Themis wrote:KevinSim wrote:That statement was premature. You have no idea whether or not I "mind the lying for the lord doctrine," and as a matter of fact I mind it very much.
Yet in the same post you say you are ok with Joseph and God doing it. You see why I think you are being inconsistent.
What I
see, Themis, is that you are caught up in thinking in black and white, and have trouble with shades of grey. I'm either okay with Smith lying or I oppose it. There doesn't appear to be any middle ground with you.
For one thing, I never said I was okay with it. What I
said was, "so although it bugs me that Smith lied to Emma about it, I can see the necessity of lying for the Lord at the time," and later I said, "if there actually was a time for lying for the Lord." Am I really okay with it if "it bugs me that Smith lied to Emma"? Do I sound like I'm one hundred percent sold on the concept when I say "
if there actually was a time for lying for the Lord"? One can see "the necessity of" something without being one hundred percent okay with it.
In short, I wasn't inconsistent at all. I wasn't one hundred percent
for lying for the Lord; nor was I one hundred percent
against lying for the Lord; rather I was somewhere in the grey area in between. Which is one hundred percent consistent with my statement that I "
mind it very much." One seeing the necessity of something does not imply that one doesn't mind that something.
And actually this is kind of the whole point I've been trying to make in this
whole series of posts. Just as you have seen inconsistency in my statements when there was none, so also do people see lies in the things a deity has said when that deity has spoken the exact truth. We can make mistakes in what we judge is true and is not true. English (nor Greek nor Hebrew) is simply not a rigorously defined enough language that when we hear something that sounds inconsistent we can conclude with certainty that it is not true. It makes much more sense, after hearing the alleged inconsistency, to try to figure out what a deity
might actually mean, taking both conflicting statements into account.
Themis wrote:KevinSim wrote:In past posts I've made a solid distinction between lying and inconsistency. Inconsistency I defined mathematically as asserting X and then asserting not X.
Asserting x and not asserting x have no meaning and unless you give more specifics it has nothing to do with inconsistency.
Themis, after reading this sentence I have come to wonder whether you're
the best person to discuss consistency with. For one thing, I
never said anything about asserting "x and not asserting x." There is a
huge difference between not asserting
X and asserting
not X, and if you don't understand that then that throws serious doubt on your ability to make
reasonable statements about consistency. Furthermore, all asserting
X and then asserting
not X is is making one statement and then stating the logical negation of that statement. If you don't think
that is the definition of inconsistency, then I'm curious what you think inconsistency
means.
The dictionary definition at "http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/inconsistent?s=t" says, "lacking in agreement, as one thing with another or two or more things in relation to each other; at variance". The two things that don't agree are
X and
not X. Another definition is "incompatible"; once again the two things that are logically incompatible are
X and
not X.
Themis wrote:The subject though is really about behavior, and lying is a part of that. You were the one to propose God would give a no answer in relation to the Book of Mormon or church bring true.
It's certainly
possible that I may have been "the one to propose God would give a no answer in relation to the Book of Mormon or church" being true, but I very definitely don't remember ever proposing that. Can you point me to where I
did propose that?