http://exmormon.org/phorum/read.php?5,897642
Mr. Stak leads off a little pugnaciously, but asks, from my perspective, an interesting and debate-provoking request from Mr. Riskas:
Given the inordinate amount of citations of and lengthy quotations attributed to Kai Nielsen, I’d like to ask Mr. Riskas to list the top 5 most relevant and substantive critics of Kai Nielsen’s unique brand of philosophy, and offer a brief review of each critic’s contribution to the debate on those subjects.
I think that was a reasonable request, and I'm not sure why Mr. Riskas didn't accept it. Also, if he didn't feel up to the challenge he should've simply stated he wasn't interested in debating Mr. Nielsen's philosophies instead of whipping out the victim card (helped in no large part by his friend and fan Mr. Benson, who is a cartoonist). Not being familitar with Mr. Nielsen's credentials, history, literary works, etc... I went to Wikipedia and read this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kai_Nielsen_(philosopher)
Kai Nielsen (born 1926) is professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Calgary. Before moving to Canada, Nielsen taught at New York University (NYU). He specializes in metaphilosophy, ethics, and social and political philosophy. Nielsen has also written about philosophy of religion, and is a advocate of contemporary atheism. He is also known for his defense of utilitarianism, writing in response to Bernard Williams's criticism of it.
Nielsen got his B.A. at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and his Ph.D. at Duke University. He is the author of some 32 books and 415 articles. Member of the Royal Society of Canada, and past president of the Canadian Philosophical Association. Nielsen is also one of the founding members of the Canadian Journal of Philosophy.
Wow. Not bad. Pretty impressive stuff! So, still not sure why Mr. Stak would be adversarial toward Mr. Nielsen, and apparently why Mr. Riskas would be overly attached to him I did the typical Internetting that one would do and found this debate between Mr. Nielsen and a theist:
http://www.reasonablefaith.org/does-god ... sen-debate
I'll break it down thusly:
- Evil exists because it does (no need for metaphysics)
- You don't need God to have morals or a purpose in life
- Morality is based in Humanism
I have a feeling most of Mr. Nielsen's works pretty much echo that basic thought process. So. In essence, why wouldn't Mr. Riskas simply address the criticisms of the problems of evil, values, morality, and death? What's the problem with debating someone; why take offense because someone says you quote Mr. Nielsen a lot? It's silly. He should've taken Mr. Stak up on the invitation, and had a substantive conversation on RFM. I believe he hurt himself more by not addressing Mr. Stak's request rather than running from it and seeking cover from his friend, Mr. Benson, who is a cartoonist (which is nice).
ETA: TL;DR I think he could've re-directed Mr. Staks questions to the topic of his book, and tied them together to further his position on Mormonism.
- Doc C