Danna wrote:Incidentally -- for the record -- I'm a Mormon partially because I disagree with the reasons that you adduce to justify your decision to reject Mormonism.
FARMS has published 117 books, and materials totaling more than 100,000 pages. I've been a significant player in that, and it's in the public domain. And I have several book manuscripts in process right now. I make my case in print.
OK. Not sure if I have worked out the formatting here right.
But. Dan. I am interested in an elaboration of your statement here.
Are you saying that due to the effort you have invested, you are a Mormon (=sunk cost benefit).
No. I'm saying that I lay out my reasons in print, and, even more so, in some manuscripts that I'm working on (intermittently) right now.
Danna wrote:Surely, as a responsible academic, you would change your opinion if that is what the evidence indicated.
I would.
Danna wrote:I have been in that situation. It is awkward, but there is only one honourable course. In my case, the realisation (no evidence for massive memory repression) took a while and resulted in some difficilty with my family and my own belief in myself.
I applaud you for your integrity and, if I understand you correctly, for the particular stance you seem to have taken.
Danna wrote:OK. I am a scientist. Not a linguist or historian or sociologist. But it is a matter of professional ethics to be willing to give up a long held opinion when the evidence suggests you are wrong.
I agree.
Danna wrote:I have read a number of your books, and I know that you can make an excellent argument over just about anything. As an atheist, I find your reasoning on argument over whether Mormons are christians to be spot on. I cannot fault you on your logic.
Thank you.
Danna wrote:But any logical argument relies on the strength of its premises.
Which, in the case of whether Mormons are Christians, I believe to be essentially inarguable.
Danna wrote:For case after case of Mormon discussion, the premises are dodgy to probably fraudulent to weak.
We disagree.
Danna wrote:So, when you cut down to the facts - why are you still a Mormon?
Because I believe the fundamental claims of Mormonism to be true.
As I say, I've published quite a bit on relevant topics, and am working on several relevant manuscripts at this very time, including two very large book-length manuscripts. I can't distill that down to an internet post and (sorry) I'm simply not going to devote weeks and months to setting it forth to the small (and, in this case, hostile) audience on a message board. (The time I've wasted here on this thread alone, where I felt an obligation to defend my character against attack, is enormous. It's also down the drain, having added no value at all.)
beastie wrote:So the reason you feel ethically justified in tattling is not because a father needs to know when his son has disrespected him, but because it’s in a format that lasts for a while, and to a larger audience. Correct?
No. Not even close.
As I've said in response to each of your hypotheticals, none of them has come close to the ethical issue. In each and every case, as I've observed, the question of whether I would have contacted the person about whom a comment was made is entirely separate from the question of whether doing so would be ethical. In each and every case, as I've expressly said, telling the person would, in my view, have been ethically acceptable.
beastie wrote:Next question: you are friends with a married couple. On an internet board, the topic of the frustration of dealing with overweight spouses has come up, and the male friend posts that he is frustrated that his wife is quite fat.
Would you alert the wife?
No. Frustration isn't contempt. Moreover, in your hypothetical, the almost-certain hurt far outweighs the need to know. In the case of GoodK's mockery of his father, on the other hand, I judged that GoodK's father would prefer to know and that the hurt, if any, would be marginal. I know GoodK's father. As fathers, we've even talked occasionally over the years about our challenges with our children. I happen to know for a fact -- having spoken face to face with him and communicated with him by e-mail since Unbelievably Horrible GoodK Letters 1 and 2 -- that my judgment of his likely reaction was precisely on target. This wasn't a theoretical exercise. This was an interaction with a friend with whom I first became acquainted in the 1980s.
beastie wrote:Can I speculate about why you would probably not alert the father? Correct me and supply the correct reasoning if I am wrong (I’m just trying to save time but guessing at what seems obvious). The reason I think you would probably not alert the father is twofold:
1 – you are on the same side as the son, and are sympathetic to his viewpoint, and may actually agree with his viewpoint
2 – you empathize with the son. You compassionately understand why he felt the momentary need to vent. You compassionately understand the relationship may be fragile for the same reasons you’ve stated, on this thread, a friendship with an apostate may be changed and challenged as well, and compassionately hope that the son can maintain some sort of positive relationship with his father, despite his father’s obvious problems. You do not want to cause additional stress of pain in this relationship because you understand and empathize with the son’s position, and you know the son may well be hurt by your tattling.
That's probably more or less accurate.
And thank you for granting that I'm capable of compassion, at least in theory.
beastie wrote:In other words, you allow your compassion and empathy with the son to override your ethics, which may otherwise demand tattling.
No.
First of all, my ethics didn't "demand" what, in a charged bit of rhetorical question-begging borrowed from the increasingly hostile GoodK, you call "tattling."
Second, as I've expressly said over and over and over and over again, I see nothing ethically problematic -- not at all, not even slightly -- in either the matter of the two Unspeakably Horrible GoodK Epistles or in any one of the hypotheticals you've supplied. So there has been no ethical objection to be "overridden."
Not, that is, until your last example of the overweight wife, where I see a husband's frustation as starkly different from a son's ideological contempt, where I see worldview as more fundamental than bathroom scale, in which I see the almost inevitable infliction of real pain as deeply different from merely giving a father potentially further reason for disappointment, and where I see a danger to a relationship as different from something that might help one party to a relationship understand the other party in a very relevant way. It's a matter, to use an economic expression, of cost-benefit analysis. I reasoned that the help I would likely be giving to GoodK's father in knowing how to understand his son would outweigh the slight possibility of relatively small pain. By contrast, the help given to the overweight wife in understanding her husband would be slight, but the pain would be considerable. As someone who really does, contrary to my image among some on this board, try to act compassionately and ethically, I see the two cases as manifestly incommensurable.
And, again, I point out that I have known GoodK's father since the 1980s, and that our many conversations over the years have, yes -- and I can hear the sirens going off all over Scratchworld on this one -- occasionally lighted upon GoodK himself. There's a history here that I have not told and will not tell. It's none of this board's business. (For all the talk of my having allegedly meddled in a relationship, it's more than a bit ironic that some here seem have forgotten that GoodK's father and I also have a relationship, and that they appear to imagine that my relationship with my friend needs to be justified and given account of to
them.)
And now, I've got things to do. I'm done with this.