This is reasonable in my estimation. I think there isn't a non-arbitrary point where accumulated flaws let us declare "this is no longer divinely guided". That leaves it to individual conclusions based upon one's own experience and knowledge. Those that say "this is too crooked" are drawing a line/level in the Sorites pile to say "this is too much". I think you are agreeing that this is the 'crux' of the matter. I agree when you say that God may operate at a scale or “dimension” where local crookedness does not cancel global direction and “we humans see zig zags, but God sees trajectory.”Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Thu Jan 01, 2026 3:34 amYou guys are moving so fast and far beyond where I can contribute. I'm not complaining about it! I can see how I am going to spend my first day of the year tomorrow - responding to ideas presented here! Lol! OK, let me see if I am grasping what it is you are getting to MG....MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 31, 2025 7:28 pmBack to my original post and my past writings having to do with the Sorites Paradox.
Questions that could be considered:
How much "crookedness' can exist before the line is no longer straight?
How much imperfection can exist in a prophet, institution, doctrine, or history before it stops being "divinely inspired"?
The Sorites Paradox (problem) might dictate that:
One flaw doesn't negate divine guidance. Another flaw doesn't negate it. Another still doesn't. But at SOME POINT, critics argue that accumulation DOES negate it.
And of utmost importance, all the while, as we are traveling crooked lines, God...who is in the midst of all things...is able to make (our) paths (and humanities') straight.
It comes back to the 5d thing gadianton was talking about and I referred to earlier. Things get rather complex REAL FAST when trying to determine how much crookedness is an acceptable amount (Sorites) before we call out the Creator. Again, on the hypothetical assumption being made here, that a creator God exists.
Who has the qualifications to specify or 'call out' the exact threshold in all of this? That is the problem that lies at the root of the paradox.
Regards,
MG
With the Sorites paradox you appear to be applying this logic to divine guidance instead of sand. The actual issue therefore is - "How much imperfection can exist before we are justified in saying 'this is no longer divinely guided'? And you bring in prophets, institutions, doctrines, history, etc. I presume you are not just saying with this that imperfection is fine. No, there is more to it than that. In reality, there is no clear, objective threshold where divine inspiration suddenly switches off. So, as analogies with the sand grains, One flaw doesn’t do it. Ten flaws don’t do it. A hundred flaws… maybe? But, and here is the crux, who decides where that line is? So, if I am understanding your idea of God writing with crooked lines, you're not saying everything is equally good or that evil doesn't matter. You may not even be saying that criticism is invalid. The issue with you appears to me to be that God’s activity might operate at a scale or dimension (your “5D” metaphor) where local crookedness does not cancel out global direction. We humans see zig zags, but God sees trajectory. You hug onto complexity for this reason I think. But you also appear to me to be shifting the burden of proof here. You are asking who is qualified to say exactly when divine guidance is no longer present? The obvious answer also seems to me to be with us, its going to end up being arbitrary. Apparently on your take of things, the accumulation of flaws creates a philosophical problem, not an easy refutation. This is why you like calling it a paradox.
OK. I like that.Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Thu Jan 01, 2026 3:34 amOK, so, I want to bring in Tolkien, not because I think he has the last word, nor because I think I am interpreting him accurately either. There is a lot of depth to the man's philosophy and theology and he spent decades developing it in spectacular story form. But humor me here for a minute. From my reading of Tolkien I believe he would agree with you that when someone fails in whatever they are doing, that does not automatically mean meaning itself is lost or fails. So to use your image, crooked paths do not cancel direction. And the reason appears to be more than obvious actually, because we simply don't see the whole story, nor can we. The finite cannot fathom let alone even possibly grasp the infinite.
I'm not sure I understand why you are thinking this is what I'm thinking.Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Thu Jan 01, 2026 3:34 amYou focus more on the when we know to reject divine guidance...
This I am in alignment with.Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Thu Jan 01, 2026 3:34 am...while Tolkien, me thinks, focuses on moral agency of individuals (and groups! at times... what responsibility remains regardless).
I don't think that I, for one, would agree with trusting any guidance from anywhere all the time with no questions asked. But I think I know where you're going with this.Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Thu Jan 01, 2026 3:34 amTolkien doesn't say “You can’t tell when guidance fails, so trust it anyway.”
I agree.Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Thu Jan 01, 2026 3:34 amWhat he does say is “Even if guidance exists, you are never relieved of moral responsibility.”
Again, I agree.Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Thu Jan 01, 2026 3:34 amWhat this means, and I suspect the beginning of the difference in your preferred system of theology - e.g., Mormonism, is Tolkien never lets authority override conscience...
That's where the Sorites Paradox kicks in. Also God writing straight with crooked lines. In LDS theology the lines are straight on the 'Plan of Salvation' chart we grew up with. The paths that actual people may take to get there are rather crooked and arbitrary when compared with what the 'ideal' and 'chart path' might dictate. This applies to so many things. There is the ideal. There are the correlated doctrines. And then there is reality. Reality is like a curvature in space. Try and get a handle on it without a 'bird's eye' view, will ya'.Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Thu Jan 01, 2026 3:34 am...nor does he ever excuse evil because it fits a larger arc (it's part of God's Plan).
Crookedness isn't "acceptable", but it may be explainable.Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Thu Jan 01, 2026 3:34 amTolkien as well never tells victims “this was acceptable crookedness.”
To be clear, I make no excuses for harm that is done. I do think that explanations are possible. Those explanations may be local/arbitrary and subject to judgement from the perspective of ONE who has not only a local view but a bird's eye/global/eternal view. That's where the God can write with crooked lines again comes into the 'picture'. The picture is one that God can step back from or look over at and determine 'what the heck is going on here'.Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Thu Jan 01, 2026 3:34 amNow this means however, that, unlike yourself, Tolkien avoids the danger of the Sorites move being used to excuse harm. If no one can ever say “this is too crooked,” then who can protest something on moral grounds? I think Tolkien's strategy was to separate two questions. Is meaning still possible? He says yes. Is this action justified? Here he says no. And yet......and YET, meaning still survives without permission.
I'm coming at this, granted, from the position that what the canon of scripture says in regard to God's power and omniscience. The "He's got the whole wide world in His hands" idea. Old song. Remember it?
I think that from what I've said thus far you can see that this would be a reasonable position to take in my opinion.Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Thu Jan 01, 2026 3:34 amWould I be fair in saying that you are proposing because there is no non-arbitrary threshold where imperfection cancels divine guidance, humans are not clearly qualified to declare when God has ceased to be at work, even when history looks messy and broken? I see that as a thoughtful position, it's not a trap question I'm asking you.
The thing is, in the instance/example (I know this is where your mind is centered/focused right now) of the LDS Church as an institution it becomes a matter, again, of the Sorites Paradox and God writing straight with crooked lines. Since the judgement any one person outside the system lacking full knowledge is going to be arbitrary I think that it is wise to have a certain amount of trust in the 'larger plan' or mission of the church knowing that God can work with finite beings that have biases, weaknesses, and intelligence in one area/thing and not another, etc. Agency factors in also as to the consequences of that agency (exercised by those in authority). Sorites again...is a greater good being done than greater evil? Can God make crooked lines straight as a result of humans doing less than perfect things?Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Thu Jan 01, 2026 3:34 amAs an instructional contrast, so far as I can understand from my reading, Tolkien accepts that meaning may persist through broken history, but he refuses to let that persistence excuse, justify, or silence moral resistance to what is broken (hence the moral indignation against critics who find fault with leaders, or something immoral in the system, or financially immoral, etc. being taught as being wickedness because leaders say it is, is a canard and false).
Again, I don't excuse those things that I might personally disagree with and/or think there might be lack of moral clarity in decision making. What I am willing to do is cut others slack knowing that they, like me, are imperfect and flawed individuals doing the best they can at each moment in time that they are doing whatever they do. God can work with that, in my opinion.Philo Sofee wrote: ↑Thu Jan 01, 2026 3:34 amAnd that's a difference. He agrees with the complexity and the humility, to be sure, but he also insists that moral responsibility never dissolves into paradox. Tolkien's safeguard is important. No amount of “crooked lines” ever authorizes doing harm or ignoring it (as Mormonism does with so many issues it faces in our day). And that’s why Tolkien remains such a powerful moral compass, while Mormonism as a religious system seems to me to be a compromise of morals shifted to obedience as the only law worth following. I was taught for hundreds of lessons (literally) in my youth, as I know you were as well, that obedience is the first law of heaven, when, now that we both have matured a bit, know that is obviously a false doctrine. The Bible never teaches that obedience is the first law of heaven; it teaches that love is, and obedience only matters when it flows from love rather than replacing it.
The question for me, and always has been(in the instance of the SL LDS church), is this God's church? Is it that organization place here in order to do an important part of His work on this earth. Not that it is the only thing going on or the only work that is important. Different, but extremely important.
I've determined that the chances of this being so are significantly greater that the answer is in the affirmative rather than the opposite. I fully understand why/how others may see things differently. I respect that.
What I don't respect is the vitriol and/or hate on either side that supplants understanding and at least and effort to 'love thy brother/sister'. I can do better at that.
I love your thoughts, Philo. They are interesting and fun to read. I may not be able to respond to all of them since your volume of what you have to say exceeds the time I have to keep it going. I hope others are responding to your "Tolkienese" and joining the party also.
I'll join in where I can.
Regards,
MG