If there is a hub around which LDS
epistemology revolves, surely it is to be found in Moroni’s Promise:
Moroni 10:3-5:
3 Behold, I would exhort you that when ye shall
read these things, if it be wisdom in God that ye should read them, that ye
would remember how merciful the Lord hath been unto the children of men, from
the creation of Adam even down until the time that ye shall receive these
things, and ponder it in your hearts.
4 And when ye shall receive these things, I would
exhort you that ye would ask God, the Eternal Father, in the name of Christ, if
these things are not true; and if ye shall ask with a sincere heart, with real
intent, having faith in Christ, he will manifest the truth of it unto you, by
the power of the Holy Ghost.
5 And by the power of the Holy Ghost ye may know
the truth of all things.
Believers in the Book of Mormon read the
above passage at the end of the final chapter of the book, and interpret it to
mean that it is possible for the reader to pray about the Book in order to find
out, directly from the Holy Ghost, whether the Book of Mormon is true.
As a young missionary, Moroni’s Promise
was the bedrock of my efforts to convert investigators to Mormonism. I would
regularly challenge people to pray to know the truthfulness of the Book of
Mormon, as ostensibly per Moroni 10: 3-5. I would do so, not only before they
had read the entire book, but when their acquaintance with the Book of Mormon
consisted of nothing more than a brief synopsis recounted by myself or my
companion, and a handful of assigned passages. If we could convince an
investigator to pray to know the truthfulness of the Book of Mormon, it bode
well for the prospects of them further agreeing to baptism.
As the years have passed, I have become increasingly
disillusioned with LDS epistemology. One of my specific issues is the passage referred
to as Moroni’s Promise or Moroni’s Challenge. What follows is a laundry list of
problems with Moroni 10: 3-5 compiled into a single piece:
1. It
is to the Lamanites only
In my ever so humble opinion, this
consideration alone invalidates Moroni’s Promise. In verse 1 of Moroni Chapter
10, the author informs the reader that in this chapter he is not addressing the
general readership; he is not speaking to you. He starts the chapter by saying
“[n]ow I, Moroni, write somewhat as
seemeth me good; and I write unto my brethren, the Lamanites..."
In verse 23 he reiterates
that he is still speaking solely to the Lamanites (“And
Christ truly said unto our fathers…”). The author does not address a general audience (i.e. you and I) until verse 24 when he
switches audience and “speak[s] unto all the ends of the earth..."
Further illustrating
the different audiences being addressed in Moroni 10 is the different standards
that must be met by the reader in order to receive the promised supernatural
confirmation that it is true. The conditions laid out in vs. 3-5 are rather stringent—ponder
God’s mercy through the whole history of humankind, ask, with a sincere heart,
with real intent, (already) having faith in Christ. But when speaking to the
general readership, the author doesn’t seem to require the same high standard
as laid out for the Lamanites, because for the general readership (verse 28) “…God
shall show unto you, that that which I have written is true.”
When read in context,
we discover that the first 23 verses of Moroni 10 are not written to you and me,
only to the Lamanites, and so the challenge/promise found therein is directed
to the Lamanites alone. Nothing in the passage or surrounding context indicates
that it applies to anybody else.
Even if the Book of
Mormon narrative is non-fiction and the Lamanites once existed, they have disappeared
from history, from the archeological record, from the genetic pool, and from LDS
publications and discourse. The challenge presented by the author of Moroni 10
is directed to an apparently not currently existent audience.
Members, leaders, and
missionaries of the Church believe that we ought to follow Moroni’s imperative,
and pray to discover whether the Book of Mormon is true. However, if we “liken
the scriptures unto ourselves” (1st Nephi 19:23) and presume that
Moroni’s Promise applies to non-Lamanites, we are interpolating something into the
Book of Mormon that is not warranted by the actual text.
2. There
is no reason to accept the promise as legitimate unless you already accept the
BoM as legit. It is “begging the question.”
There is a logical fallacy referred to as “begging the
question.” The term is widely misunderstood and is misapplied to mean “implying
the question…” or “leading us to ask.” The actual meaning of “begging the
question” is that an argument already assumes the truth of the conclusion in
its premisses. In other words, the reason that I offer in order to convince you
of a conclusion is only believable if you already accept the conclusion.
If, for example, I am trying to convince you to trust
me, you might ask me why you should trust me. A fair question. If I answer that
you should trust me because I never lie, is that a convincing reason? For most
of us it would not be a good enough reason to extend trust because in order to
accept my assertion that I never lie (the premiss) you have to have already
accepted the conclusion (that I am trustworthy). You cannot accept the premiss
unless you have already accepted the conclusion.
If, upon reaching the final chapter of the final book
of the Harry Potter series, you found a passage that claimed that if you prayed
about the Harry Potter books, the spirit of Dumbledore would let you know that it’s
true, would you do it?
Of course not. But why not? Because you do not believe
that the Harry Potter series is true. You do not accept that the Harry Potter
books correspond to reality in any meaningful way. You do not accept the
narrative, you do not believe that the characters exist, and do not read the
supernatural aspects of the book to be anything more than fantasy.
Why would you accept a promise or a challenge from a
character about whom you have no reason to think is anything other than
fictional?
You would not.
Yet upon reaching the final chapter of the Book of
Mormon, people do pray to find out if it is true. Why pray about Moroni’s
Promise when you would not extend the same courtesy to Dumbledore’s Promise?
The reader must have already accepted the idea that Moroni is less fictional
than Dumbledore; you would not accept the challenge if you believed that Moroni
is fictional.
The “begging the question” aspect of the passage is
that you would only accept that the promise is real if you already accepted
that the context in which it is found is likewise real.
The very act of making that prayer requires that the
person accept that the Book of Mormon is an actual book of history, and the
religious nature of the challenge requires that the reader has already accepted
the books supernatural claims.
3. Takes
advantage of Cognitive Dissonance
Leon Festinger’s theory of Cognitive Dissonance[i]
says, in a nutshell, that we do not like it when our attitudes and beliefs
contradict (i) with our other attitudes and beliefs or (ii) with our behaviors,
so we try to change an attitude/belief or an attitude so that they are in
harmony (or consonance). Interestingly, it turns out that when an
attitude/belief is in conflict with a behavior, people are more likely to
change the attitude/belief than the behavior[ii]. I’ll
reiterate that because it might be the opposite of what you expect. If an
attitude/belief/opinion is in conflict with a behavior, we are more likely to
change the attitude/belief/opinion than we are to change the behavior.
So what if, for example, I believe smoking is bad for
me, and yet I smoke? I am more likely to downplay my belief in the harmful
effects of smoking than I am to quit. Or what if I believe that sex before
marriage is a sin, but I find it difficult to abstain? I am more likely to give up
my attitude regarding the sinfulness of premarital sex than I am to stop
foolin’ around.
A further example comes from Boyd K. Packer[iii]
who says that a testimony is found in the bearing of it… You don’t have a
testimony? Well bear your testimony anyway until you have one. The act of
bearing ones testimony will be dissonant with the mental state of not having a
testimony. According to Dissonance theory, if you continue to bear your
testimony, the mental state of not having a testimony will give way to the
state of having a testimony.
Yeah…you better believe that as a professionally
trained educator, Boyd K. was familiar with Festinger’s Cognitive Dissonance
Theory…
Now apply this to Moroni’s Promise. You have the attitude
that you desire the Book of Mormon to be true, you have the behavior of praying
to know if the book is true, but you also have the belief that you don’t know
if the book is true.
So there is dissonance between the mental state of not
knowing the Book is true and the desire to believe it is true, and there is
dissonance between the state of not knowing, and the action of praying—an action
that implies (as argued part 2, above) that you already accept the Book of
Mormon to be true.
It doesn’t take a genius to figure out which is likely
to change.
Consequently (and ever so frustratingly), even if the
Book of Mormon is entirely a work of fiction, if one desires the book to be
true, and prays to know if it is true, Cognitive Dissonance Theory suggests that
that person’s belief will change to the affirmative.
4. Relies
on subjective emotions
The evidence for the Book of Mormon is, by all
accounts, a feeling—an internal, qualitative, subjective feeling. An emotion.
In order to accept the legitimacy of Moroni’s Promise, we have to accept the
existence of what I call Internal Truth Detectors (ITD’s)[iv].
We have to assume that humans have an internal faculty for detecting supernatural
or spiritual truth.
Don’t get me started.
a. Emotions
don’t carry semantic content
Feelings don’t convey the
right sorts of information that would be required to judge truth. Feelings can
really only tell you about your emotional reaction to something. They might
tell you “I love the book,” “I was frightened by the book,” or “the book is a frightful
bore” but will not tell you anything about its relationship to external
reality.
If I say “I love my son,”
that feeling tells me about my feelings about my son, but tells me nothing objective
or factual about my son himself. Feelings tell you about your subjective
perception of something, but they do not tell you objective information about
the thing itself.
b. There
is no reason to believe in ITD’s
Maybe your religion has
told you that you ought to accept the proposition that you have an internal spiritual
truth detector. If so, that proposition is part of a larger set of
propositions. |Why would you accept that larger set of propositions? Because
your ITD’s confirm that they are true? You would not accept that specific proposition
(ITD’s) unless you have already accepted the wider set of beliefs (your
religion), which you accept because your ITD’s tell you to. In other words, one
would not believe in an internal truth detector unless one already believes the
religious propositions that the detectors are supposed to be detecting. *cough*beggingthequestion*cough*
c. The
feelings are left undefined. Anything potentially counts as an
answer.
The feelings that one
might experience upon accepting Moroni’s Challenge are subjective, qualitative,
internal, and ineffable.[v]
Because of the above
characteristics, it is impossible to define just what the confirmatory feeling
in question ought to be. So in practice, when someone prays about the
truthfulness of the Book of Mormon, whatever emotion or sensation they
experience (whether it is peace, excitement, joy, sadness (at not learning it
earlier), physical warmth, a tingle, virtually anything), it can be interpreted
(especially with the guidance of a helpful missionary) as the witness of the
Holy Ghost.
d. There
is no test to distinguish ordinary emotions from ITD’s
As believers and
non-believers alike have lamented, the feelings associated with the ostensive
witness of the Holy Ghost are indistinguishable from feelings experienced while
looking at a majestic waterfall, holding your child, watching a Disney movie,
hearing a moving choir, etc., etc. etc.
Discouragingly, our Lord
has allegedly seen fit to judge you and me according to whether we believe and
act upon the right set of propositions. Believing and acting upon the correct
set of propositions requires a means to adjudicate between true and untrue
propositions. The means of adjudicating is via our ITD’s. And He has offered no
reliable guideline for distinguishing such ITD’s from ordinary natural
feelings.
e. No
way to compare with those of others.
Our brothers and sisters
in different faiths also believe that they have reliable internal truth
detectors. They believe with a certainty equal to that of the LDS that their
cherished set of propositions is in fact the correct set. For the true LDS believer,
the only reasonable inference is that only the ITD’s of the LDS are accurate, while
everybody else’s must be faulty, or that everybody else must be mistaking
ordinary emotions for the witness of the spirit.
The problem with this
inference is that when one considers that the experiences in question are
subjective, qualitative, internal, and ineffable, it is literally impossible to
do a comparison between the experiences of any two individuals to see if once
feels more valid, feels more truthish. If it impossible to do a comparison
between such feelings, it is impossible to say that my feelings are better
truth detectors than are your feelings.
f. The
Illusory Superiority Effect[vi]
(also referred to as the Above Average/ Better than Average Effect) is a well
established psychological phenomena describing the inclination of people to
judge themselves as better than average on almost every skill, trait, quality,
or characteristic. Almost everybody thinks that they are safer than the average
driver[vii],
a better than average friend, and are more honest than the average person.
Consider whether an
erroneous judgment is more probable when asked to agree with “I am taller than
average” as opposed to “I am more ethical than average.” In the question of
height, the definition is easy to pin down, and the criterion of evaluation is
quite clear. But in the question of ethics, the definition and means of
comparison are more difficult to ascertain. We would expect that errors are
more likely to happen in judgments regarding ethics rather than height.
It turns out that people
are more likely to judge themselves as superior to others as the subjectivity/ambiguity
of the trait/skill increases, and when individuals are free to define the
skill/trait for themselves.[viii]
In fact, The Illusory
Superiority Effect informs us that those who are the least competent at a
skill are the most likely to overestimate
their ability in that skill[ix].
Keep that in mind the next time you hear a testimony that starts with “I know
beyond a shadow of a doubt…” or “I know with every fiber of my being…”
Moroni 10: 3-5 does not
define, in any meaningful way, what the criteria of truth detection is supposed
to be. Internal Truth Detectors are the poster child for skills and traits that
are subjective, ambiguous, undefined, and incomparable. Even if the Book of
Mormon were entirely true, a response to Moroni’s Promise is precisely the sort
of thing that we are going to erroneously judge ourselves as superior to others
on.
g. In
light of the above, in particular e and f, claiming a spiritual witness seems
the height of arrogance.
You are claiming that
your emotions are accurate truth detectors, more accurate than those of
believers in all other faiths, and all non-believers. The believers in other
faiths, although just as sincere as you, are victims of their own faulty
emotional truth detectors. Every last one of them. The hubris.
And do you think that unto such as you;
A maggot-minded, starved, fanatic crew:
God gave the secret, and denied it me?—
Well, well, what matters it! Believe that, too.
Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam
5. Only
supposed to try it on the Book of Mormon
Let’s say, hypothetically, that I have never tried
drinking a soda pop, and I decide to try it to find out which is my favorite.
The first one you hand me is a root beer and I love it (it must have been
Barq’s). If I were to exclaim “This is the one! I don’t need to try any others,
this is my favorite!” how would you react? Would I be silly for thinking I like
it better than all the ones I have never tasted?
I try Moroni’s Promise, and I get an emotion that I
interpret as the witness of the Holy Ghost that the Book of Mormon is true.
That fact alone is no indication that I won’t get exactly the same feeling (or
something even thruthier) if I were to pray about the Quran, or the writings of
Mary Baker Eddy or Ellen White, or the Vedas, or Dianetics, or the Egyptian
Book of the Dead, or the Bhagavad Gita, etc., etc.
The only reason to try it on the Book of Mormon only,
and then stop the search, is that you are already predisposed to believe the
Book of Mormon. In which case, Moroni’s Promise hardly constitutes a legitimate
test. It amounts to “I’m going to pray about it, and whatever I feel means that
it’s true. Then I’ll never try it on another text.
As was argued in point 2, once again we see that the
reader is only going to be willing to accept Moroni’s Challenge if already
predisposed to believe in the Book of Mormon.
6. Why
would it even occur to Moroni to suggest praying to find out if it’s true?
This seems fishy to me. Moroni is, like his father
Mormon, according to the text, amongst things, a historian. As a historian, he
would presume that the record he is providing would itself be the evidence of
the history of his people. If he has dedicated a large portion of his life to
preserving the evidence of the history of the Book of Mormon people, why would
he include an odd instruction to pray, essentially for evidence of what he has just
provided evidence for?
You might counter that the Book provides a history of
the people, but the purpose of the Book of Mormon is to bring people to Christ.
That might very well be a stated purpose of the book, but Moroni’s Promise
doesn’t ask the reader to pray about whether Jesus is real, or if Jesus is the
savior. You have to already believe in Jesus in order for the challenge to
work. It only asks the reader to pray about whether the book is true.
7. So
many qualifiers
A clever tactic used by the author of Moroni’s Promise
is to load it with qualifiers. When praying to find out if the Book of Mormon
is true, the seeker has to
(i)
remember
how merciful the Lord hath been unto the children of men
(An odd criterion—keep in mind that God is merciful? Why not keep in
mind that God can answer prayers? That would make more sense)
(ii)
from the creation of Adam even down until the time
that ye shall receive these things,
(For
serious? In order to get an answer, you need to keep in mind the entirety of the
history of human civilization. That’s a bit of a tall order)
Wait...
Does this mean that the promise only works if you literally believe in Adam and
Eve? So only young earth creationists can get an answer to Moroni's Promise?
(iii)
and ponder it in your hearts.
(If you don’t get the right
answer you might not have pondered enough, or the right aspects of all of human
history)
(iv)
I would exhort you that ye would ask God, the
Eternal Father, in the name of Christ
(The ball is in your court. Do it
correctly. Don’t pray to Jesus, only to the Father, in His name. Do it wrong,
it might not work).
(v)
and if ye shall ask with a sincere heart,
(Left undefined, you have to really
really really want to know. If you
didn’t get an answer, it doesn’t mean the book is not true, maybe you just were
not sincere enough)
(vi)
with real intent
(Again, undefined. If you don’t
get answer, it does not mean the book is not true, just maybe your intent was a
bit wonky)
(vii)
having faith in Christ
(Right. In order to know whether
I should believe this one supernatural claim, I already have to have a prior
supernatural claim preparing the way for it.)
Because
of this long list of criteria, there is always room for doubt about any
negative answer. If one does not get the affirmative, it is always possible
that the seeker failed on one or more of the ambiguous criteria listed in the
promise.
So, the
affirmative will always mean it is true, but the negative does not mean it is
not true.
This
allows the believer in the Book of Mormon to take advantage of the fallacy of
special pleading (sometimes referred to as the No True Scotsman fallacy). To
illustrate, consider the following hypothetical thought experiment:
Let’s say
some intrepid researchers were able to survey every seeker who accepted
Moroni’s Challenge and prayed to know the truthfulness of the Book of Mormon.
Let’s further say that the results were 1 in 10. 10% of our hypothetical
seekers believe that they receive an affirmative answer to their prayer and
accept the truth claims of the Book of Mormon. This leaves 90% feeling nothing,
or feeling that the book is not what it claims.
If this
hypothetical study were carried out, and the results handed to believers in the
Book of Mormon, how would they interpret it? I suggest that it wouldn’t matter.
One of the reasons is that the list of qualifiers in the promise give a handy
way of dismissing any counter evidence. The believer could dismiss the 90% by
saying that some didn’t pray with real intent, or some didn’t pray with faith
in Christ, some maybe didn’t have a sincere heart, etc. So the believer is in
the enviable position of being able to accept any confirming evidence as proof
that the book is true, while dismissing all counter evidence as irrelevant.
8. …ask
if these things are *not* true?
(Edited
to add that this point is slightly tongue in cheek)
Just between you and me, internet, this seems to be a
nod and a wink from the actual author of the Book or Moroni.
“I
would exhort you that ye would ask God, the Eternal Father, in the name of
Christ, if these things are not true…”
Ask if they are NOT
true
(If anybody tries to argue that this is Popperian
Falsifiability, I might have to track you down and punch you in the duodenum)
So you ask if these things are NOT true
…and you get a “yes” answer, then the answer is “yes,
they are not true.”
…and you get a “no” answer, then your answer is “no,
they are not true.”
Nudge nudge, wink wink.
9. In
what sense is it true?
a. The
book is wrong on all sorts of factual details like virtually every mention of
the flora and fauna, food, wheels, silk, steel, etc.
b. It
is ambiguous enough that its central claims can’t even be pinned down—where did
it happen? Was the land empty? Are modern day Indians of the House of Israel?
c. The
theological claims are basically biblical, or unrelated to Mormonism, so no
unique truth claims in that sense.
d. There
were changes to the book. And some are significant. It initially taught a
concept of God that was much closer to Trinitarian, before being changed to
reflect the tripartite conception of the Godhead of later Mormonism. That is
not a grammatical change, it is a change in bedrock doctrine.
So what?
Mistranslations? Misinterpretations? In the most correct book in the world?
If horses and
elephants and silk and geography and history are so easily misunderstood, what
is to say that the theological and doctrinal aspects of the book are not
equally misunderstood, and our confidence in them unwarranted?
The book says some
very straightforward things. It is extremely unambiguous that the Jaredites and
Lehites were guided to a land with nobody else there. There are multiple
passages that are clear on this matter. However, after evidence started to
accumulate that this claim was untenable, apologists discovered that a “closer
reading” “implied” that there were already inhabitants there. If the very clear
and straightforward claims of the Book of Mormon can be revised upon a “closer”
reading, what’s to say that the theological claims are not equally ambiguous.
The “truth” of the
Book of Mormon is a moving target, is vacuous, and amounts to nothing more than
the warm fuzzies unrelated to anything in external reality.
10. Many
(most?) people don’t even read it prior to praying about it.
Speaking from my own missionary experiences, the norm,
at least in my mission, was to have the shortest space of time possible between
first contact and baptism. The standard discussions we used tried to get us to
commit the investigators (‘gators) to baptism on the second lesson. However,
“if guided by the spirit” we were to try to commit them to baptism on the first
discussion.[x]
Because we were trying make the conversion process happen
on such a short time frame, it was standard practice to get our ‘gators to pray
about it after reading only a few chapters. Usually 3rd Nephi 11
(when Jesus visits the Nephites), or if we were feeling ambitious, 3rd
Nephi 11-26 (the entire visit of Jesus to the Nephites), and of course Moroni
10: 3-5 (but not the whole chapter, I see why now…).
So even if our ‘gators accepted Moroni’s challenge and
received an affirmative response, they still had no clue what they were
claiming to believe to be true. They said, in effect, “I don’t know what the
content is, but I believe that content to be true.
11. Moroni’s Promise inoculates the believer
against the effects of real evidence.
Not only is
accepting Moroni’s Promise likely to lead the seeker to accept the truth of the
Book of Mormon claims independently of whether the book actually corresponds to
reality in any way, it is also likely to lead the seeker to reject evidence
that could lead him or her to re-evaluate the truth of the book.
The “proof” of the
Book of Mormon is entirely independent of geography, geology, linguistics,
population genetics, DNA, or even (as was pointed out in point 10) the content
of the Book of Mormon. It is instead dependent upon the supposition that you
have superior Internal Truth Detectors to anybody who disagrees with you.
As a result,
counter-evidence has no effect on ones testimony of the book. Every time there
is counter-evidence, the believer can simply fall back upon the “spiritual
witness” of his or her Internal Truth Detectors and confidently dismiss any and
all criticisms of the Book of Mormon.
12. Moroni’s
Promise fails do distinguish between competing Mormon sects.
As
missionaries, one of the strategies that we employed was to tell our
investigators that if the Book of Mormon it true, then it follows that Joseph
Smith is a legitimate prophet, and that the LDS Church is God’s legitimate
Church. Well, it doesn’t follow.
Even
if the Book of Mormon is true, AND Joseph Smith is a prophet, it still doesn’t
follow that the current LDS Church is God’s one and only.
Why
not? Because there have been and continue to be multiple organizations that
claim to be the legitimate heir to the organization that Joseph Smith organized,
including (but not limited to) the Community of Christ, the Remnant group, the
various Fundamentalist groups, the “Strangites,” “Bickertonites, ” and “Hendrickites”
(Temple Lot group), “Cutlerites,”and a plethora of defunct groups. And all of
these groups trace themselves back to Joseph Smith.
Even
if the Book of Mormon is true, and Moroni’s Promise works, there is nothing the
Book of Mormon, including in Moroni 10, and nothing (typically reported) in the
experience of receiving an answer to one’s prayer regarding Moroni’s Promise
that allows one to adjudicate between the variety of groups that trace
themselves back to Joseph Smith.
[i]
Festinger, L (1957). A Theory of Cognitive Dissonance. Evanston, IL.; Row,
Peterson.
[ii]
Festinger, L., & Carlsmith, J. M. (1959). Cognitive Consequences of Forced
Compliance. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 38, 203-210.
[iii]
"The Candle of the Lord," Ensign, Jan. 1983, pp. 54-55
[iv] These years later my memory is vague, but I think I stole the term
“Internal Truth Detectors” from radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh who stole it
from Bill Clinton…
[v]
Ineffable: something that, the experience of which, cannot be communicated.
Imagine that I have never tasted pineapple. Could you taste it and describe it
to me in such a way that I would know what pineapple tastes like. No? Because
of its internal subjective nature, the experience of taste cannot be conveyed
using words. It is ineffable.
[vi]
Codol, J. P. (1975). On the so-called “superior conformity of the self”
behavior: Twenty experimental investigations. European Journal of Social
Psychology, 5, 457–501.
Alicke,
M. D. (1985). Global self-evaluation as determined by the desirability and
controllability of trait adjectives. Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, 49, 1621–1630.
Hoorens, Vera (1993). "Self-enhancement and Superiority
Biases in Social Comparison". European Review of Social Psychology.
4 (1): 113–139.
[vii]
Svenson, O. (1981). Are we all less risky and more skillful than our fellow
drivers? Acta Psychologica, 47, 143-148.
[viii]
Mark D. Alicke; Olesya Govorun (2005). "The Better-Than-Average
Effect". In Mark D. Alicke; David A. Dunning; Joachim I. Krueger (eds.). The
Self in Social Judgment. Studies in Self and Identity. Psychology Press.
pp. 85–106.
Sedikides, Constantine;
Strube, Michael J. (1997). "Self-Evaluation: To Thine Own Self Be Good, To
Thine Own Self Be Sure, To Thine Own Self Be True, and To Thine Own Self be
Better". Advances in Experimental Social Psychology. 29. pp.
209–269.
Dunning, David;
Meyerowitz, Judith A.; Holzberg, Amy D. (1989). "Ambiguity and
Self-Evaluation: The Role of Idiosyncratic Trait Definitions in Self-Serving
Assessments of Ability". Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
57 (6): 1082–1090.
[ix]
Kruger, J., & Dunning, D. (1999). Unskilled and unaware of it: How
difficulties in recognizing one’s own incompetence lead to inflated
self-assessments. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 77(6),
1121–1134.
[x] First
night on the mission, out knocking on doors, we met a family, and I committed them to baptism on the first discussion. I thought “Man, this mission thing is gonna
be a breeze…”
This is a masterpiece. And your other article is like unto it! Keep up the good work. So thorough, so articulate. Sharing with friends for sure!
ReplyDeleteWow this is genius, I believe, I believe! Now let’s discuss why would a people follow/continue to follow a pedophile/predator? Would love to hear your thoughts.
ReplyDeleteSeriously, well laid out arguments. Thank you for sharing!
ReplyDelete