spotlight wrote:Rather than commit to any specific interpretation and defend it you are happy to say well I really don't know and isn't that true for the vast majority of the inhabitants of the planet about the vast majority of subject matter that is out there?
I take serious a logic of vagueness. So there are things I know and many things I don't. I try and keep the two as clear as possible in my mind (although I'm certainly not perfect in that - especially about things I've not thought about in a long while). So where my knowledge is vague I try to be as open to the possibilities as possible so as to pay attention to that vagueness. Thus my emphasis on hermeneutics and the nature of open texts.
It's the Peircean in me.
Angels or the resurrection doesn't make any sense according to our present understanding of physics? Well maybe the resurrection means something different than what we thought it meant, blah, blah, blah.
i.e. I'm just forthright that I don't know.
Fixed it now with a new shorthand. It's better than the temptation I felt and refused to refer to you as ClarkKent.
Clark Kent or Superman are fully acceptable alternatives.
It's perfectly reasonable to commit everything, literally everything without knowing anything, literally anything in your world.
You need to know enough. But at certain times you have to act without perfect certainty. Again perhaps this is an element of my pragmatism, but for instance when I go to turn on a light switch I don't need absolutely knowledge it will turn on. I expect it to turn on and if it doesn't I adjust. No big deal.
To me it's more odd the level of certainty you require.
Meanwhile others including myself bring up issues which you as a purported professional in the field of physics ought to address seem never to respond to.
To clarify while my background was in physics and for a while I worked at LANL I'm no longer in physics and haven't been for some time. I've done software development (anytime you search in Adobe Acrobat that's my code) and have since done some startups (I have one of the top chocolate companies I run). I like intellectual discussions like this because I don't have time to do physics but it can keep my mind fresh and lively. Plus I enjoy learning.
You simply ignored the heat death of the universe and did not address it at all. You speculate about brane collisions as it deals with some tiny aspect of the LDS problem without taking into consideration the fact that it introduces more problems than it solves for LDS theology.
Branes in string theory are one example of a multiverse but not the only one. Further they really have no empirical evidence (as neither does any multiverse theory). Thus it's almost impossible to pick one. I did say clearly at the beginning that I think Mormon theology requires information flow between universes. But I certainly make no claims of empirical evidence for that.
So this seems an odd criticism unless you think I need empirical evidence for every theological claim. (My sense is you do)
Tell me exactly where eternal beings are and what they are doing before the creation of places to hang out? And this for a hundred trillion trillion years?
Such a model without a multiverse communication would be incompatible with Mormon theology. Again I think I've been forthright about this. Right now there's no empirical evidence to confirm such models.