RayAgostini wrote:Kish and Trevor are sometimes indistinguishable, not always, but sometimes, and that's because he/they often talks to himself in two different personalities, and they overlap:
Trevor wrote:Well, enough of that. Gee ends with his version of Pascal's wager, which has already been pointed out here. I would like to add one more tidbit on this. I think that indulging in faulty reasoning and believing in things that are not true does have a human cost. When the world is calling out for effective answers to real problems, it strikes me as cavalier to the point of dangerous irresponsibility to claim that dogged adherence to falsehoods, be they erroneous scientific or religious ideas, only means something in the next world. I live in this world, and if Mormonism is not true, I would prefer that people with the IQ of a John Gee devote their attentions to worthwhile problems whose solutions will bear real fruit in the here and now.
(Emphasis added)
So you think he's interested in "better" and "gentler apologetics"? Can I sell you some land at low tide?
Yes, you can comb through all the old material to find such nuggets. The next question is, how does Trevor feel about this today? I would not have written this today, because it does not reflect my thinking today. I am willing to say that I have been wrong about many things, both in the substance of my writing, and in the way I expressed myself.
As I said elsewhere recently, I am a work in progress, an insignificant, but human, rough stone rolling. And yes, I am interested in a better and gentler apologetics. Those who really know me, as I am today, do not doubt it. Those who comb the archives to find every moment I may have said something harsh or silly, can continue to believe as they like.
And I do get the point of what you are doing. But there is a big difference between writing something stupid and then admitting it was stupid, and writing something stupid and defending it to the bitter end.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist