deserve to be mocked, just like animals that are no longer adapted to their environment deserve to go extinct.

The fact that you cannot distinguish between mocking a ridiculous superstition and attacking someone personally only demonstrates the degree to which Mormons let their cherished beliefs define their identity. (We're not a cult, though!)

And again, Ray, taking issue with members of the LDS Church turning on one another is not comparable to a person who has disaffirmed loyalty to that organization taking issue with the teachings of said organization.


Your concepts are riddled with contradictions, and even hypocrisy. Tame your own pen before you try to tame others, "for the good of the members", who, in your opinion, belong to a "cult" that should be mercilessly ridiculed?

Darth J wrote:Just wondering, but do you at any point intend to post something that is on-topic to the OP?


Fair enough point. Maybe Kish or you would like to start another thread defending yourselves against this hypocrisy. Go ahead, and let's see how much sense it makes.
_Kishkumen
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Re: Decent Post on Proof and Evidence at Sic et Non

Post by _Kishkumen »

RayAgostini wrote:Fair enough point. Maybe Kish or you would like to start another thread defending yourselves against this hypocrisy. Go ahead, and let's see how much sense it makes.


I have no need to defend myself against a charge of hypocrisy since the issue I am addressing is organizational, not a matter of personal morality. These guys can go nuts. I don't give a crap. I just don't think it is beneficial for the organization to be saddled with their shenanigans, and I think problematic issues of authority arise. I am not telling any individual apologist to stop being an asshole. Go for it, I say.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist
_Darth J
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Re: Decent Post on Proof and Evidence at Sic et Non

Post by _Darth J »

CaliforniaKid wrote:
Darth J wrote:I picked the Eight Witnesses as an example simply because Peterson singled out the "Book of Mormon witnesses" (which is already a question-begging term) in his blog post. You seem to be addressing a different point than what I was discussing. The Eight Witness' ability to determine that Joseph Smith translated the Book of Mormon and that the plates they saw appeared to be of ancient work is a different issue than the probability that the plates they were shown were in fact what Joseph Smith claimed them to be. The probability that the Eight Witnesses were qualified to make those determinations is zero. They did not have any knowledge or ability to research the plates that would make them competent to make those statements. If what they were shown were in fact ancient Nephite records, that's coincidental to their testimony. You're not looking at the odds that they knew what they were talking about; you're trying to guess what the odds are that Joseph Smith was telling the truth. It still comes down to whether Joseph Smith was right, which still means that the Testimony of the Eight Witnesses is irrelevant (because their personal knowledge doesn't factor into your analysis) and lacks foundation (they couldn't have known whether Joseph Smith translated the plates and whether the plates were of ancient origin).

Let's put it this way. There are several possible explanations for the witnesses' testimony. 1) Perhaps Joseph fabricated some plates which he showed them, and they just hallucinated or lied about the angel. 2) Perhaps they hallucinated or lied about the whole thing, plates and angel entire. 3) Perhaps they really were shown plates by an angel, and the Church/Book of Mormon are true. 4) Or perhaps they really were shown plates by an angel, but for some reason the Church/Book of Mormon are not true.

Group hallucination and conspiracy aren't unheard of, but they are fairly rare, which means explanations 1 and 2 are somewhat improbable. Thus, I think, the witnesses' testimony raises the probability of explanations 3 and 4 above what they would be if there was no witness testimony for a naturalistic explanation to account for. (Still not high enough to justify acceptance, in my opinion.)


The Eight Witnesses did not claim that an angel showed them the golden plates.

You're right that my discussion about foundation and relevance is similar to evidence in a legal setting, but I'm not suggesting that people should follow the Rules of Evidence in their daily lives. I'm talking about the reasoning behind rules that determine what a fact-finder can legitimately consider as evidence---whether that fact-finder is a member of a jury, a researcher, or a person shopping religions.

I am very leery of applying legal standards to historical problems. Legal reasoning and historical reasoning are designed to accomplish different objectives.


So am I, and yes, they are. But like I said, I'm not suggesting we apply legal standards to questions of history or factual claims in general. I'm talking about principles of reasoning and heuristics that people use in general---principles that guide evaluation of proffered evidence in many areas of life, not just law.

The highest priority of legal reasoning is to protect the innocent, whereas the highest priority of historical reasoning is to determine the most likely explanations about what happened in the past.


That's not really accurate. The law of evidence is about reliability. The same rules of evidence apply in both civil and criminal cases---the presumption of innocence does not apply to the former. And in criminal cases, both prosecution and defense have to follow the rules of evidence.

For this reason, the standards of admissability and definitiveness of evidence are very different. For instance, "hearsay" is considered pretty much invalid in legal reasoning, whereas in historical reasoning second-hand accounts are used liberally.


That's not entirely accurate, either. There are numerous exceptions to the hearsay rule. The fundamental consideration for statements that would otherwise be considered hearsay, and for statements that are hearsay but can come in anyway, is that the statement is shown to be reliable. Also, whether a statement is hearsay depends primarily on what you're using the statement for. If you're simply trying to prove that a statement was made, then it is not hearsay. If you're trying to prove the truth of the matter asserted, then it is hearsay. Example:

"Bob told me the car was blue."

If you're trying to prove the car was blue, this is hearsay, because Bob is the one who saw the car, not the person saying this. But if you are just trying to prove the fact that Bob made the statement that the car was blue, then it is not hearsay.

In fact, I think the application of legal standards to religious history has usually been promulgated by apologists who view the historical enterprise as a prosecution of their cherished beliefs, texts, and leaders. They want us to assume their religions' innocence until proven guilty, and to throw out any evidence that wouldn't qualify for a courtroom. You, Darth, seem to be sort of turning that approach on its head, to make naturalism the privileged defendant. A strictly probabilistic approach rejects any such privileging of one side or the other. There is no defendant; there is only a set of alternatives.


Actually, I'm not (and heuristics, which I talked about, does not come from law---it comes from cognitive psychology). It has nothing to do with naturalism, or about supernatural claims. A person could be a true believer in angels and miracles and whatever and still validly consider questions about foundation, relevance, and "common sense" about assessing the reliability of claimed evidence. The principles I'm talking about apply just as much to a believing Mormon evaluating whether to believe that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone as a secular critic evaluating whether the Testimony of the Eight Witnesses is legitimate circumstantial evidence that the Book of Mormon is real history.

In fact, you've actually suggested the confusion of the issue that Mormon apologists consistently raise--and I would say rely on--in the face of secular criticism. You can go ahead and grant the existence of supernatural beings and events. The issue is not either the faith-promoting narrative is true, or you summarily dismiss the possibility of angels and miracles and whatnot. The issue is whether on this specific occasion, an angel showed Joseph Smith an ancient Nephite record that he later showed to eight of his close friends and relatives. The reason I say Mormon apologists generally rely on the false dichotomy is it creates the out for them and their target audience of, "Well, you just don't believe it because you don't believe in God."

But I'm having a hard time seeing how P(h) is not arbitrary.

Unfortunately, we frequently can't assign hard and fast numbers to the different alternatives. We weigh probabilities on a sort of intuitive level, based on a lot of educated guessing and induction.


In this example, I would not find a Bayesian probability persuasive either for or against the plates really being an ancient Nephite record because we have no frame of reference for how likely that would be.
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_CaliforniaKid
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Re: Decent Post on Proof and Evidence at Sic et Non

Post by _CaliforniaKid »

Buffalo wrote:I don't think hallucinations/lying are the only counter explanations. As we've seen, Joseph used cold reading techniques to pressure people into saying they're seeing whatever vision he claims to be seeing. The same could apply with the witnesses.

I think that would qualify as hallucination or lying, regardless of the pressure they may have been under to do so.
_Darth J
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Re: Decent Post on Proof and Evidence at Sic et Non

Post by _Darth J »

Ray:

I'm painfully aware that you don't understand the concept of begging the question, but you have yet to demonstrate that there is any hypocrisy at work.

Or that you are familiar with the relevant literature on Dungeons and Dragons.
_Dr. Shades
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Re: Decent Post on Proof and Evidence at Sic et Non

Post by _Dr. Shades »

RayAgostini wrote:
Kishkumen wrote:My position is simple and clear: no organ connected to the LDS Church or receiving support from the LDS Church should publish attacks on members of the LDS Church in good standing.

I don't see how that is a hypocritical request on my part.

With the mockery and attacks that occur here on Mormons (in good standing, too - see Darth J as an example), it looks extremely hypocritical.

It isn't hypocritical because this place isn't an organ connected to the LDS Church or receiving support from the LDS Church.

Darth J wrote:Until I'm convinced that you have a working knowledge of how many hit dice a hobgoblin has . . .

Going off memory--no Wikipedia checks whatsoever--it's 2, right? Specifically, 2d6?

. . . and what your armor class rating would be if you're wearing plate mail and carrying a +1 shield, I'm not talking about Dungeons and Dragons with you anymore.

1, right? (I think plate mail with a normal shield is armor class 2, so a +1 shield should reduce it by one more.)

Until and unless you convince me that you understand how being stricken with lycanthrope would affect a player-character whose alignment is lawful good, I won't waste time on you, either.

Simple: During the full moon, when the player-character transforms, his or her alignment would change to match the specific type of lycanthrope into which he or she transformed.
"Finally, for your rather strange idea that miracles are somehow linked to the amount of gay sexual gratification that is taking place would require that primitive Christianity was launched by gay sex, would it not?"

--Louis Midgley
_RayAgostini

Re: Decent Post on Proof and Evidence at Sic et Non

Post by _RayAgostini »

Kishkumen wrote:I have no need to defend myself against a charge of hypocrisy since the issue I am addressing is organizational, not a matter of personal morality. These guys can go nuts. I don't give a crap. I just don't think it is beneficial for the organization to be saddled with their shenanigans, and I think problematic issues of authority arise. I am not telling any individual apologist to stop being an asshole. Go for it, I say.


Kish, in the thread-that-will-soon-eventuate, will you, Darth and/or Scratch show that, apart from anecdotal evidence or what is accepted here as truth, that members of The Church of Jesus-Christ of Latter-day Saints, in general, are adversely affected by what is published by the NAMI, or that a "rescue mission from NAMI apologists" is needed?

Have a good think about whether this is "personal", or the "antidote" that members desperately need. Then think about why Darth J would want to criticise Mormon apologists for occasionally criticising their own members for "sloppy/uninformed apologetics", when he thinks it's a "silly cult" with ridiculous beliefs not worth the time of day.
_CaliforniaKid
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Re: Decent Post on Proof and Evidence at Sic et Non

Post by _CaliforniaKid »

Darth,

In history, "Bob told me the car was blue" would be admissible evidence for the blueness of the car. It's true that many of the same principles for handling evidence apply, but the bar is set considerably higher in the courtroom because of what's at stake. As a result, some important inputs may be excluded from the probability equation in order to preserve, shall we say, the integrity of the system. Different priorities lead to rather more rigid rules of evidence. That's all I'm saying.

Darth J wrote:The Eight Witnesses did not claim that an angel showed them the golden plates.

So? The Three did. Were we only talking about the Eight?

In this example, I would not find a Bayesian probability persuasive either for or against the plates really being an ancient Nephite record because we have no frame of reference for how likely that would be.

We actually do have multiple frames of reference for assessing the probabilities of the case. For instance, given the frequency with which claims of angels, visions, and discoveries of ancient religious artifacts are made and disproven, I think we can set a very low prior probability on this particular claim being true.
_Darth J
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Re: Decent Post on Proof and Evidence at Sic et Non

Post by _Darth J »

CaliforniaKid wrote:Darth,

In history, "Bob told me the car was blue" would be admissible evidence for the blueness of the car. It's true that many of the same principles for handling evidence apply, but the bar is set considerably higher in the courtroom because of what's at stake. As a result, some important inputs may be excluded from the probability equation in order to preserve, shall we say, the integrity of the system. Different priorities lead to rather more rigid rules of evidence. That's all I'm saying.


Yes, that's true. Depending on the circumstances, though, "Bob told me the car was blue" may also be admissible in court to prove the car was blue, even though it's hearsay. But what I've been saying in this thread about foundation and relevance and heuristics isn't about discounting hearsay. It's more about evaluating whether a hearsay statement is reliable, not whether it's "admissible."

The Eight Witnesses did not claim that an angel showed them the golden plates.

So? The Three did. Were we only talking about the Eight?


We have been so far.

In this example, I would not find a Bayesian probability persuasive either for or against the plates really being an ancient Nephite record because we have no frame of reference for how likely that would be.

We actually do have multiple frames of reference for assessing the probabilities of the case. For instance, given the frequency with which claims of angels, visions, and discoveries of ancient religious artifacts are made and disproven, I think we can set a very low prior probability on this particular claim being true.


Okay, but as far as I am aware, the frequency of claims about angels and visions leading to the discovery of ancient artifacts is zero. Don't we need some confirmed instances of this really happening to establish a base rate that is more than zero?
_Darth J
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Re: Decent Post on Proof and Evidence at Sic et Non

Post by _Darth J »

RayAgostini wrote:
Kishkumen wrote:I have no need to defend myself against a charge of hypocrisy since the issue I am addressing is organizational, not a matter of personal morality. These guys can go nuts. I don't give a crap. I just don't think it is beneficial for the organization to be saddled with their shenanigans, and I think problematic issues of authority arise. I am not telling any individual apologist to stop being an asshole. Go for it, I say.


Kish, in the thread-that-will-soon-eventuate, will you, Darth and/or Scratch show that, apart from anecdotal evidence or what is accepted here as truth, that members of The Church of Jesus-Christ of Latter-day Saints, in general, are adversely affected by what is published by the NAMI, or that a "rescue mission from NAMI apologists" is needed?

Have a good think about whether this is "personal", or the "antidote" that members desperately need. Then think about why Darth J would want to criticise Mormon apologists for occasionally criticising their own members for "sloppy/uninformed apologetics", when he thinks it's a "silly cult" with ridiculous beliefs not worth the time of day.


It's just rich for you to be saying this about me, when I have made no secret that Mormon apologetics was the catalyst for my loss of faith, and you know it because you commented in the thread where I told my exit story.

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