I personally have found [the Book of Mormon] more powerful than the Bible or Qur’an.
Can you expand on that? What is this perception of “power” you get in varying degrees from such books, and what is the relation between that sensation and deciding whether anything in those books is true?
I’ve read the Bible and the Qur’an, and while I haven’t read the Book of Mormon, I have a copy (souvenir of a visit to Salt Lake City). I’ll have a look at it if you like, but I’m not expecting much, because of the sort of thing that books like these are. Neither the Bible nor the Qur’an convince me that any of the events recounted in them ever happened, or that any of the supernatural entities they talk about ever existed, or that their various moral prescriptions should be followed simply because they appear there. How could they?
A large part of the Bible is purported history, and to do history right you can’t rely on a single collection of old and multiply-translated documents which don’t amount to a primary source for much beyond their own existence, especially when archaeology (so I understand) doesn’t turn up all that much to substantiate it. And things like the Genesis mythology are just mythology. The world was not created in six days. Proverbs, Wisdom, the “whatsoever things...” passage, and so on, fine: but I read them in the same spirit as reading the rationality quote threads here. Where there be any virtue, indeed.
The Qur’an consists primarily of injunctions to believe and imprecations against unbelievers. I’m not going to swallow that just because of its aggressive manner.
So, that is my approach to religious documents. This “power” that leads many people to convert to a religion, that gives successful missionaries thousands of converts in a single day: I have to admit that I have no idea what experience people are talking about. Why would reading a book or tract open my eyes to the truth? Especially if I have reason to think that the authors were not engaged in any sort of rational inquiry?
That is, BTW, also my approach to non-religious documents, and I find it really odd when I see people saying of things like, say, Richard Dawkins’ latest, “this book changed the way I see things!” It’s a frequent jibe of religious people against atheists that “atheism is just another religion”, but when people within atheism convert so readily from one idea to another just by reading a book, I have to wonder whether “religion” might be just the word for that mental process.
That is, BTW, also my approach to non-religious documents, and I find it really odd when I see people saying of things like, say, Richard Dawkins’ latest, “this book changed the way I see things!” It’s a frequent jibe of religious people against atheists that “atheism is just another religion”, but when people within atheism convert so readily from one idea to another just by reading a book, I have to wonder whether “religion” might be just the word for that mental process.
What’s strange about converting from one idea to another by reading a book? A book can contain a lot of information. Sometimes it doesn’t even take very much to change one’s mind. Suppose a person believes that the continents can’t be shifting, because there’s no room for them to move around on a solid sphere. Then they read about subduction zones and mid-ocean ridges, and see a diagram of plate movement around the world, and think “Oh, I guess it can happen that way, how silly of me not to have thought of that.”
I haven’t found any religious text convincing, because they tend to be heavy on constructing a thematic message and providing social motivation to believe, light on evidence, but for a lot of people that’s a normal way to become convinced of things (indeed, I recently finished reading a book where the author discussed how, among the tribe he studied, convincing people of a proposition was almost entirely a matter of how powerful a claim you were prepared to make and what authority you could muster, rather than what evidence you could present or how probable your claim was.)
among the tribe he studied, convincing people of a proposition was almost entirely a matter of how powerful a claim you were prepared to make and what authority you could muster, rather than what evidence you could present
I suspect this was also true of the tribe I went to high-school with.
a single collection of old and multiply-translated documents which don’t amount to a primary source for much beyond their own existence
I know how most atheists feel about the Bible. Really, I do. But if you don’t understand what’s so powerful about a book, and you want to know, then you really should give it a try—I might say that the last chapter of Moroni especially addresses this.
(I promise I’m not trying to convert you. I don’t remotely expect you to have a spiritual experience because of this one chapter.)
I have to wonder whether “religion” might be just the word for that mental process.
Yes, it’s easy to compare religion and atheism to each other as well as professional sports and a lot of other human behaviors. I’m all for free thought and not being persuaded by powerful words alone. However, just as I try to be able to enjoy ridiculous sports games, I’m glad to understand why people believe what they do.
But if you don’t understand what’s so powerful about a book, and you want to know, then you really should give it a try—I might say that the last chapter of Moroni especially addresses this.
Well, I’ve now read the last chapter of Moroni, which is the last book of the Book of Mormon. The prophet takes his leave of his people, promises that God, the Son, and the Holy Ghost will reveal the truth of these things to those who sincerely pray, enjoins them to practice faith, hope, and charity and avoid despair, and promises to see them in the hereafter.
I don’t feel any urge to read this as other than fiction.
I know how most atheists feel about the Bible. Really, I do. But if you don’t understand what’s so powerful about a book, and you want to know, then you really should give it a try—I might say that the last chapter of Moroni especially addresses this.
I grew up on the Bible. I studied the Bible for over a decade. I have read the Old Testament in Hebrew.
It’s the most boring thing I’ve ever laid eyes on.
I’ve always marveled at peoples’ assertions that, even if they don’t believe the bible is the word of God, they still respect it as a great work of literature. I suspect that they really do believe it, humans can invest a whole lot of positive associations with things simply through expectation and social conditioning. But my opinion of it as a literary work is low enough that I have a hard time coming up with any sort of of comparison which doesn’t make it sound like I’m making a deliberate effort to mock religious people.
Can you expand on that? What is this perception of “power” you get in varying degrees from such books, and what is the relation between that sensation and deciding whether anything in those books is true?
I’ve read the Bible and the Qur’an, and while I haven’t read the Book of Mormon, I have a copy (souvenir of a visit to Salt Lake City). I’ll have a look at it if you like, but I’m not expecting much, because of the sort of thing that books like these are. Neither the Bible nor the Qur’an convince me that any of the events recounted in them ever happened, or that any of the supernatural entities they talk about ever existed, or that their various moral prescriptions should be followed simply because they appear there. How could they?
A large part of the Bible is purported history, and to do history right you can’t rely on a single collection of old and multiply-translated documents which don’t amount to a primary source for much beyond their own existence, especially when archaeology (so I understand) doesn’t turn up all that much to substantiate it. And things like the Genesis mythology are just mythology. The world was not created in six days. Proverbs, Wisdom, the “whatsoever things...” passage, and so on, fine: but I read them in the same spirit as reading the rationality quote threads here. Where there be any virtue, indeed.
The Qur’an consists primarily of injunctions to believe and imprecations against unbelievers. I’m not going to swallow that just because of its aggressive manner.
So, that is my approach to religious documents. This “power” that leads many people to convert to a religion, that gives successful missionaries thousands of converts in a single day: I have to admit that I have no idea what experience people are talking about. Why would reading a book or tract open my eyes to the truth? Especially if I have reason to think that the authors were not engaged in any sort of rational inquiry?
That is, BTW, also my approach to non-religious documents, and I find it really odd when I see people saying of things like, say, Richard Dawkins’ latest, “this book changed the way I see things!” It’s a frequent jibe of religious people against atheists that “atheism is just another religion”, but when people within atheism convert so readily from one idea to another just by reading a book, I have to wonder whether “religion” might be just the word for that mental process.
What’s strange about converting from one idea to another by reading a book? A book can contain a lot of information. Sometimes it doesn’t even take very much to change one’s mind. Suppose a person believes that the continents can’t be shifting, because there’s no room for them to move around on a solid sphere. Then they read about subduction zones and mid-ocean ridges, and see a diagram of plate movement around the world, and think “Oh, I guess it can happen that way, how silly of me not to have thought of that.”
I haven’t found any religious text convincing, because they tend to be heavy on constructing a thematic message and providing social motivation to believe, light on evidence, but for a lot of people that’s a normal way to become convinced of things (indeed, I recently finished reading a book where the author discussed how, among the tribe he studied, convincing people of a proposition was almost entirely a matter of how powerful a claim you were prepared to make and what authority you could muster, rather than what evidence you could present or how probable your claim was.)
I suspect this was also true of the tribe I went to high-school with.
I know how most atheists feel about the Bible. Really, I do. But if you don’t understand what’s so powerful about a book, and you want to know, then you really should give it a try—I might say that the last chapter of Moroni especially addresses this.
(I promise I’m not trying to convert you. I don’t remotely expect you to have a spiritual experience because of this one chapter.)
Yes, it’s easy to compare religion and atheism to each other as well as professional sports and a lot of other human behaviors. I’m all for free thought and not being persuaded by powerful words alone. However, just as I try to be able to enjoy ridiculous sports games, I’m glad to understand why people believe what they do.
Well, I’ve now read the last chapter of Moroni, which is the last book of the Book of Mormon. The prophet takes his leave of his people, promises that God, the Son, and the Holy Ghost will reveal the truth of these things to those who sincerely pray, enjoins them to practice faith, hope, and charity and avoid despair, and promises to see them in the hereafter.
I don’t feel any urge to read this as other than fiction.
Great. No pressure on you, but now you’ve read the promise that inspires so many people. Feel free to think of it as fiction if you choose to.
I grew up on the Bible. I studied the Bible for over a decade. I have read the Old Testament in Hebrew.
It’s the most boring thing I’ve ever laid eyes on.
I’ll agree with that, some parts of it are incredibly boring. (Though some parts could make an awesome action flick.)
I’ve always marveled at peoples’ assertions that, even if they don’t believe the bible is the word of God, they still respect it as a great work of literature. I suspect that they really do believe it, humans can invest a whole lot of positive associations with things simply through expectation and social conditioning. But my opinion of it as a literary work is low enough that I have a hard time coming up with any sort of of comparison which doesn’t make it sound like I’m making a deliberate effort to mock religious people.