Themis wrote:It would depend on ones desire to believe or disbelieve in relation to their desire to know the truth as things really are.
I suppose I'm open to a wider definition of "things [as they] really are".
Themis wrote:I would suggest one can have a high desire for the truth, but be trumped by an even higher desire to believe a particular belief.
I suppose that may be. In my case, however, knowing many of the more esoteric and quirky teachings encapsulated within this thing we call Mormonism, I would have to say that truth would have to be the greater object in view. Mormonism has some fairly difficult doctrines/theology to swallow.
Themis wrote:This can be complicated in that desire to believe can vary a lot from one particular belief to another. Your posts suggest you have a very high desire to believe certain LDS claims even if you may have a high desire for the truth.
There are some LDS claims that I would just as well not have to 'believe'. So again, I am more concerned with what 'truth' may be.
Themis wrote:This is in consideration that I think you know some of the evidences available that clearly show Joseph as a religious fraud.
Not some. Many. Over twenty years worth.

I'm not convinced that he was definitively and/or by default a religious fraud. I am open to him being the conduit through which a creator/God performed a latter day work that is somehow important in the eternal scheme of things.
Themis wrote:This thread is a good example with Jesus. I think the evidence for Jesus existence is very limited, but enough to make it more likely there was a Jesus figure, but nothing to confirm the many stories about him. It's unlikely they are even close to accurate, but many have that large desire to believe many if not most of them as true.
As has been mentioned in this very thread, we ought not to expect that there would be a lot of evidence of Him. It's the nature of the historical record and those that recorded it...or didn't.
Regards,
MG