Long lives of the antedeluvian patriarchs

The upper-crust forum for scholarly, polite, and respectful discussions only. Heavily moderated. Rated G.
Post Reply
_Fence Sitter
_Emeritus
Posts: 8862
Joined: Sat Oct 02, 2010 3:49 pm

Re: Long lives of the antedeluvian patriarchs

Post by _Fence Sitter »

ClarkGoble wrote:
By and large the typical member has barely read the scriptures and couldn't pass a test on pretty simple theological and scriptural claims that are important official parts of Mormonism. I say that not to criticize them simply to note that for most people religion is not primarily about knowledge of theology, history or even scriptural narratives.

Nothing I'm saying really is that controversial within Mormonism and it's not hard to find prominent general authorities who have held the views I've outlined (except perhaps some of esoteric physics that got brought up - here just meaning the theological claims). The most controversial thing you could get in what I've said is about Noah but there's pretty prominent writings by John Widstoe saying the same things. Further probably the majority of professors at BYU believe the same sorts of things.

...the need to move away from the classical definition of a God who is omni everything


This actually is quite old and goes back to Joseph Smith. Again none of this is really controversial and it even used to be taught explicitly in church manuals.

I think you are missing a big problem here. These miracles you are reexamining, these myths, stories and so on to which you are attempting to provide a more naturalist view, are part and parcel of what defines Mormonsim. In my opinion when you remove the miraculous from these stories you are taking away the divine. What is the point of worshiping a being who is just a greatly advanced scientist?


I don't think I'm taking away the miraculous. What I'm suggesting is that miracles accord with natural law and that we tend to read the stories in a fashion the texts themselves don't warrant. i.e. there is a much wider range of acceptable readings. Typically when I make these readings I try to go out of my way not to say this is the only reading. Just that some readings are more defensible than other readings.

To the larger point, that's the key theistic debate point. Is a more limited materialist God (which is very much what Joseph Smith emphasized) more or less worshippable than the more Greek like conception of God as the source of all being.

The interesting point there is that of course the traditional view of God is losing adherents. The major thrust of philosophy in the late 18th century onward was the problem of such a God. (This is the point of Nietzsche's death of god in a way, although it was more his noting that despite claiming they didn't worship such a god philosophers were still holding on to the ideas of such a god in their arguments) You have Heidegger noting that the traditional God is not a "God before whom one could sing and dance."

So the question then becomes what makes God worthy of worship? Is it the Greek conceptions of God? (which are essentially bound up in arguments for his existence) To me the deist implications of such a conception of God as either Being or the source of Being is that I can't even figure out what the point of worship would be for such a thing.

Not arguing against those who do. Just that to me the distinction between atheism and this omni God is pretty negligible. It's just that the atheists note that it's hard to get excited about God as Being.


Rather than parse your statement, which I am not a big fan of, because I think it breaks an argument into parts which don't really represent the whole, I think I would like to continue on about the divine and what makes it worthy of worship, a question I have never really felt had a good Mormon answer.

I suppose I would call myself agnostic. I see, from that viewpoint, much more to consider worthy of worship in a non-contingent being upon whom all existence rests that I do a being who is constrained by the same natural laws we are and who may be just as contingent as we are. The former because of the simple fact it the ground of being God is a state/being which no one else can attain, it is the unknowable of miraculous if you will, that creates the divine.

So as I read your attempts to place the Mormon God within the bounds of natural laws and to try and show how events which most LDS feel are miraculous I get the sense you are illustrating a god within which there is nothing divine, he is simply a very advanced being from us. Why worship him any more than we would consider worshiping our own earthly parents? So on the one hand you cannot think of anything that the LDS God does that is contrary to the laws of nature as we understand them but on the other hand I am sure you consider him divine is some sense, so I would be interested in hearing more from you on what it is exactly that makes him different enough to worship?

By the way, fair warning, it is in this area that I think your really have to gut traditional Mormonism to get to a god with divinity as opposed to a really smart being who is just a few millennia advanced from us.

Thanks
"Any over-ritualized religion since the dawn of time can make its priests say yes, we know, it is rotten, and hard luck, but just do as we say, keep at the ritual, stick it out, give us your money and you'll end up with the angels in heaven for evermore."
_spotlight
_Emeritus
Posts: 1702
Joined: Thu Sep 26, 2013 1:44 am

Re: Long lives of the antedeluvian patriarchs

Post by _spotlight »

Fence Sitter wrote:Is God able to communicate or travel faster than the speed of light? Or can he exert any influence that would require communication or a physical process that would exceed the speed of light?

Prayers make their way to god through wormholes. If your prayers aren't answered right away it could have something to do with the limitations of bandwidth of WormWay v3.6. Things will improve with the release of v4.0.
Kolob’s set time is “one thousand years according to the time appointed unto that whereon thou standest” (Abraham 3:4). I take this as a round number. - Gee
_ClarkGoble
_Emeritus
Posts: 543
Joined: Wed Jan 25, 2017 4:55 pm

Re: Long lives of the antedeluvian patriarchs

Post by _ClarkGoble »

Themis wrote:
ClarkGoble wrote:Well I think the Book of Mormon has enough non-fundamentalist like aspects I'd dispute that but that's neither here nor there.


And of course we don't have any examples.


Of the Book of Mormon being non-fundamentalist? I think 1 Nephi 13's warning about the textual integrity of the Bible (it was true when it proceedeth forth from the mouth of the Jew) not to mention Moroni's lament on his limitations in Ether 12 are pretty non-fundamentalist takes on scripture. There are others but those are the ones I usually throw out. There are people of course who still try to reading it in a fundamentalist way despite those scriptures, usually explaining away their significance. But it definitely changes the the hermeneutic stance of the text towards scripture from what fundamentalists usually adopt.

Joseph used what he knew. Big clue where he was getting his religion from, but then I suppose you might like the idea God would let him make up a bunch of stuff not really true. Can't really trust anything at that point.


Come on now. You know that's not what I'm arguing for. Let's play nice.

When you look at text they first try to date them, and then they look at the text to see how it fits. The Book of Mormon doesn't fit an ancient world, and we don't have any source outside of Joseph Smith.


When you say "doesn't fit" I'm not quite sure what you mean. It's definitely true that we don't have any historical artifact that at least links up with some passage in the text in an unambiguous way. (I know some point to the trip of Lehi but that is at best a degree of plausibility and ends up being pretty speculative in the reading too) So there's nothing like say finding ruins from the Temple of Solomon.
_ClarkGoble
_Emeritus
Posts: 543
Joined: Wed Jan 25, 2017 4:55 pm

Re: Long lives of the antedeluvian patriarchs

Post by _ClarkGoble »

spotlight wrote:
ClarkGobel wrote:That's an odd question. Isn't most of our knowledge and beliefs vague?

That is missing the issue completely. The issue is the organization to which you subscribe and the amount of time and resources that they demand from you. If you only have vague reasons to believe then it would be considered odd by most I suspect for someone to commit everything to such an entity, even your life if called upon to do so. I assume in your 40's you have been to the temple by now. Do you go monthly or is that another area of church practice that you consider to be fundamentalist in nature, reserved for the more ignorant fundy members to attend to?


Again I think that's the issue explicitly. You obviously think religious knowledge shouldn't be vague whereas I think it has to start that way and, as with science, become less vague as we learn more. This to me is simply part and parcel of how humans learn and make judgments based upon incomplete information.

You may disagree with people who make decisions based upon incomplete information but if you think back to your time in your 20's I think you'll find most of your decisions were made in that fashion. We continue to inquire and if as we learn more we find we were incorrect we make different decisions. Again I don't think there's anything particularly shocking about all this.

If you demand absolute knowledge to make a religious commitment that's fine. Just be aware most people don't. I'd also say that such a demand ends up entailing never making religious commitments. After all I don't think any of us think we have absolute knowledge.

That doesn't mean even with vague beliefs those beliefs don't matter.

The greater the claim, the greater the need for evidence to back the claim.


I'm not quite sure what you mean by "greater." There is risk in most decisions in life. We try and discern the risks when we make a decision. Some decisions I require stronger evidence that things are correct. So I don't particularly require evidence that when I turn on the light switch that the light will come on. It's come on most of the time in the past and if it doesn't then it's not that big a deal. If I'm doing electrical work I'll probably demand more evidence that the electricity to that system is off.

Anticipating your reply you'll say "greater" means more unusual. But of course it doesn't since lots of things that aren't unusual we require lots of evidence for. And lots of unusual things people don't demand evidence for. (Think the odd things people are taught in school that they accept)

Put an other way, I think what you want is a general point about epistemology yet all you can provide is a point about risk which is of course tied to what I'm risking. Now if you wish to change the discussion from epistemology to a discussion of risk and ethics I'm more than happy to do so. But let's be clear it is a different discussion.
_LittleNipper
_Emeritus
Posts: 4518
Joined: Wed Jun 06, 2012 5:49 pm

Re: Long lives of the antedeluvian patriarchs

Post by _LittleNipper »

spotlight wrote:
LittleNipper wrote:Cults with alternative facts can be religious or political and sometimes both at once. :wink:
Cults can presume to be scientific in their attempt to fabricate a purely naturalistic explanation for man's existence ---- without any conclusive evidence or repetitive experimentation to demonstrate/backup their theory. Such religiously condemn or ignore any inclusion of GOD because they imagine themselves so much more educated and practical than everyone else. :ugeek:

If you are referring to the scientific establishment LittleThinker LittleNipper you are mistaken as science and its method was developed mainly by theists throughout history who departed from your way of thinking about a god as a result of the evidence they discovered. It is cults that ignore evidence in preference to dogma obtained from ancient texts.[/quote]

Those theists held to a rigid scientific method: The scientific method has four steps

1)Observation and description of a phenomenon. The observations are made visually or with the aid of scientific equipment.
2)Formulation of a hypothesis to explain the phenomenon in the form of a causal mechanism or a mathematical relation.
3)Test the hypothesis by analyzing the results of observations or by predicting and observing the existence of new phenomena that follow from the hypothesis. If experiments do not confirm the hypothesis, the hypothesis must be rejected or modified (Go back to Step 2).
4)Establish a theory based on repeated verification of the results.

Spontaneous generation is not observable. What IS observable: Life only comes from life. Life never just happens. Any theory that suggests that life simply happened has NEVER been proven, cannot be substantiated; therefore, it should not be taught as truth or as a superior alternative to CREATION, or without any regard to CREATION.
_The CCC
_Emeritus
Posts: 6746
Joined: Tue Nov 03, 2015 4:51 am

Re: Long lives of the antedeluvian patriarchs

Post by _The CCC »

No one is saying it just happened. But it did happen over the long half billion years of earth's early history.
Whether you want to credit God, space aliens, or complex organic chemistry is up to you.
_LittleNipper
_Emeritus
Posts: 4518
Joined: Wed Jun 06, 2012 5:49 pm

Re: Long lives of the antedeluvian patriarchs

Post by _LittleNipper »

The CCC wrote:No one is saying it just happened. But it did happen over the long half billion years of earth's early history.
Whether you want to credit God, space aliens, or complex organic chemistry is up to you.
Even your "Space" Aliens would beg the need for an Ultimate Eternal Creator God. And "organic" chemistry is no different. It doesn't just happen and humans trying are unsuccessful. Even to clone sheep, they must start with living sheep.

As for "billions" of years, God dumps the need of extensive periods of time into the trash. He made the earth no more than 10,000 years ago and everything as a result of sin has been wearing out faster and faster ever since.
_Themis
_Emeritus
Posts: 13426
Joined: Wed Feb 17, 2010 6:43 pm

Re: Long lives of the antedeluvian patriarchs

Post by _Themis »

ClarkGoble wrote:Of the Book of Mormon being non-fundamentalist? I think 1 Nephi 13's warning about the textual integrity of the Bible (it was true when it proceedeth forth from the mouth of the Jew) not to mention Moroni's lament on his limitations in Ether 12 are pretty non-fundamentalist takes on scripture. There are others but those are the ones I usually throw out. There are people of course who still try to reading it in a fundamentalist way despite those scriptures, usually explaining away their significance. But it definitely changes the the hermeneutic stance of the text towards scripture from what fundamentalists usually adopt.


I would agree, but it's not really the fundamentalism we are talking about. Creating the Book of Mormon goes against certain fundamentalism, and Joseph was into non-biblical things like mysticism. The fundamentalism we are talking about it are things like the age of the earth, global flood, Adam and Eve being real people, etc.

Come on now. You know that's not what I'm arguing for. Let's play nice.


It comes across that way. You want so much fallibility that one cannot really trust anything said in the texts as accurate, meaning God doesn't care about communicating well with humans, or is incapable. Both make God unworthy of our trust and worship.

When you say "doesn't fit" I'm not quite sure what you mean. It's definitely true that we don't have any historical artifact that at least links up with some passage in the text in an unambiguous way. (I know some point to the trip of Lehi but that is at best a degree of plausibility and ends up being pretty speculative in the reading too) So there's nothing like say finding ruins from the Temple of Solomon.


You wouldn't need an actual ancient text to have any historical artifacts in order for the text to fit into the ancient world. The text itself would reveal it's age. The Book of Mormon lacks this and shows itself to be from the 19th century. This is why you argue for so much influence from Joseph, and a poor communication process. I just go where the evidence obviously points here, as well as other mountains of evidence against Joseph's claims.
42
_spotlight
_Emeritus
Posts: 1702
Joined: Thu Sep 26, 2013 1:44 am

Re: Long lives of the antedeluvian patriarchs

Post by _spotlight »

LittleNipper wrote:Spontaneous generation is not observable.

God is not observable. The act of creation by a god is not observable. So by your standard we can dispense with it.

Actually what you are doing is introducing your own private definition of what it means for something to be observable and demand that science follow your definition. Science will continue along just fine without considering your cult and its adherence to dogma. Just because something hasn't been discovered fully yet does not mean it cannot be discovered in the next decade and won't be. Much of the mystery of abiogenesis has been worked out and progress is being made at a reasonable rate in that area. Meanwhile life lacks a clear definition and the border between life and non-life seems incapable of being drawn.

Creation has NO evidence to support it. Looking at DNA it is overwhelmingly obvious that all life is related through a common ancestor. Do you believe now in evolution and that an act of creation was constrained to the common ancestor? Correct me if I'm wrong but I never perceived that to be your position.
Kolob’s set time is “one thousand years according to the time appointed unto that whereon thou standest” (Abraham 3:4). I take this as a round number. - Gee
_The CCC
_Emeritus
Posts: 6746
Joined: Tue Nov 03, 2015 4:51 am

Re: Long lives of the antedeluvian patriarchs

Post by _The CCC »

LittleNipper wrote:Even your "Space" Aliens would beg the need for an Ultimate Eternal Creator God. And "organic" chemistry is no different. It doesn't just happen and humans trying are unsuccessful. Even to clone sheep, they must start with living sheep.

As for "billions" of years, God dumps the need of extensive periods of time into the trash. He made the earth no more than 10,000 years ago and everything as a result of sin has been wearing out faster and faster ever since.


Life created in test tube.
SEE https://www.scientificamerican.com/arti ... ed-in-lab/

Abiogenesis shown in lab.
SEE https://phys.org/news/2015-03-chemists- ... earth.html

Without organic chemistry there can be no life.
SEE https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organic_chemistry

The earth is 4.55 billion years old. Get over it. What is time to an eternal being?
Post Reply