If plates then God

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MG 2.0
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Re: If plates then God

Post by MG 2.0 »

Physics Guy wrote:
Thu Nov 02, 2023 7:09 am
MG seems to be trying to defend the authenticity of Smith's claimed golden plates by demanding a position that includes hope and faith.

That doesn't follow. There might just not really be any hope of the kind MG wants. We have to face that possibility.

On the other hand I think it can be perfectly reasonable, not as a logical deduction but as a strategy for dealing with life, to decide to focus on a hopeful scenario and go on living as if it were certain, even though one knows it isn't. If you're trying to survive on a desert island or something you don't spend half of each day moping in despair because survival is realistically 50/50 and you need to give equal time to both scenarios. You think about the bad outcome as little as possible, squashing negative thoughts as fast as you can; you celebrate each bit of progress as if it were proof that you are definitely going to get through this. The negative outcome will take care of itself, if it is what's going to happen, so you may as well just ignore it, while if you're going to survive, there'll be a lot for you to do.

That analogy is meant to illustrate a general principle, that utility is a factor along with probability in deciding what theories to entertain. Neither the island survival problem nor the principle that it's meant to illustrate necessarily supports religious faith over atheism. You could even see the island survival analogy as supporting atheism rather than faith: it's in the scenario in which you die alone on the island that you need to make the place as decent as possible for all the years that you'll spend there, while the upbeat scenario in which a boat comes to rescue you is the one that will take care of itself anyway, so you might as well ignore it.

What I really don't get, though, is how the heck MG can sustain the false dichotomy between believing in Smith's golden plates and giving in to existential despair. Literally billions of people have firm hope and faith in eternal life with all their loved ones and a loving God, but also consider Joseph Smith's claims to be obvious fraud. MG has to know this. So how on Earth can MG keep harping back to defending the reality of Smith's ancient plates by declaring that rejecting them means abandoning faith and hope?
The problem with analogies is that they may not always include all of the whys and wherefores. They may make a point but the point is made at the expense of not actually having laid out all the surrounding variables that may not be included in the simple analogy. I have described and pointed out some of those whys and wherefores in this thread.

Rejecting the plates and the angel for many folks, let’s say other Christians, does not cause them to abandon hope and faith. For an active LDS person rejecting the plates and the angel might cause them to abandon their faith and hope in the core message of the restoration and even their belief in God. Two scenarios.

Earlier I referred to apples and oranges. Gadianton, and now you, like to paint others into a box of your own making. My thoughts and opinions cannot be boxed up into a container that you then put a certain label on, tape up the box, and send it off as though it actually contains MY thoughts/opinions/conclusions. I’m (we) are more complicated/nuanced than the caricatures that are often created and then presented as accurate representations of reality.

You can do that, but it doesn’t hold any real substance in fact or truth.

And then I’m left with the responsibility of trying to untangle a mess that is, at least in my mind as I see it, purposefully created without much thought. Or, on the other hand, maybe some real thought has been given but with the intent of misdirection or setting a trap.

That gets old.

The reasons for hope in a hereafter should be based on sound logic and evidence. That logic and evidence of course is going to be open for debate and acceptability based upon what various parties see as good logic and evidence. And that will be dependent on the biases and assumptions/presuppositions that are brought to the table. And don’t forget life experience, cultural influences, and the natural man (moral inclinations and desires, etc.)

You seem to have a ‘Wow!’ factor built into your estimations as to how I can believe in the plates. I understand that. You and I have different life experiences that put us in different places. The important thing is to try and understand and accept the other and their viewpoints as being valid without automatically casting them off as being nonsensical.

Although, truth be told, I so the same thing as I consider the rationality of Scientology and other what I see as false ideologies and beliefs. So each of us is subject to certain biases towards others and we believe that we’re more closely aligned with what is closer to the truth.

We really do work out our own salvation (path of enlightenment).

Regards,
MG
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Re: If plates then God

Post by MG 2.0 »

I Have Questions wrote:
Thu Nov 02, 2023 8:06 am

That's one thing that comes across from all MG's baseless protestations…
I’m puzzled as to what you mean??
I Have Questions wrote:
Thu Nov 02, 2023 8:06 am
…that he sees his way of life as obviously superior to the lives of others that don't believe as he does, regardless of their good works.
No.
I Have Questions wrote:
Thu Nov 02, 2023 8:06 am
He holds a low opinion of people who don't believe in God, and those who have suspended belief in any God.
No. Although I believe they are mistaken.
I Have Questions wrote:
Thu Nov 02, 2023 8:06 am
He has a myopic view of atheists being this angry unfulfilled group of people, all because he believes in an afterlife and they don't.
No.
I Have Questions wrote:
Thu Nov 02, 2023 8:06 am
He doesn't really believe in gold plates, if he did he'd be on a senior mission by now…


My wife and I have chosen to live near our aging parents (in their nineties) to take care of them so they don’t have to go into assisted living. In my wife’s case even moving her parents from out of state into our own neighborhood to do so.

Oh, and I believe in the plates…and the angel.
I Have Questions wrote:
Thu Nov 02, 2023 8:06 am
…so he's just trolling this board to satisfy his inherent narcissistic personality disorder.


Honestly? You’re full of crap. I have said many times why I come to this board and participate. It is not to troll or to express some narcissistic behavior. Although, truth be told, I have to wonder why YOU are here. Seems like you would have something better to do with your time other than be the ‘critic’.
I Have Questions wrote:
Thu Nov 02, 2023 8:06 am
He'll say anything to scratch that superiority itch.
BS
I Have Questions wrote:
Thu Nov 02, 2023 8:06 am
This board is just a foil for him. Once you see his real intent (to elevate himself) you see the fakeness of his interactions, which also explains why he goes round in circles and contradicts himself. He's not putting forward a reasoned argument based on a consistent belief, evolving that position based on study and learning and new information, he's simply saying whatever comes to mind in the moment to make himself feel superior. It explains why he posts lots of sources without going to the effort of reading them.
You come across as a bellicose armchair pseudo expert on human personality and behavior. See my response to PG for a bit more information that might help you as you reconsider your rather narrow views in regards to ‘the other’. That person whom you cannot tolerate or accept as a result of their beliefs which contradict and/or do not align with yours.

When I read your last paragraph I simple had to chuckle. You don’t know jack.

And to be straightforward with you…I have absolutely no idea who you are and what you’re all about when it comes right down to it. Except that you are a critic that likes to spend his valuable time (?) dissing on the LDS Church and its members.

For all I know you could be a psychopath or an alcoholic or a womanizer or any one of a number of deviant personality disorder types. You may come on this board carrying a boatload of sins on your back.

I’m being a bit facetious.😉

What you can know about me is that I’m trying to be like Jesus and all that this entails. No, I’m not perfect…but I’m not anything like what you and others would like to portray me to be.

It is sad that we typically end up in this place where a post like yours is accepted as ‘gospel truth’. Unfortunately it is only filled with innuendo, armchair psychobabble, and the like.

I am not the caricature that you would like to paint.

So STOP it. STOP your lying and false accusations.

Regards,
MG
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Re: If plates then God

Post by MG 2.0 »

I Have Questions wrote:
Thu Nov 02, 2023 8:06 am
Why do people need to have a hope and a faith in something after they are dead in order for them to feel they are living a better life than others? I see people living fuller and more beneficial lives without that expectation. It's like belief in an afterlife prompts people to try less hard to fulfil their potential in this life. It's like a belief in an afterlife is an excuse to not be more involved in this life. It's also a magnet for people who want to feel themselves superior to others (as well as others who have nothing left in this life to hope for, so need the respite of hoping there's something more than what they face each and every day).
One can believe in an afterlife while at the same time not judging those that don’t as being inherently inferior. I’m not sure if the opposite is true.

Believers are, in most cases, fully involved in the reality and joys/pains of this life.

Just like you!

Regards,
MG
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Morley
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Re: If plates then God

Post by Morley »

MG 2.0 wrote:
Thu Nov 02, 2023 6:24 pm

One can believe in an afterlife while at the same time not judging those that don’t as being inherently inferior.
Ha! Maybe. However, reading this thread, it’s not apparent that you can, MG.
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Re: If plates then God

Post by Kishkumen »

I love the mythos of the discovery of the gold plates. It fits well with a lot of other myths of the recovery of lost books with sacred or magical knowledge. It makes Mormonism a whole lot more interesting. Do I think Joseph Smith actually discovered gold plates inscribed in Reformed Egyptian that tell the story of a lost Hebrew Christian civilization in the Americas? No way.

I don’t think the Book of Mormon is really about antiquity. It is about bridging the cultural gap with indigenous peoples in Joseph Smith’s time and place through religion. As such it was kind of a flop, but it was compelling enough to serve as the foundation for a modestly successful sect.
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Re: If plates then God

Post by Doctor CamNC4Me »

Kishkumen wrote:
Fri Nov 03, 2023 12:24 am
I love the mythos of the discovery of the gold plates. It fits well with a lot of other myths of the recovery of lost books with sacred or magical knowledge. It makes Mormonism a whole lot more interesting. Do I think Joseph Smith actually discovered gold plates inscribed in Reformed Egyptian that tell the story of a lost Hebrew Christian civilization in the Americas? No way.

I don’t think the Book of Mormon is really about antiquity. It is about bridging the cultural gap with indigenous peoples in Joseph Smith’s time and place through religion. As such it was kind of a flop, but it was compelling enough to serve as the foundation for a modestly successful sect.
The story would’ve been more compelling had Joseph Smith read Jason and the Argonauts. Needs a little more action.

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Re: If plates then God

Post by Gadianton »

MG wrote:Rejecting the plates and the angel for many folks, let’s say other Christians, does not cause them to abandon hope and faith. For an active LDS person rejecting the plates and the angel might cause them to abandon their faith and hope in the core message of the restoration and even their belief in God
An improvement and the closest you've come yet to a rational thought, but it's taken you several pages of modifying your position to get here. Your initial position was pretty straightforward that disbelieving the angel and the plates leads to nihilism. When it was pointed out to you that 99.9% of the believing world rejects Joseph Smith and his Golden Bible, instead of acknowledging it like you did here, you tried to defend your ridiculous position. For example:
And the number of ‘nones’ as been exponentially increasing.

It is not surprising that many other Christians do not believe in the Book of Mormon as the word of God.
You dishonestly tried to link the disbelief of Christians in the Book of Mormon with the growing influence of nonbelievers when in fact, the disbelief in the Book of Mormon for most Christians is a direct function of their zealous faith in Jesus and God and less to do with skepticism.

And so your quote while true enough, still shows that you miss the point -- there would be no reason to expect Christian faith has anything to do with the plates in the first place. your sentence could equally read, "Rejecting Science and Health by Marie Baker Eddy does not cause traditional Christians to abandon their faith the way it might cause a member of Christian Science to abandon their faith." Sure. But is it much of an insight into anything? Perhaps into the mind of the author of the words still not quite getting it yet.
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Re: If plates then God

Post by Res Ipsa »

Kishkumen wrote:
Fri Nov 03, 2023 12:24 am
I love the mythos of the discovery of the gold plates. It fits well with a lot of other myths of the recovery of lost books with sacred or magical knowledge. It makes Mormonism a whole lot more interesting. Do I think Joseph Smith actually discovered gold plates inscribed in Reformed Egyptian that tell the story of a lost Hebrew Christian civilization in the Americas? No way.

I don’t think the Book of Mormon is really about antiquity. It is about bridging the cultural gap with indigenous peoples in Joseph Smith’s time and place through religion. As such it was kind of a flop, but it was compelling enough to serve as the foundation for a modestly successful sect.
Yeah, the Lamanite story arc didn't end so well. ;)
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MG 2.0
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Re: If plates then God

Post by MG 2.0 »

So the last few posts and a number of other comments made during the thread seem to have a common thread (pun intended). That is, that the peripheral issues of Book of Mormon historicity, anachronisms, and such, Trump the precursor event(s) of how the words got onto the pages of the Book of Mormon.

I’m (no surprise, I guess) still of the opinion that it is highly unlikely that Joseph cobbled together this rather complex book…for reasons described throughout the thread. I think this is the primary thing we need to look at. We don’t have the plates and we didn’t see the angel but we do have a pretty good idea of the genius it would have taken for Joseph, at the time/place/age we find him during the translation, to have committed a fraud which was beyond his abilities.

I suppose we could have concluded this way back on the first few pages. As it is we’ve probably (may have?) set a new record for the number of replies in a thread to get here. 🙂

At least in recent memory.

Regards,
MG
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Re: If plates then God

Post by honorentheos »

MG 2.0 wrote:
Fri Nov 03, 2023 3:37 am
We don’t have the plates and we didn’t see the angel but we do have a pretty good idea of the genius it would have taken for Joseph, at the time/place/age we find him during the translation, to have committed a fraud which was beyond his abilities.
He got everything about the ancient Americas wrong while inserting blatant 19th c. racism and American restorationist Christianity. It's obviously a fraud. I agree, it was beyond his ability to produce on his own, but that's a secondary point.
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