charity wrote:Jak and sethbag, You have both attacked my world view as being out of touch, wrong, etc. ignorant, etc. Which of course, means that you have some superior vantage point with which to evaluate my world view. Rather arrogant of you, while chiding me for my "arrogance" in continuing to maintain my belief in the midst of all this supposed truth and enlightenment that you spew forth.
I have heard a prophet, seer, and revelator bear solemn witness to the reality of the Savior. I know what he said. If he didn't use the words you wanted to hear, or if you never put yourself in a place where you can hear the witness, that is your responsibility.
And I think it is quite hypocritical to demand that a person explain something to you in specific language when you wouldn't believe him if he did!
Charity,
I do not speak for sethbag, and so far as I know, I have never addressed any of his posts.
Please feel free to
quote me directly and respond to exactly what I stated.
Your post here (Jan 29, 2008 5:51) seems to some extend a misreading of my comments directly to you.
More information is superior to less information. The more accurately we can take into account all the available information, the more likely we are to have a valid or reliable view.
Conversely, the less information we have, the less likely we are to have a valid or reliable view.
It is my position that
any religious doctrine/dogma which is derived from multiple languages and multiple translations over thousands of years
is unlikely to be reliable.
So my comments are not an attack of
you personally. In my last post I stated that you had my “sympathy” and “understanding.” I clarified what I meant by that expression.
I strongly suspect that you regard Islam as
wrong or perhaps
unreliable. I would agree with you if that is your view. Islam has a particular
religious doctrine/dogma.
If you, Charity, had grown into adulthood in a Muslim family (from birth up), what would your religious views be? You will recall that I said we are all products of our
heredity and environment.
That statement can be well supported with evidence about any of us.
If I never studied Russian, never heard Russian spoken, I would NOT know Russian (environment). None of us can escape our cradle up environment.
However, today, unlike centuries or even several decades ago, we have access to information on a far higher level as a result of several modern inventions (anything in print – books, newspapers, etc., television, Internet, university study).
I feel fortunate that both my parents were university graduates and provided me with exposure to a large world of information and ideas. They challenged me
to think.
I have often asked parents who appear to be stifling
critical thought in this way:
Do you want to raise your children to blind belief or do you want to raise your children to think?
When put that way, most parents (even those who want to control their kids) tend to respond by saying the want their children to think.
Occasionally, there are people who really
don’t want their children to think. They want to think for them. They want to control them. They want to mold them to be a virtual clone of themselves.
Religious indoctrination attempts to
mold people in such a way that the people do not think, do not question, do not explore.
How do we get great science? We get it from people who
do think, question, and explore. You communicate on this forum as a result of people before you who
thought, who
explored and who
challenged previous means and methods of communication.
The first printing press and typewriter were products of people who
thought.
People who claim to be “prophet” or “seer” in the context of a specific religious dogma are
unreliable. Why is that? It’s because many who make such claims make
different claims.
I recall some individuals who claimed that
God told them the world would end on X date. The date came and went. Their
claim was
unreliable.
Now sometimes a person may, by accident, make a claim which turns out to be correct. But no one is successful in predicting future events with reliability. I’m not speaking here of stating the obvious.
For example: If someone tells another person that someday he will die, that’s a statement of the obvious. Anyone could have stated that with objective information.
You may have heard someone say something (of a religious nature). But, you were a
willing believer not a skeptical listener. You offered no specifics here. Therefore, I cannot address specifics you didn’t state.
However, it’s the “responsibility” of a listener to use his/her
brain. That is, it’s a listener’s responsibility to listen to extraordinary claims with extraordinary skepticism.
I expect you would do that if you were visited by a Muslim who
claimed the
truth of his religious doctrines and beliefs to you.
You might take an extraordinarily
rational, reasoned view toward the claims of a religious pundit which made such claims
outside your
religion box.
Now you stated:
Charity:
And I think it is quite hypocritical to demand that a person explain something to you in specific language when you wouldn't believe him if he did!
On the contrary, there is nothing “hypocritical” to require clear, transparent, and open to skeptical review
a claim which someone makes.
How is that “hypocritical”? Second, asking for clear evidence is how we can arrive at the validity and reliability of what someone says or claims.
Most who question are open to that clear, transparent evidence.
When the Wright brothers were challenged:
How in the world can you think this thing will fly?, the Wright brothers had answers. More than that, they said, in effect:
Come with us to the place where we are going to try to fly this thing. People came. A few had cameras. The evidence was clear, transparent, and open for all to see.
Some came away shaking their heads saying:
I would not have believed it if I had not seen it. And, they should not have believed it on the
say so of the Wright brothers.
The skeptical review was beneficial in establishing the reliability of the claims made by the Wright brothers.
Now you stated:
Charity:
I have heard a prophet, seer, and revelator bear solemn witness to the reality of the Savior. I know what he said. If he didn't use the words you wanted to hear, or if you never put yourself in a place where you can hear the witness, that is your responsibility.
That’s not a clear, open statement. What was said? Who said it? How many heard it? Were the listeners already
convinced?
It certainly is not the responsibility of
the listener to be uncritical. On the contrary, if the listener
has a brain and the capacity to ask intelligent questions, the listener has the responsibility to do that.
You’re quite incorrect to conclude that
the listener should come with a pre-convinced supposition to the expressions of someone.
I am non-specific here only because your words are non-specific. That is, I cannot address what you did not say.
But, I can address the principle of
skeptical listening. In various posts, I have given examples of how a claim is supported. (These have not all been addressed to you, so I can understand if you did not see them.)
If I claim I have water a foot deep in my basement, you, the listener have a
listening responsibility. You could simply choose to believe my claim. If there were 10 inches of rain just before, the claim is quite ordinary. Nevertheless, you could say upon my claim:
I want to see this. I’m skeptical.
If I take you to my basement and you wade the water and bring your ruler, you can confirm the reliability of my claim, or you can confirm that I have only 3 inches of water, or you can observe there is
no evidence for my claim. All these are ways to
test the reliability of my claim. You could bring a friend. You could bring 5 friends. All of you would make objective review of my claim
at the time I make the claim.
Now if I tell you
after the fact, it may be more difficult for you to confirm or reject my claim. Yet, there might be water marks on the wall, clear, definite, and such that you understand there is
honest, open evidence for the claim which I have made.
Let me emphasize that my challenge (not speaking for sethbag) is that claims require evidence.
Even more importantly, the more extraordinary the claim, the more extraordinary the evidence must be if that claim is to be regarded as reliable. That’s the principle.
Religion relies on claims
absent evidence. That fact is evidence that religion is unreliable. And different religions make different claims. In the case of this bb, the
same religion has multiple and contradictory claims.
JAK