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  • Creating a Testimony, 1990

    Talk given by Chauncey Riddle
    23 October 1990,
    at Weber State College Institute, Ogden, Utah

    Suppose with me for a moment. Let’s pretend that you have acquired a passion for Granny Smith apples. You buy and keep them on hand whenever you can, and enjoy them every day while the supply lasts. You become so fond of the fruit that you decide to plant a Granny Smith apple tree. A fast trip to the nursery, a quick hole dug, and the tree is on its way. Then you settle down to wait.

    The next spring the little Granny Smith tree puts forth leaves and grows apace, but no blossoms. Ah, but the tree is just a young thing you sigh, and wait till next spring. But the next spring there are again many leaves and much growth, but no blossoms. You decree patience and settle down to tend the tree and wait another year. You wait another year, and another, and another—what on earth could be wrong?

    At this point you demand knowledge. You search for someone who will tell you what to do. You don’t want to fool around any more. You demand an expert witness who will help you to solve your problem.

    You first encounter Neighbor One. One is a very smart fellow; he reads all kinds of things all the time. He tells you that he has read that cutting the bark of the tree all the way around the tree will scare it into producing blossoms the next year. “What! Kill my tree!” you explode. Neighbor one says all he knows is that he read it in a book and suggests you go read the book for yourself.

    Dissatisfied, you pin down Neighbor Two. “I’m desperate,” you say. “What can I do to get my Granny Smith tree to blossom?” Neighbor Two says that it is easy. Last year he watched Neighbor Three go out to his apple tree one fine spring day and cut the bark all the way around the trunk of the tree. This spring the tree is loaded with blossoms for the first time.

    By now the idea of girdling the tree isn’t quite as new and alarming. But you are properly concerned. Is it possible that the girdling of the tree followed by the blossoming this year was pure coincidence? Thanking Two you seek out Neighbor Three with your problem.

    It turns out that Neighbor Three loves plants and trees and has been pursuing horticultural expertise for half a century. His yard shows it; it is a veritable Garden of Eden. He receives your query with a smile and takes you out to his yard.

    Says he, “To get an apple tree to blossom sooner than normal, you must girdle the tree in the spring between the time of leafing out and before the hot weather comes. I have used this technique on hundreds of trees with positive results, and have never lost a tree in the process. Come look at these apple trees and you can see the scars of my therapeutic girdling. It really works.” Then he takes you to one of his new trees and coaches you while you girdle his tree so that it will blossom next spring.

    Now you are assured. You hasten home, girdle your own tree and sit back with grateful anticipation for a tree full of blossoms in one more year. And it does work. You enjoy your Granny Smith apples ever after.

    What these three good neighbors illustrate is three kinds or degrees of knowledge. Let us examine each of these kinds.

    Neighbor One gave you a witness based on understanding. He had strong associations in his mind about the way the phloem and the zylem work in the cambium layer of the bark of a tree and understood that interrupting the flow process would produce the desired result. This was book learning. It turned out to be true, but you were not sufficiently assured by it. You demanded a better kind of testimony before you would act. Neighbor One’s kind of knowledge is called by the word wissen in German, and is the root of our English word “witness.” The corresponding word in Spanish is saber; in French it is savoir. This is the kind of knowledge all of us get out of history books or from reading scientific explanations of things unfamiliar to us.

    Neighbor Two gave you a witness based on a second kind of knowledge. He had actually seen the process performed. Had he seen the process without understanding it, even seeing would not have helped, for he could have supposed as you first did that girdling was an attempt to kill the tree. But Neighbor Two was an eye-witness to something that worked. His testimony to you brought the problem out of the realm of the theoretical to the arena of actual and personal experience. The German word for this kind of knowledge is kennen or erkennen; in Spanish it is conocer, in French it is conaitre. This is the kind of knowledge we all get as we travel or as we go to the zoo or inspect a factory. It is better than mere understanding of what one is seeing. Without understanding, seeing is essentially blind.

    Neighbor Three bore the strongest witness of the three. He not only had understanding of trees and had seen what he was talking about, he had actually performed the operation in question successfully and many times. This kind of knowledge, the ability to do, is called konnen in German, as in “Ich kann Deutsch:” I know how to speak German. When you find someone who understands a matter, is personally acquainted with what he is talking about, and has learned how to control the thing in question to produce desired results when necessary, you have someone who really knows what he is talking about. He bears a strong testimony.

    A person can have a testimony of anything, any subject matter, and can have it in any of the three kinds or degrees we have mentioned. If you want knowledge of the usefulness of a new medicine or of what will make your garden grow, or of how to extract oil from shale efficiently, you would do well to use these three kinds of knowing. But you will quickly discover that you know best only when you can do, when you can control the thing you are studying. Thoughtful and intelligent persons seek out and construct a testimony of what is important to them. They search for the knowledge and assurance that they are not being fooled, that they can rely on the information they have.

    A testimony of the Gospel of Jesus Christ can also come in these same kinds and degrees. Let us explore the evidences and experiences which make for these three kinds of knowledge, of testimony.

    The first kind of knowledge, understanding can come by any of the standard ways in which we humans know things, and each of these can be an important piece of information to bolster our testimony of the Restored Gospel, the Restored Church, and the Savior. You may gain understanding by the testimony of others. If you know intelligent, reliable people who say that they know the gospel is true, that should strengthen you.

    If you learn the gospel message and see how the scriptures give a consistent account of it in all ages, that consistency begins to satisfy the desire in you to be reasonable. As you see the beauty of the gospel system and how there is an answer for everything which we need to know at this time, your reason is further assured.

    If empirical evidence is your demand, it is furnished. The Book of Mormon is a solid piece of such empirical evidence. It exists; you can pick up a copy in your hand. The question is, of course, how did it come to be? Books don’t grow on trees. All of them are written by people. So who wrote the book? Joseph Smith’s contemporaries, friend and foe alike, agreed that he could not have written it. If not he, then who did write it? The search of all the enemies of the church is to find another author. But they have looked in vain. No other hypotheses fits the known historic facts to this day except the explanation offered by Joseph himself: He translated it by the gift and power of God from ancient plates, but did not author it. The Book of Mormon is solid empirical evidence for a testimony of the Restored Gospel because it is the only explanation which fits the known historic facts.

    Suppose you insist on statistical evidence. You want to see the Restored Gospel correlated with something very beneficial in a contrast which assures that the correlation did not occur by chance. To satisfy this demand you might look at health statistics. It is noteworthy that persons who live the gospel standards are markedly more healthy than the general population. While not an overwhelming piece of evidence in itself, it nevertheless is an evidence and fills a place in one’s scheme of things.

    If you demand pragmatic evidence that the Restored Gospel is true, you may just look at the lives of recent converts. The gospel changes their lives. As they accept and live the teachings, they become different persons, uplifted and enlightened, more hopeful, more helpful, more cheerful, nicer to be around. The Restored Gospel works. It lifts and ennobles lives, and therefore is good.

    Each of these five kinds of evidence; authoritarian, rational, empirical, statistically empirical and pragmatic give a person understanding that the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ might be true. I say “might be” because not one of them or the collection of them is solid, sufficient evidence. All of these things are circumstantial evidence. They are what the scriptures call signs. Included in this category is archaeological evidence like the tree of life stolen from Central America and the corroboration of other documents (like the Dead Sea scrolls), mention of the stick of Ephraim in the Old Testament, and many other such evidences like the archaeological evidence found on the shores of the Indian Ocean in Oman that match the Book of Mormon description of the land Bountiful where Nephi and his brothers built the ship that carried to the Promised Land. One would rightfully be very uneasy in believing that the Restored Gospel could be true if one had no such signs or circumstantial evidence.

    The second kind of knowledge is conocer knowledge, or that which we personally have experienced. The message of the Restored Gospel is delivered with the promise that is we pray in faith, in the name of Jesus Christ, we may receive a divine spiritual assurance that the gospel is true, that the Restored Church is the true Church of Jesus Christ, and that Joseph Smith was his prophet. This knowledge cannot be a physical or earthly thing. It must be from out of this world, from a recognizably divine source, to suffice. It exists only when we do pray in faith and in the name of Jesus Christ about the gospel and do actually receive some kind of answer, a personal and spiritual answer, which speaks to our heart and mind in a way that no earthly, physical or human source can.

    The very point of the Gospel of Jesus Christ is that to do good we must receive help from him, from outside this mortal sphere. Getting an answer from outside of this mortal sphere is thus the only sufficient basis for knowing that the Restored Gospel is true. If there is nothing outside of the mortal sphere, the gospel could not be true. If we receive a message from outside that sphere, then we are assured that the general hypothesis might be true. And if the witness we receive from that source is that the Restored Gospel is true, then and only then do we begin to have a solid base of evidence of the truthfulness of the gospel.

    The first kind of knowledge, the sandy foundation, is knowledge about the gospel. The second kind of knowledge, receiving an answer from God, is building our house upon the rock. Now we have real assurance that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is true. This is knowledge of the gospel, for the message is beginning to work in our lives. What is says is true in our own experience. But our knowledge could yet be more sure. We must now add the third kind of knowledge.

    The third kind of knowledge, the surest kind, comes only from doing. It is the knowledge that one possesses who has used an idea or technique over and over again with good results. As applied to the Gospel of Jesus Christ, this sure knowledge is only obtained by those who live the gospel and do the works consistently, over some period of time. It is the voice of faithful experience.

    Whenever the power of God comes to a person to give that person personal knowledge of the second kind, a divine witness that the gospel is true, another kind of message always accompanies that attestation of truth: there is always an instruction to do something. That something to do is a moral obligation. It is what the Lord requires of those who come to learn wisdom at his hand. He is not primarily a God of truth, though he certainly is a God of truth. He primarily a God of wisdom. Wisdom is doing what is right, the most intelligent thing to do. Our God wants us to become wise, as he is. Therefore, he never speaks to us without instructing us to do something wise.

    The very point of being mortal is to have the opportunity to choose between good and evil. Good is righteousness, God’s wisdom. Evil is anything else. Human beings profit from mortality only as they choose and do good when instructed as to how to be wise by God. One can gain a testimony that the gospel is true without being wise, without doing whatever it is that God says to do. But one cannot be wise without a testimony. For only through receiving a testimony can one also receive those instructions which lead to the kind of wisdom which makes possible a place in the kingdom of God.

    As a person receives instruction from God along with the assurance that the gospel is true, certain kinds of actions are commended by that divine influence. One is guided from time to time to be more kindly, to be more generous, to pray and fast for others, to share one’s food with the hungry and one’s clothing with those who have none. One is told to believe only that which is attested to from above, and to do only that which can be done in love. One is told to eschew all pride, anger, covetousness, hypocrisy and greed. One is told to seek to perfect one’s soul rather that to seek wealth. One is told to marry and raise a family in the nurture of the Lord rather than to fall into the ways of the world. One is called to serve missions, to witness of Jesus Christ, to share the ordinances of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and to strengthen those who have covenanted with Christ. Through faithful obedience and heartfelt sacrifice the servant of Christ does His will and knows of the doctrine. He knows the Gospel of Jesus Christ is true because it works, because there is divine testimony and guidance, and because following that divine guidance leads to the works of love, which are good. There can be no surer knowledge that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is true.

    Looking back over all of this we now see that a testimony of Jesus Christ and his Restored Gospel consists of all three kinds of knowledge. It consists of understanding, sandy as such a foundation might be. It consists of personal knowledge through the revelation of God’s voice as received from another world. This personal revelation is the rock of testimony. It brings sure knowledge. This rock is solid enough and broad enough that each of us may build our house on it. That rock will never leave us wanting when the winds and waves of time and temptation come to try all things. But only as we build our house upon that rock do we really profit from having a foundation, a testimony. The house we build with our good deeds becomes the habitation for ourselves and our posterity in eternity. By godly means we may build a godly house on the rock of Christ himself. All other works will be washed away when the time of reckoning comes.

    The reason for having a testimony is the reason that God gives each person a testimony if they honestly seek it: so that we can do God’s good works and be a bastion of love and blessing to all those we know, both in time and in eternity.

    Thinking back over all of this, let us now review the laws and principles of testimony that relate to what has already been said.

    Principle 1: Testimonies of the work of Jesus Christ come in many degrees. Some persons claim testimonies even without any basis to do so. Such testimonies are not helpful to anyone. Some persons do have circumstantial evidence that the gospel is true and have the beginnings of a real testimony. Others have better knowledge because they know by the power of the Holy Ghost that Jesus is the Christ. Those who know best are those whose lives have been filled with doing good and godly works of compassion under God’s direction. Then they really know and their testimony is almost as powerful as human testimony can be. What they then know surely is God’s goodness, which is a greater testimony even than knowing that he lives. The final and climactic knowledge of Christ is that which comes to his faithful servants when he comes to one of them, embraces him or her, and says, “Well done, thou good and faithful servant.”

    Principle 2. God gives mortals a sure testimony of his work not only so that they can know the truth, but more so that they can live as he does and come and dwell with him. Some human beings want to know the truth, but are not particularly interested in doing what God says. God seldom gives such persons a testimony.

    Even the manifestation of the truth of the gospel is temporary if the person does not do the good works. To do the good works is to be valiant in the testimony of Jesus. Not to do them is to know of Christ but to be ashamed of him. Mercifully, many who are ashamed of him come to forget that he once spoke to them. The memory of his speaking to them fades or is pushed away, and they are left to flounder in misery with those who know not Christ. But they are different. They have had their opportunity to know and do good.

    Principle 3. No one is or can be saved until they obtain a testimony. Only in Christ can any man be saved. We are saved by Christ only after all we can do. What we can do is receive wisdom, gifts and power from God and by those means do good in the earth. But the wisdom, gifts and power come only to those who accept and depend upon a testimony. But a testimony by itself saves no one.

    Principle 4. All lasting testimonies of God are created by the possessor. If a person wants a testimony, he or she must seek evidence. When the evidence is found, it must be carefully marshalled until it is sufficient to depend on. A person may have all the materials for a testimony, yet not want to put them together. Thus Laman and Lemuel had no testimony even though they had received many marvelous signs and manifestations. They did not want a testimony, apparently because they did not want to do the good works of God.

    Thus, a person who does not want a testimony will not be bothered by one until it is too late. It is too late when the time of repentance is in the past. Even after it is too late, every human being will construct a testimony, for each will eventually have such overwhelming evidence that God lives and loves that every tongue will confess the same. Many will then have to admit that they really knew this all along.

    Principle 5. Bearing a testimony of what we understand about the gospel is the weakest and least helpful testimony. This testimony is sand to us and to anyone who receives it. Sand makes a good back fill, but surely is no foundation for a house of good works.

    Principles 6. Bearing a testimony of our spiritual experiences is a strong and valid witness. This kind of testimony encourages others to seek to be founded on the rock, to know for sure for themselves.

    Principle 7. Bearing a testimony by our good works (not by speaking about them, but simply by doing them) is the strongest testimony we can bear that God truly lives and is good. To speak of them is a sort of bragging and leads to pride. It may entice others to seek the power of God so they can bear similar testimony rather than for the correct reason of wanting to bless others.

    Principle 8. Bearing a sure testimony of personal spiritual experience coupled with the silent testimony of good deeds done as obedience to God provides the greatest help to others. This is the maximum that any human being can do to assist another to be saved. No human being can save anyone else. But doing this will be the greatest of all helps.

    Principle 9. A person can construct a testimony of anything. People build and bear testimonies about foods that taste good, medicines that work, friends that are true, books that are insightful, experiences that are breathtaking. But only one testimony is a foundation upon which salvation can come, the testimony of Jesus Christ and his New and Everlasting Covenant.

    Principle 10. The most intelligent way to live is first to seek and build a testimony of Jesus Christ, then to build a house of good works on that foundation. Many of us seem content to wait until we have had our fun or until we are at the end of our lives to find the rock. But then it is sometimes too late to build a house on it.

    In conclusion, I bear to you my testimony that Jesus Christ lives, that his work is sweet, and that his burden is light. I have learned that if we do not try to please the world, but only try to please him, we will be able to please him and at the same time do everything in this world which he appoints as our mission. He is a good master. He has the words and the power of life. Of this I bear solemn witness, in the beloved name of Jesus Christ, Amen.

    Creating a Testimony Handout

    1. Testimony is:
      • Knowledge that we have.
      • Witness we bear of the knowledge we have.
    2. Traditional ways of knowing:
      • Authoritarianism
      • Rationalism
      • Empiricism
      • Statistical Empiricism
      • Pragmatism
      • Mysticism
      • Scepticism
      • Fabrication
      • Scholarship
      • Science

    All of the traditional methods of knowing focus primarily on truth. But none of the traditional methods can guarantee truth. At the best they afford ability.

    • There is another, almost forgotten way of knowing: It is the knowledge of good and evil. Good is righteousness. Evil is anything else. (Moses 4:3–13)
    • Difference between focus on truth and the focus on righteousness.

                Salary:

    1. Truth: Did I get paid all to which I am entitled?
    2. Righteousness: Did I give everything to my work that I should have?

                Football:

    1. Truth: Will we win the game?
    2. Righteousness: Will we play honorably?

                Money:

    1. Truth: Will this stock go up and make me a lot of money?
    2. Righteousness: Should I support this business?

                Salvation:

    1. Truth: Will I be saved?
    2. Righteousness: Can I help someone to be saved?
    • Note: An enquirer after truth is likely to be selfish.
    • There is no way to get at righteousness through truth.
      The best way to get at truth is through righteousness.
    • Righteousness is a personal relationship with God. It begins with the light of Christ, develops through receiving the witness of the Holy Spirit, and is fulfilled through the ordinances of the New and Everlasting Covenant.
    • He who ignores good and evil rejects righteousness, and therefore rejects God.
    • He who cultivates the knowledge of good and evil until he can discern each clearly will then be able to tell the good spirit from the evil spirit. (The evil spirit will sometimes tell the truth, but never will commend righteousness.)
    • He who can tell the good spirit treasures the witness of Christ given by the Holy Ghost.
    • He who treasures the witness of Christ comes unto Christ and makes covenants with Him, with Father, and with the Holy Ghost.
    • He who loves righteousness does the works of Christ, which is to build a house upon the rock of revelation.
    • He who has built his house upon the rock is entitled to know all things. Nothing can be kept from him.
    • He who pretends no knowledge of good and evil is left out of all eternal things until he can get the fundamentals straight, and get on the path of righteousness.
    • The tests of truth given in the scriptures only work for one who already has sorted out good from evil: Alma 32:28, Moroni 7:16–17
    • Conclusion: Anyone who wants a testimony can surely build one if he or she will begin at the right place, with careful attention to good and evil. This is a matter of the heart. Only through the heart can a person surely learn real truth and have a sure testimony of the truth of the important things about mortality. Testimony is a matter of heart and mind, and only when both are satisfied in the actual work of righteousness with the flesh will a person have the surest testimony.
    • The surest testimony comes when the Savior comes to a person, embraces him or her, and says: “Well done, thou good and faithful servant.”
    • May everyone who desires to have this surest of all testimonies gain it, soon.
  • Pride and Riches

    Chauncey C. Riddle, “Pride and Riches,” in The Book of Mormon: Jacob through Words of Mormon, To Learn with Joy, eds. Monte S. Nyman and Charles D. Tate Jr., (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 1990), 221–34.

    Chapter 13: Pride and Riches

    Chauncey C. Riddle

    One of the most memorable and striking passages of the Book of Mormon is Jacob’s instructions to his people on the subjects of pride and riches. Our purpose here is to examine the detail of this message and to apply it to our own day. We will proceed by giving a verse by verse commentary on the short passage on this subject found in Jacob 2:12–21, and will then draw some relevant conclusions for our own time.

    Parentheses and superscripts are used to mark the portions of the text upon which specific commentary will be made. Commentary is then made without further reference to substantiating evidence. The supposition is that each reader will compare notes with the author’s opinions and submit any differences of opinion to the Lord in prayer for resolution. That, of course, is what must be done with any evidence or opinion, footnoted or not.

    The setting for Jacob’s message is that his older brother Nephi, the son of Lehi, and leader and prophet unto the Nephites, has died. Jacob has been consecrated to be the spiritual leader of the Nephites, and on the occasion of the message concerning riches he is addressing those whom we might well presume are the more faithful of the Nephite peoples because his discourse takes place within the confines of the temple (Jacob 1:17). In response to Jacob’s prayer, the Lord has given him instruction, specific word, to deliver to these covenant people on this occasion, and Jacob delivers that word as quoted below.

    Jacob 2:12. And now behold, my brethren, this is the word which I declare unto you, that many of you have begun to search for gold, and for silver, and for all manner of precious ores, in the which (this land, which is a land of promise unto you and to your seed)a, doth abound most plentifully.

    a. A land of promise is a place designated by the Lord where he will go before those who are assigned to go there. The promise is that there they may find righteousness and the Lord himself, to be personally redeemed from the fall of Adam. There is no guarantee that a promised land will be fruitful or that it will abound in ores, such as Lehi’s promised land did. If it is fruitful and abounds with treasures, this may actually prove to be a snare to the people if they forget the real purpose of their being in the land and if they then substitute temporal desires for the promised spiritual blessings.

    13. (And the hand of providence hath smiled upon you most pleasingly, that you have obtained many riches)a; (and because some of you have obtained more abundantly than that of your brethren)b (ye are lifted up in the pride of your hearts)c, and (wear stiff necks and high heads)d (because of the costliness of your apparel)e, and (persecute your brethren because ye suppose that ye are better than they)f.

    a. The Lord is the provider, the hand of providence. He wants his children to enjoy the good things of the earth.

    b. The Lord gives different gifts in differing amounts to each of his children. He deliberately does not equally bestow his temporal blessings. He wishes to give each of his children the opportunity voluntarily to share with others who have less of some temporal gift. Sometimes the temporal blessings are given to those who seem to deserve them least. The initial distribution of spiritual blessings also often seems to be unequal and unearned. But any subsequent spiritual blessings must be earned upon the principles of righteousness. In this area of further spiritual blessings, the Lord is immediate, equitable and absolutely just in bestowing his blessings, even as he will be in bestowing physical blessings in the next world.

    c. We lift up our heads in pride as if we were something special among men, supposing that it has been our intelligence and industry which have provided for our desires rather than the Provider. Thus we look down on those whom we consider to be less industrious and less intelligent.

    d. We have stiff necks in that we will not bow to the God of the land and acknowledge the source of our blessings. We have high heads in the haughtiness of pride.

    e. The common way of showing wealth the world over is to wear expensive clothing. Expensive clothing is labor intensive, and wearing it shows that we are able to buy the time and skill of others more than most persons can.

    f. Persecution comes in so many forms that it is impossible to name them all. But standard ways of persecuting are to look down on others, to speak down to them, and to segregate them because of their lack of wealth.

    14. And now, my brethren, (do ye suppose that God justifieth you in this thing)a? Behold, I say unto you, Nay. But (he condemneth you)b, and (if ye persist in these things his judgments must speedily come unto you)c.

    a. God justifies men by teaching them what is just or righteous, then empowering them to live up to the standard. He never calls an evil thing just, and can never make a person who persists in doing evil things into a just person. The only hope an unjust person has to become just is personal repentance through faith in Jesus Christ.

    b. Jacob is the Lord’s anointed; he represents Jesus Christ to them. Thus they need to take very seriously his flat statement that the Lord condemns them.

    c. This is a plain warning of peril. The Lord will not always immediately bring misery and woe upon a people who are wicked if they know him not. But when a people have covenanted to become his children and obey his commandments, he warns them through his prophet and then shakes them temporally if they will not hearken to the spiritual warning. This has the goal of causing them to be humbled through physical suffering if they will not be humbled by spiritual warnings. Only as they are humble can they repent and receive the promises.

    15. (O that he would show you that he can pierce you, and with one glance of his eye he can smite you to the dust)a,

    a. Jacob seems to be saying: I would that he would impress you by letting you see his great power, without having actually to smite you so that you and your children suffer.

    16. O (that he would rid you from this)a (iniquity)b and (abomination)c. And, O (that ye would listen unto the word of his commands)d, and (let not this pride of your hearts destroy your souls)e!

    a. It is the Lord who makes it possible for a person to repent. He does not take the iniquity out of the world or the person, but enables the person to depart from the iniquity by turning to the corresponding righteousness. When we have departed from iniquity by making the good things the Savior would have us do part of our character, then we can also receive a permanent forgiveness for the iniquity once committed.

    b. Iniquity is inequity, and it is never seen more plainly than when some are rich and some are poor and there is no attempt on the part of the rich to create equity in righteousness. Unrighteous ways to create equity in wealth are theft and governmental redistribution. Both of these attempted solutions use force to negate agency, and never do create real equity, for they are based on the faulty “wisdom” of men. The righteous way to attain equity in society is for the rich to humble themselves before God and share their wealth with the poor as he directs, until they have achieved a just equity (D&C 104: 11–18).

    c. Abomination is that which departs from, is different from, the revelations of God. All righteousness comes through faith in God, which is loving obedience to his revealed instructions “Omin” is the equivalent of “omen,” which refers to revelation. “Ab” means away from.

    d. Faith comes by the hearing of the word. If only they will inquire of the Lord to know for sure that this is his word and then do what he says in full faith, they can and will be released from the curse under which they operate.

    e. The curse under which they operate is their own doing. They have departed from the way of the Lord, and the destruction of their souls, spirit and body, awaits them if they will not now return to that strait and narrow way.

    17. (Think of your brethren like unto yourselves)a, and (be familiar with all)b and (free with your substance)b, (that they may be rich like unto you)c

    a. The Lord’s celestial way is for us to love one another even as he loves us. If we are not quite up to that, at least we ought to think of and treat our brethren and sisters of the covenant the same way we treat ourselves.

    b. The desire to make money, especially to benefit unduly, is one of the great spiritual traps of the world. Spiritually, we might well be much better off if there were no money and we were under the necessity of trading labor. That would be one step toward equity. But another, more immediate step, is simply freely to give of our possessions to those who have less than we do, being aware of their needs and circumstances and imparting to them under the direction of the Holy Spirit.

    c. Richness is relative. It is not required that all men rise to a certain absolute level of physical wealth. It is only required that we of the new and everlasting covenant be equal, voluntarily equal, with each other in whatever we have. Then the Lord promises that he will give us the abundance of spiritual blessings. (D&C 70:14)

    In any mortal situation, a righteous person who has the strength to do so will be voluntarily producing physical goods and services for the society in which he dwells. He will consume only what is necessary of these self-gained benefits, and will voluntarily share the surplus with others who are in need of his surplus.

    One such surplus is knowledge, skills and tools which enable us to produce physical benefits. These may be righteously shared with others and are even more helpful to the recipient in most cases than are consumable goods.

    18. But (before ye seek for riches, seek ye for the kingdom of God)a.

    a. There is nothing wrong in itself about seeking for riches. But we must put things in proper perspective, in proper order. The correct order is first to straiten our hearts and minds into the pattern of the Lord’s love. That we do by finding his kingdom, accepting the covenant to enter that kingdom, then fully participating in the proffered salvation of our souls from the evil which is within our own breasts, which evil keeps us from becoming just and upright in all that we do.

    19. And (after ye have obtained a hope in Christ)a (ye shall obtain riches, if ye seek them)b; and (ye will seek them for the intent to do good)c—(to clothe the naked)d, and (to feed the hungry)e, and (to liberate the captive), and (administer relief to the sick and the afflicted)f.

    a. Hope in Christ is the pivotal concept which helps us to bridge from the beginnings of faith in Jesus Christ to the attaining of the fullness of faith, which is charity. After we receive a manifestation from the Savior which reveals his will, we have the opportunity to exercise faith by believing and obeying that instruction. Obeying the Savior gives us a right to hope for the spiritual blessings which the Savior can so richly bestow. The principal blessing which a person of faith can hope for is to receive a new heart, a pure heart which no longer desires any form of evil. This pure heart is called “charity” and is the greatest mortal attainment of any human being. Attaining it makes it possible to be able to ask for and to receive any other blessing from the Savior. Such a further blessing can be either spiritual or temporal. Additional gifts can then be given freely by the Savior to the individual who has charity because there is then no danger that the person will use any gift for an evil purpose. Thus to attain to a genuine hope in Christ is another way of saying that we have attained unto charity, which is the pure love of Christ. Then we are ready to endure to the end of our lives in righteousness, in doing pure and godly works in behalf of others. We are then ready to seek riches of any kind to be used for righteous purposes.

    b. The Savior tells us that when we are pure and cleansed from all sin, we can ask for anything and will surely receive it as we obey him, because we will not ask amiss but will ask for good things to do the work of righteousness.

    c. The intent to do good is the intent to do the will of God, even Jesus Christ, who is the fountain of all righteousness for the inhabitants of this earth. This good sought may be of four forms or types, each one corresponding to part of the nature of each individual human being.

    We humans consist of heart, mind, strength, and might. The heart is the heart of the spirit body and is the decision center in the human being. The mind is the brain of the spirit body and is the knower, planner, executor function of the human being. The strength is the mortal human body especially including the power of procreation. The might is whatever power or influence the person has in his or her sphere of action resulting from the abilities of the heart, mind and body and also from any wealth, property, persuasive power, or ability to command the efforts of other persons which anyone might enjoy. Thus there are good things of the heart, such as pure desires; good things of the mind, such as truths; good things of the body, such as health and strength; and good things of might, such as food, clothing, shelter, fuel, money, land, political position, priesthood power, etc.

    d. The naked may be those who have no clothing with whom we might share our excess clothing. Or they might be naked emotionally, such as the bereaved or hopeless to whom we can extend love. Or they might be naked intellectually, and we can share with them a knowledge of just how this world works so that they need no longer be so buffeted because of their ignorance.

    e. Some hungry persons need physical food. But others are hungry in heart; they need love and kindness in a world that offers much hate and tyranny. Or they may have an insatiable curiosity which they cannot satisfy because they lack the opportunity to learn.

    f. Some captives are political or military prisoners who are incarcerated through no fault of their own. To use our might to free them may be most important. Or they may be justly imprisoned, where influence might be brought to bear to help them to square a debt with society so that they may be honorably released. They might be emotional captives who are under the spell of an evil person and need an alternative to which to turn. They may be intellectual captives whose vision of the world is constrained to the point that they know not God. They may be captive to drugs or sin, from which they might be released through the assistance of the ordinances of the holy priesthood.

    g. Administering relief to the sick and the afflicted may be caring for someone who has had a stroke or a debilitating disease. But it may also be nurturing someone who is suffering under a load of guilt and does not know of the mercies of the Savior. It may be to help someone who has a preoccupation with a false idea or cause, who needs to see the world another way. It may be to help a person who is possessed of evil spirits who can find no relief except in Christ.

    Whatever the virtually infinite variety of need, the Savior has a solution which faithful servants may obtain and administer for every malady save one: A hard heart which will not admit the Holy Spirit. Only that person himself can change that.

    20. And now, my brethren, I have spoken unto you concerning pride; and those of you which have afflicted your neighbor, and persecuted him because ye were proud in your hearts, of the things which God hath given you, (what say ye of it)a?

    a. When the prophet speaks to those of the covenant, they of necessity must respond. If they are repentant, they will confess their sins and forsake them; thus Jacob asks his people what they will say. If they wish to continue the apostasy, they will murmur under their breath and persist in the way of evil. In either case they are judging themselves and setting the direction of their own future unto good or evil, whichever they choose; and out of their own mouths they are exonerated or condemned.

    21. Do ye not suppose that such things are abominable unto him who created all flesh? And the one being is as precious in his sight as the other. And all flesh is of the dust; and (for the selfsame end hath he created them, that they should keep his commandments and glorify him forever)a,

    a. God is a god of righteousness. He desires that we should worship and glorify him because that increases the righteousness in the universe and enables him to enlarge us without end. The dust of the earth and we humans were both created, or organized, for that same purpose, but most of the time the dust is more faithful than are most humans.

    Reflection on Jacob’s message brings three strong conclusions to mind. The first is that there is a good reason why it is hard for people to share: the differences of values and commitments which they have. The second is that to live the gospel of Jesus Christ we must be willing to be poor. The third is that before we do anything else in our life we should seek for a hope in Christ.

    Having differences of values and commitments does not make sharing impossible or unnecessary, only harder. When people have the same values and allegiances, it is easier to share. When they do not, sharing can become more difficult. To use an extreme example to emphasize the point, let us suppose two families living as neighbors. One family is very frugal and saving, and through years of living by those principles have gathered a small surplus. They are in a position to share. Suppose the other family is very needy. The first family sees that need and takes part of its hard earned savings to the other family to buy groceries. Then suppose that the second family takes the gift, rejoices in it, but decides that the best way to spend it would be to invite all of their friends over for a big alcohol bust. In one evening they squander the hard earned savings of the frugal family and are even poorer than they were to start with. Sharing has gone awry there.

    For this reason, the first thing people should share with one another is the restored gospel of Jesus Christ in the hope that there can be a common set of values, and service under a common Master. That would greatly facilitate sharing. But even if those in need will not change their values, they may yet have needs that must be addressed.

    This brings us to the general rule laid down by the Savior: Sharing needs to be done under his instruction and in his way. That is why there is a gift of the Holy Ghost, for men are not wise enough to know how to do all things in righteousness. That is why there needs to be a priesthood structure in the Church to be an established channel of inspiration and sharing among the children of the Savior. Difficult though sharing maybe, it must be done, but in his own way by the guidance of his own Spirit. When done in the Savior it is always worthwhile to impoverish ourselves in the service of our fellowmen.

    Clearly we do not need to be impoverished or poor to be servants of Christ. But we must always be willing to be poor. If we are already poor, we are admonished to remain poor before seeking wealth until we have obtained a hope in Christ. Thus we must be willing to be poor. If we have wealth, we must be willing to share our wealth with our brethren to the point that they are equal with us in physical wealth; if we have many brethren, our wealth may help many only a little, leaving us and everyone else in relative poverty. Sometimes our mission in life may cause us to be impecunious, as are some persons who spend most of their lives on a series of missions, or who may be dedicated to an enterprise which completely drains them financially, such as sustaining a fledgling educational institution. Or they may be moved to contribute heavily to the construction of a new temple, and making that contribution leaves them impoverished.

    The general principle is, of course, that all we have is at the Lord’s disposal. Whenever he instructs us to give it all away to the cause of righteousness, we gladly do so, knowing that we are pleasing our Master and furthering his work. We cannot be faithful servants of Christ unless we are willing to be poor, even as he, the Father of Heaven and Earth, was willing to be poor to fulfill his earthly ministry in righteousness.

    But who can look so dispassionately on material possessions as to count them nothing dear when the time comes to be stripped of them? This is not easy for most mortals. It surely is not the natural inclination of the vast majority of mankind. But it must be the attitude of all who are true followers of Jesus Christ.

    The true followers of Jesus Christ know that the only riches worth counting are the riches of eternity. They know that all flesh is as grass and will be gone tomorrow. They know that God is good, and amply rewards the faithful for any sacrifice of worldly goods they might make. They trust completely in the wisdom of their Master, having tried him and having found him to be trustworthy in every particular. So their faith commends only one thing as the first priority in their lives: Seek first for a hope in Christ before doing anything else.

    The time called “youth” is looked upon by the world as a time of freedom from responsibility, a time of learning, of indulging, of exploration before settling into the sacrifices and rigors of adulthood. That largely perverse view is a very poor preparation for adult, responsible life for most of its adherents. No wonder so many want to be supported by society throughout their lives, or to be perpetual students, or to indulge their ever increasing desire for pleasure, or to avoid the responsibility of family and a productive life.

    The ideal pattern for Latter-day Saint youth would seem to be that of the life of Jacob himself, who in his youth sought for a hope in Christ and found it. As a youth he beheld the glory of the Savior (2 Nephi 2:4). Then Jacob could ask for anything and know that he would receive it because of the promise of his God. If we become pure and spotless, we may ask whatsoever we will and we will receive it, for we will not ask amiss (D&C 46:30). We will ask to be able to succor the weak, the helpless, the poor, the abused, the ignorant, the hopeless. The riches of both time and eternity are standing ready to be given to the faithful to minister to the needs of the poor of all nations, kindreds, tongues and peoples if only the covenant servants of Jesus Christ will seek first for the kingdom of heaven and for a hope in their Beloved Master before they seek for anything else.

    The real problem is not with riches, of course. The real problem is with hearts. When our hearts are not pure, we cannot love with a pure love. We cannot love the Savior as we should, nor can we love our neighbors as we should. The Savior came to save us from this deficit of love by extending the arms of mercy, through our own faith and repentance, to each of us.

    Why do some of us resist? Is it not because we somehow see ourselves as being sufficient as we are? Do we not believe in our hearts that we are already good enough, that the Savior may indeed have to forgive us of a few things, but his love and generosity will easily take care of those things and we will then be ushered ceremoniously into the blessings of the great beyond? (2 Nephi 28:7–9). Such a belief is what the scriptures call pride. It is the belief that we are good, though perhaps our deeds are not. This is the belief that the old us does not need to die and become a new creature, but only our garments need to be cleansed. In pride we see ourselves as eternal creatures who may need to be forgiven and lifted up by Jesus Christ, but who do not need to be essentially changed by him. We do not need that new and pure heart which only he can give to us.

    My understanding of the gospel of Jesus Christ is that no mortals are just and righteous enough of themselves to go to the same kingdom as Jesus Christ unless they are remade in the image of Christ, heart and mind, body and soul. For without that pure heart, that charity, we are nothing (Moroni 7:44), and can, of ourselves, do no good thing (John 15:1–5). We must cease to exist as the old selfish persons we were and take upon ourselves new hearts and new minds.

    Then in the humility of being salvaged from damnation by the Savior’s love, we will never again consider that we are better than anyone else. Then we will know that we stand only in the grace of Christ, and will never be found looking down on anyone, including the worst sinner and Satan and his angels. We will then know our true place and being in the universe, and will say of the sinner, “There, but for the grace of God, go I.”

    Pride is the root of our evil, the source of our selfishness, the great barrier to our salvation. It is the pride of our hearts from which we need to be saved more than from anything else. Once we are saved from that, then all good things can be added to us. Then we will see as we are seen, know as we are known, and we will be familiar and free with our substance, treating all men as brothers. Then indeed we will have heaven on earth.

  • Problem Solving, 1989

    November 1989

    Step 1: Establish the problem.

    • a.   Locate the topic and do a concept formulation on it.
    • b.   Do an internal systems analysis of the topic.
    • c.   Seek for any laws or rules that govern this topic in the world.
    • d.   Locate the major problems related to the topic.
    • e.   Select a problem for further work and state it with clarity.

    Step 2: Relate the problem to its context.

    • a.   Do a systems analysis of the place of this problem in the larger world or universe system.
    • b.   Detail the relationship of the problem to three or four major components of the larger system.
    • c.   Locate the key system element(s) which governs the problem area.
    • d.   Identify the principal system outputs which make this problem important.

    Step 3: Examine the thinking which governs the problem area.

    • a.   Examine the epistemological roots of the problem.
    • b.   Show the metaphysical involvements of the problem.
    • c.   Show the ethical complications of the problem.
    • d.   Relate the problem to worldviews.

    Step 4: Propose and justify a solution to the problem.

    • a.   Propose a solution for the problem which furthers some stated general goal.
    • b.   Propose a systems analysis of the implementation of this solution.
    • c.   Tell why your solution will work better (be more effective and/or more efficient) than other solutions.
    • d.   Propose an assessment and an evaluation which would serve to measure progress in actual solving of the problem and in establishing the cost/benefit assurance.
  • The Development of Thinking Skills in College Students, 1989

    15 August 1989
    (This paper was delivered at a conference on education held at the University of Puerto Rico in 1989)

    This paper consists of three main parts. The first will be a set of definitions of thinking. The second will be a comment on the history and future of thinking. The third will be the description of a system of instruction for teaching people to think in the manner defined and in the historic context outlined.

    The position taken here is that the major problem in thinking is not formal. Logic seldom trips anyone up. It is the considered opinion here that the two major problems in thinking are 1) techniques of information handling and 2) gaining truth as a basis for thinking. Problems of logic come a distant third in this comparison.

    I. Definitions of thinking.

    The following definitions of thinking are intended to describe the same process, but in different idioms and applications. It is intended that the understanding of each separate kind of definition will assist the reader or hearer to gain a positive grasp on the ideas here being described.

    First a common-sense definition: Thinking is what happens in the mind and heart of a person as that person learns, uses and transforms the social and natural milieu in which the person finds himself. “Mind” and “heart” are here used as metaphors for the imagining and deciding functions of the human being. It is assumed that the individual person is shaped and molded by his environment before coming to any consciousness of self or of the surroundings of the self. We are born mentally as individuals only as we have learned well the social, linguistic and natural context of our lives. Our individuality at first is largely a product of the environment in which we are reared. Later we contribute to and change that milieu according to our desires and abilities.

    Now a technical definition of thinking. Thinking is the concept sequences which result from a person’s choosings. Concept sequences are systems of concepts. Thinking is thus the creation and use of concept sequences. Admittedly this is a non-behavioral approach to the subject. It depends upon introspection: you and I as individuals are aware of our own concepts, even if those concepts have no standing in a “scientific,” that is to say, “behavioral” account. Not all good thinking is science, and thinking about thinking is not science, just as thinking about mathematics is not science. But concepts and systems of concepts are known and used by us. Thus the focus of the investigation of thinking must focus on concepts and systems of concepts.

    The third definition of thinking is a description of ideal thinking: Ideal thinking is the deployment of concepts and systems of concepts which allow the individual to solve every problem which it is desirable to solve with a maximum efficiency and with no later regrets. Ideal thinking thus includes three main elements: the truth of the way things are, the possibilities of how what is might be transformed, and values as to what is good and worthwhile. This definition is thus a stipulation that thinking has its end in solving problems, and in solving them effectively, efficiently and wisely. Turning now to the historical perspective, we see how thinking has and may yet operate in human affairs.

    II. The history and future of thinking.

    The individual human being in our society today inherits a vast cultural deposit. This deposit consists of one or more languages, a social order, technical skills, and a value hierarchy. Languages are the basic socializing factor; they make all things in the deposit available to the person. The social order is the human relationships of which one is a part, including the nature of the family structure into which a person is born, the neighborhood structure, and the church, educational and governmental arrangements one partakes of in the process of growing up. Thinking in this personal situation consists of learning and using the ambient milieu in order to fulfill or to attempt to fulfill one’s desires.

    It is to be emphasized that no one person creates or controls the ambient milieu in which each person comes to consciousness. The milieu is a fabric, woven of many strands by every person who affects an individual, living and dead. No two persons have identical milieus, for each person has a unique set of relationships with the persons around him and becomes part of the milieu for every other person whom he or she affects. In a special way, the individual is created by his unique milieu, given his speech, ideas, values and habits. How he acts on the milieu may indeed have something to do with his unique personality, but that personality is at first almost wholly shaped by the milieu itself. Whatever latent absolute individuality there may be in the person can only emerge and find expression in terms of the cultural heritage. It is notable that few persons affect very many others in passing on that cultural heritage, though everyone affects someone in living their lives.

    The picture we are painting of the individual is that of a web. Every person is born into and becomes part of a social web. The web gives the person existence and the opportunity to act. But the person acts within the web and whenever he or she acts it is within the web. No person can destroy the web into which he or she is born. One may affect it, change it, in some way. But for any individual the change can be only small. One individual may apply those small changes to assist some around him also make small changes; but the receiving of those changes will be mostly voluntary. As the number of persons acting in concert grows, the net effect on the web may be drastic. Of such stuff are revolutions made, both military and cultural. But no one person can swing a revolution by himself. Many must cooperate and add their deliberate changes to the web to make any lasting change in the whole.

    Power in this world into which each of us is born thus comes from social organization, numbers of people working in concert. Only by joining the concert can any of us become persons. Only by working within the concerted effort can any person make a contribution. And the contribution of any individual is always small, notwithstanding the mythologies which grow up under the “great man” theories of history. The “great man” theories are simply useful fictions which focus upon one individual to describe changes which it takes many like-minded people to make. Theories as to why one individual appears to succeed and another appears to fail are interesting, but like all theories, cannot be proved to be true. But the theories sometimes become part of the cultural milieu, the small influence of some individual multiplied by the small influence of other persons who choose to believe the theory.

    As far back as our historical documents reach, we see this same picture of human beings and human life. Each human being has come into existence and has learned the language, the social system, the arts and the values of his context, has made some small impact on that milieu, and has then passed out of this existence through death. But there has been at least one major change in that cultural heritage in historic times. We now turn to an examination of that change, which we shall call the scientific revolution.

    The scientific revolution has its focus in the desire of individuals to understand the processes of the natural and social world, the milieu or context in which each individual finds himself, and to describe the processes of this milieu in general terms. This desire has probably always been present in some persons of every society. But the revolution came because many persons joined forces in that desire and created a new social and intellectual heritage, one in which the procedures and fruits of scientific thinking were socially codified and transmitted.

    Scientific thinking begins with asking the questions “how” and “why” does something operate or work in this world. That beginning has probably always been present, and is not itself scientific thinking. For no person is ever at a loss to answer such questions. Historically, most persons either ask someone else to answer their questions of this sort or they invent an answer for themselves. The scientific revolution takes place in the demand that the answers must pass two kinds of muster. First, they must satisfy certain canons of adequacy. These canons are culturally determined, that is to say, are changeable and do change historically and from place to place. They include today such requirements as rationality (the demand to be rationally consistent), the necessity of being grounded in some phenomenal base (the demand that there be a relevant body of empirical evidence on which the ideas are based), and the requirement that the ideas be predictive (that they successfully enable one to predict future phenomena, especially novel or unexpected phenomena). These requirements are not strictly “rational” themselves. Rather they are social. They are requirements established by the consensus of those who are considered to be scientists. Which brings us to the second factor for passing muster in the scientific revolution: the explanation must not only meet the requirements or canons set by those who are scientists, but must be accepted by the scientists themselves.

    We see that the scientific revolution was thus a social revolution. It consisted in the institutionalizing of truth. A certain body of persons loosely known as “the scientists” of their day became the arbiters of what would be and could be called truth. They were socially successful in replacing the clergy because they took a special and different focus than had the clergy. Where the clergy had focused on being the keepers of the truth by claiming the ability to deliver men’s souls to happiness in the next life, the scientists focused their claim as the arbiters of truth on the ability to improve the arts, the technical traditions of mankind. And because they were able to deliver obvious and impressive technical gains by means of their socialization of truth, they gained the acceptance of many persons, thus becoming socially acceptable and influential. The clergy, on the other hand, took a back seat, because one needed to die first to verify their claims to truth.

    Today scientists would like to think they have a corner on all truth. That they have not been able to accomplish thar, for the average person does not yet believe them in all things. But they are roaringly successful nevertheless, and would fain claim to be the keepers of all that is true. The atom bomb, medical advances, electronics, and other innovations have given them great clout, so they try sometimes to take dominion over the past in connection with their cousins, the scholars, and over the future. But they sometimes go too far, and are forced back into their proper bailiwick, the improvement of technical processes.

    The scientific revolution was thus a revolution in thinking. Those who created it said and showed that there was a process, a systematic approach, which was beneficial, in answering the questions “how” and “why” things work as they do in this world especially as related to physical or material processes. They have been successful in socially institutionalizing this method of thinking using the PhD degree. And they maintain their hold as keepers of the truth by attacking all others and any mavericks within their own ranks who will not bend to the socializing process and accept their group verdict as to what is truth and what is not.

    It would seem that on the whole, the scientific revolution has been a great plus for humanity. Apart from the exaggerated claims of some persons of the scientific community, they have shown very real gains for humankind, gains which continue and which give every promise of continuing into the future. And perhaps the domain may expand as human beings come to agreement about psychic phenomena as they have about physical phenomena.

    But there is another revolution in the wings, waiting for enough persons and enough consensus, that it might be truly institutionalized as science has been. This revolution is the revolution of value considerations, the question of good and evil, that values are all either non-existent or entirely arbitrary. But they have not convinced the majority.

    Today the majority of persons know that human survival depends upon getting the same kind of hold on good and evil that science made possible for truth about technical processes. It will not do to simply politicize the matter. That did not work for truth, and doubtless it will not work for good and evil. The opinion of the majority does not make persons happy just as it does not launch rockets to the moon. Today we look into the near future and see that if we do not come to some value conclusions as to what to do with the production and distribution of garbage, with the allocation of health care, with the endlessly draining arms race, with the breakup of the family, we will all soon be in misery. And misery is evil.

    The historic solution for misery has been social. Into the dark recesses of the past our peering reveals that a few have always organized things so that they could escape misery by focusing the labors of the many upon themselves. This is to say in plain terms that every great world civilization has been formed on the social base of slavery, some kind of involuntary servitude. The scientific revolution and the accompanying industrial revolution enlarged the few to many, as natural power replaced slave power in producing the amenities of the good life. But the revolution has failed to improve the lot of the remainder. Technical processes used for evil now threaten everyone (e.g., the nuclear threat). Gone is the old scientific optimism, replaced by a wandering apprehension of gloom and doom.

    The gloom and doom will continue until we have a widespread recognition of the realities of good and evil, even as there was a widespread recognition of a corner on some kinds of truth in the scientific revolution. How this will come, I do not know. But doubtless it will be a new kind of thinking, even as was the scientific revolution. It will be a thinking which has some demonstrable benefit, even as the scientific revolution benefited industrial and technical processes. Perhaps some group of persons will achieve a society so happy and emotionally prosperous that everyone will have to admit that they have a corner on good and evil, and will make them the keepers of good and evil, even as the scientific community has been made the keepers of certain kinds of truth.

    But clearly a value revolution is needed as our world of inequities so clearly shows. Not only must we choose our future on the basis of truth but also on the basis of which choices are good and which are evil, which choices lead to peace and happiness, and which ones lead to misery and degradation. The next revolution must and will be a social thing. As was the scientific revolution, it must also be an institutionalizing of good thinking. And it will make possible the final revolution which will be the creation of a social order in which the cultural heritage and milieu of every child born will be truth, good, and perfected social order. But the revolution of good over evil must come before the society can be perfected. The mistake of Marx was to jump the gun. He thought that the scientific revolution was all that was necessary to destroy evil and create the just and perfect society. He did not see that science does not and cannot answer the question of good and evil. His new state simply perpetuates the evil of the old system, replacing nobles with party members, perpetuating social inequality in the midst of technical triumphs.

    All that has been said thus far is a prelude as to how to teach thinking, good thinking. The prelude has been necessary, because not to put thinking into its historic context would be to shear thinking of its true power, the power to help us to see what our real problems are and to assist us with creating and implementing the social institutions which will assuage those ills. Good thinking must be a two-edged sword: cutting away error from truth and evil from good, that good and reasonable men and women might work in concert for that better world to which so many of us have dedicated our lives. Good thinking must see the world as a whole, as a system which includes people, truths and values.

    III. The teaching of thinking.

    As with everything else, thinking cannot be taught. But it can be learned. What we call good teaching is actually the facilitation of learning, and it can exist only as and if learning is actually taking place. But a good deal can be done to facilitate good thinking. Most of what can be done is to suggest possibilities which the learner can try, to see if they help. If they help, and if problems are solved, then facilitation has taken place.

    The following is a description of an intense experimental honors course in thinking which has been conducted at Brigham Young University for the last nine years (since 1980). The course is actually a workshop in which daily written assignments which involve the practice of thinking skills are required of each student. The course has undergone many revisions. This account will review its present major features.

    a.   The Key is to ask good questions.

    The key to thinking and learning is the asking of good questions. The interrogative stance puts the initiative on the inquirer, begins where he needs to begin, pursues what he wants and needs, proceeds at his pace, and terminates only according to the individual’s desire.

    All learning is thinking, and thinking is the creation of concepts and the establishing of relationships among the ideas one has created. Relationships among concepts or ideas is what we ordinarily call understanding, and all questions are questions of understanding. It is the world of saber, not conocer knowledge which is opened up by questioning. (Of course, good questions may well lead indirectly to conocer types of knowledge.)

    It is helpful in the facilitation of questioning to note that there are five kinds of questions. First there is the generic question of understanding, and all questions are questions of understanding. But within the domain of questions of understanding there are four principal subtypes. These are questions which elicit clarification, verification, evaluation and application. Questions of clarification are requests which seek surety of the intention of the speaker or enlargement of an area of ideas indicated by a speaker. “Do you mean to say that…?” and “Would you be more explicit?” and “Tell me more about X” are questions of clarification. Verification is concerned with the evidence for the truthfulness of an idea. Questions such as “What is the documentation for that data” and “How do you know whereof you speak?” and “How can you hold that idea in the face of evidence that X?” are questions of verification. Evaluation has to do with the value connections of ideas, and results in questions such as “Why is concept X better than concept Y?”, “Is this procedure a practical thing to do?” and “How can we be sure this is the moral thing to do in this situation.” Application questions deal with the actual use of ideas in the real world, and result in questions such as “How do I put this on?” and “Will this work for every occasion of the problem?”, and “Of what use is this object?” Questions for general understanding which do not well fit any of the four specialized kinds might be the following: “How is X related to Y?”, “In what ways is the human brain like a computer?”, and “What does hygiene have to do with longevity?”

    One can, of course, mix categories of questions, such as asking, “How can you be sure that this is the best thing to do?” which mixes verification with evaluation. And if all questions are simply questions of understanding, why even separate out the four subtypes? The answer is that as one becomes aware of the subtypes and their combinations, one can become more expert in asking just the right question to elicit the answer needed. It is true that one can use a shovel to do the work of a hoe, just as one can use questions of evaluation to get at problems of verification. But clumsy and inefficient applications are not desirable in either gardening or thinking. Asking “Is this a good idea?” is a clumsy way of asking for the evidence for the truthfulness of a concept, and would better be replaced by “How can we be sure that this procedure is reliable?”

    b.   Everything is part of a system.

    When a person has been alerted to the importance of asking good questions, he is ready to be exposed to systems thinking. Systems thinking is different from ordinary thinking in that it insists on conceiving things as wholes. It involves the recognition that though analysis of things or ideas is valuable, analysis must always result in a resynthesis to be fully fruitful. Nothing exists in a vacuum, and nothing can be understood all by itself. Understanding is a matter or relating, even as existing is a matter of being a part of a system. And it is important to realize that there is but a single system in existence: the universe itself.

    It is useful to distinguish five modes of systems thinking. The first is systems analysis, which is studying something in the real world to determine its parts, how they function, and how that something relates to the universe around it. An example of this kind of thinking is a market survey to see what is needed in an area. The second mode of systems thinking is systems design. This is the invention of an idea structure which is not part of reality, but which hopefully would be an improvement upon reality if actualized. This is the planning, designing, inventing function which is so crucial to all successful solving of practical problems. An example of this would be the work of an architect. The third mode of systems thinking is systems creation, which is the translation of the desired systems design into reality, as a contractor builds the building which the architect has envisioned. The fourth kind of systems thinking is systems operation, which is the maintenance and use of a system for its intended purpose, such as the work a hotel manager would do. Finally, there is systems evaluation, which is the comparison of two systems according to some criterion of desirability to ascertain which of the two beings compared most nearly meets the desired standard. An example of systems evaluation is the star system by which many hotels are rated in various countries of the world.

    To assist persons to learn to think in systems format it is useful to establish a standard set of questions which form a useful beginning to the five types of systems thinking. It is useful to see that every real system has a form, and may be considered as a static system. The important questions to ask for a static system are, “What are the system boundaries, which set it apart from the environment?” “What are the system parts and how are they related to one another?” And, “What is the function or purpose of this system as it exists in its environment?”

    Many systems may also be analyzed in a dynamic aspect, asking such questions as: What are the inputs of the environment to this system? What are the outputs of the system to the environment? What are the factors which are in opposition to this system, which tend to its destruction? What is the relative efficiency of this system as it functions in its environment?

    A system may also sometimes be seen as an agent system, one which contains an agent and is therefore not fully to be understood in terms of its structure and environment. For agent systems we ask such questions as: What is the goal or desire of this agent? What are the resources available to the agent? What strategy may the agent employ to use the resources available to attain the goal? What tactics would be useful to implement the strategy selected? What assessment can and should be made to determine when the agent has reached the desired goal? What evaluation of the cost/benefit ratio of the attainment of the goal can and should be made?

    These questions of the static, dynamic and agent systems analysis are of course not exhaustive. They do provide a beginning, and a solid beginning for interrogative investigation of an area, and as the technique of systems thinking is learned by a person, his list of questions becomes tailored to his own particular personality, needs and successes. What is important for thinking is that a person see all things as systems, and all part of the one actual system of the universe. An example of the fruit of such systems thinking is the environmental concerns which are beginning to abound as people become painfully aware that no factory or business is an isolated entity unto itself. We will do better systems thinking when we all realize that individuals must not be a law unto themselves either. Consciousness of that necessity is beginning to be seen in restrictions on the public burning of tobacco (smoking), which burning some individuals seem to enjoy while being oblivious to the stress which that act causes in other persons near them.

    c.   Concepts are systems also.

    The concept of systems as a foundation leads to an analysis of concepts as systems. Concepts are the building blocks of our thinking. Human beings think, speak and act according to their concepts, whether these concepts be correct or incorrect, fuzzy or precisely defined, few or many. To attain to clear and precisely articulated concepts is the foundation of all expertise. This process benefits from the application of good questions in order to elicit the systemic relationships which all concepts possess. The following is a list of ten questions which have been found useful to assist persons to think newly and precisely about their own concepts, thus to be able to think and to communicate with greater ability.

    1.   What are the names which attach to this concept? A listing of the names used, even from several languages, provides the key to researching of the concept. The name is not the concept, but is the index.

    2.   What is the base, language, culture, time-frame of this concept? All concepts are related to people in their historic settings, thus the necessity of seeing a concept as part of a particular cultural system at a particular time and place.

    3.   What is the etymology of the words used to designate this concept? It is important not to confuse historic usage with present concept, but historic usage of them provides important nuances of meaning for a concept.

    4.   What are the dictionary definitions of the symbol being used? Dictionary definitions are not to be confused with what a concept should be. They are simply a register of historic usage. But historic usage needs to be known whether or not that usage is fortunate or useful or not.

    5.   What are examples of the use of this concept (symbol) in the designated cultural base? Good dictionaries give such examples, and such examples are helpful in seeing how the concept has actually been deployed by other persons.

    6.   What are the correlative concepts which form the matrix of meaning in which this concept has its significance? Examples of such helpful correlative concepts are the genus, concepts which are similar, contrary and opposite, concepts which are complementary, counterfeit, and the perfection of the concept. Here we see systems operating as a concept is shaped and defined by the concepts with which a person associates the idea on which they are trying to shed light.

    7.   What key questions should I ask and answer to elicit factors of this concept which have not already been brought to light? This category gives the thinker the opportunity to get away from the prescribed questions and to explore what is needed at the fuzzy edges of this concept which is being fashioned.

    8.   What is the best definition of this concept? Here the person has the opportunity to pull together the very best thinking he or she can do to detail the nature of the concept in question. It is here recognized that concepts are and should be personal, for every person creates his own concepts within the cultural milieu in which he or she finds intellect. A concept system which is clear, articulated, which has integrity or consistency in itself and is most useful in solving problems is never a gift from the public domain, but must be achieved by the individual out of the materials furnished by the cultural heritage. Having achieved such a concept system, the fortunate possessor of same then has the problem of communicating it. But at least then he has the possibility of communicating precisely, which the cultural heritage alone does not usually afford.

    9.   What are positive and negative examples of this newly formulated concept? The definition is a beginning of the process of communicating the new concept. As we learn in life the usage of words from positive and negative examples used by our tutor, so we may communicate to others the nature of our concept by furnishing many positive and negative usages of the concept, according to the needs of the circumstances.

    10. What effect should and does this concept have on me? What does it do for my mind, for my belief system? What does it do for my heart, for my value system? What does it do for my actions, the skills of body with which I relate to the universe? And what does it do for my power to influence the universe around me? A concept demonstrates its existence and power by the changes it makes in its possessor. Thus, part of the defining and communicating of the concept is the answering of questions as to what difference using it will make in the life of the user.

    Concept formulation is the deliberate and forthright attempt of an individual to control his own thinking by acquiring a set and system of carefully thought-out concepts with which to relate to the universe. Anyone who does well at anything in this world has performed this operation, which operation enables the person to make correct and precise judgments about the world around him, and to make wise plans for acting. Concept formulation is a species of systems analysis as a preparation for other modes of systems thinking.

    d.   Strategies for effective systems action.

    Armed with good questions, a sense of systems, and a power to formulate useful concepts, the person who is learning to think is ready to consider strategies. Strategies are specialized patterns of thinking which are devised to handle efficiently recurring human problems related to thinking. While there are many strategies, the principal ones for a thinker to master are those of communication, scholarship, science, religion, creativity, and evaluation. We shall consider each of these in turn.

    1. Communication. Communication is the affecting of others. We communicate diseases, blows, and gifts, but the communication with which we are here principally concerned is the communication of ideas, which we do mainly through symbols. Communication is an expression of thinking in the speaker and a stimulus to thinking in the hearer.

    It is useful for a user of language to know that there are four principal uses of language: to express one’s feelings and ideas, to describe the world, to command others, and to perform acts by authority. These are the disclosure, the descriptive, the directive and the declarative modes of assertion, or human symbol usage. Good thinking distinguishes them and identifies each correctly both when the person is speaker and hearer.

    Knowing the type of assertion is the key to the capture process. To capture is to grasp the essence of any human communication, seeing it for just what it is. The capture format is to ask and answer four basic questions about any assertion:

    a.   What is the speaker’s purpose? (Knowing the correct type of assertion is of assistance here.)

    b.   What is the speaker’s main assertion? When a message is all boiled down, what is the point being made?

    c.   What is the support of that main point? Is it a true or important assertion, and what evidence is there for that? Does the speaker give evidence, or do I already have evidence which shows me that the speaker’s point is true or false, or important or unimportant?

    d.   What is the relevance of what the speaker says? Should I do something about it, and if so, what? And what might be the loss if I do nothing.

    Only as a person grasps all four of these factors does a person grasp a message. These four parts map the nature of human beings. Each human being is made of value choices which are reflected in purpose: ideas which are reflected in main assertion; clout, which is reflected in support; and effects, which are reflected in relevance. These are the four aspects of the human system, and every communication reflects systemically these four aspects of a speaker. To communicate well, both as speaker and hearer, is to understand communication and communicators well, which these questions help one to do.

    2. Scholarship. Scholarship is researching and interpreting the written communications of other persons, then forming an image of whatever they are describing on the basis of what has been documented. This is the typical mode of gaining ideas about the past and the distant where we have no personal opportunity to observe. Scholarship is a specialized mode of thinking which is designed to eliminate error in favor of the truth about matters one cannot directly observe. This strategy has served mankind rather well, but has not proved to be without problems, for it sometimes rejects truth in favor of error.

    The essential thinking process of scholarship is to assemble the extant documents on a subject, interpret them, then to form a reconstruction of what they describe according to the stricture and canons of scholarship acceptable to the community of scholars at the present time in history. As with science, this is an institutionalizing of truth. No one person can read all the documents about every subject. So there is a division of labor in which one person becomes an expert on one set of documents and ideas, other persons on other documents and ideas. The hope is that if each person is responsible and careful, each person will contribute to the society the best that can be done and thus all will be edified as they believe the delivered reconstruction of the scholars.

    Scholarship has large problems, of course, because human beings perform it and human beings have large problems. The scholar is at the mercy of whatever documents happen to be extant, what other scholars have said, the truthfulness of the writers of the original documents, and the canons which obtain at the time of writing. Scholarship eliminates the unusual, the spiritual, the unlikely, and the unverified. And this is done with good reason, for many things that are unusual, spiritual, unlikely and unverified are in fact not true. But some are, and thus the scholar labors in the cause of likely truth. The person who does good thinking understands and uses scholarship, both as a consumer and a producer, but is acutely aware of its limitations.

    3. Science. The strategy of science is to produce reliable generalizations of fact, law, theory and principle out of the phenomena human beings observe about the universe. It is a creative enterprise, necessarily restricted by what ordinary human senses perceive, but highly flexible as to how those sensations shall be construed. Science also weaves a social fabric, for no person can observe and imagine all things. As one person does his task of generalizing and creating ideas which are responsible and within the current canons of scientific acceptability, all are enriched. Science has the advantage over scholarship that some of its products have enormous potential for technical application, and therefore for commercial gain, where scholarship is limited to the production of information.

    To think scientifically is to attempt to characterize the universe in which we live in a manner that reduces surprises to zero. Its surety lies in its predictive ability. The controlled experiment reveals what has been and is; inductive faith in uniformity projects what will be. Fortunately for us humans, uniformity seems to be a real thing, making planning and engineering of many kinds feasible. But there are limitations to science.

    Science cannot operate except in an area of controllable phenomena. If there cannot be a controlled experiment, there cannot be reliable projection. If the phenomena are not public, (if they are unique to some personal sensibility) again there cannot be scientific projection. And controlled experiments are very difficult to achieve, even in simpler cases such as physics and chemistry. But notwithstanding the limitations of science as a thinking strategy, every good thinker needs to know the procedure, to perform it well as necessary, and to consume its products with care and skepticism.

    4. Religion. Religion is the strategy of the creation and maintenance of one’s self or one’s character through controlling habit formation. Habits are formed by unbroken patterns of choosing, and the strategy of religion is to learn to perform such unbroken patterns even in the face of thoroughly entrenched habits which one has had for a lifetime.

    Using this strategy, there seems to be no limit as to which or how many habits can be changed. This gives the individual total control over his own personality over time. It is thus a great access to personal freedom. To understand the patterns of habit change, the function of triggers, of positive and negative feedback and rewards, the necessity of controlling the environment as well as the person, all give the person power over self.

    The strategy of religion is not to be confused with church institutions. Churches traditionally have attempted to influence the habits of individual participants, to influence the character and choices of persons. But churches have usually done a poor job of making much difference except for initial imprint. Learning to think in the strategy of religion gives the individual the opportunity to take good out of every culture and environment and to incorporate that good into himself, be it values, ideas or physical action patterns. The strategy of religion is what gives lasting personal harvest to all other good thinking.

    5. Creativity. Creativity is the strategy of taking the patterns given to the individual by nature and by his culture and then recombining those patterns in ways not before encountered. Creativity is a thought process, a thinking method. To learn how to do it is to free the imagination, that the imagination might learn well the heritage of the past and then expand that heritage. The greater the heritage of patterns, the greater the recombining potential, other things being equal.

    Not all creativity is good or useful, even as the seemingly random mutations in a gene pool seldom produce viable, much less superior, individuals. But the value of a genuine improvement is so great, and so few persons seem to want to be genuinely creative, that the creative person has a great advantage in society.

    Society is double-minded about creativity. In general what society rewards, especially in children, is conformity. Through conformity one learns his language and becomes acculturated and an acceptable member of the adult world. But then for an adult, lavish praises are heaped upon those who manage yet to be creative and produce things which society then treasures.

    Thinking creatively is a social skill as well as a thinking skill. The wild imagination must be tamed to select and publicly produce just those new ideas which are on a leading edge of social change, which will be desirable and tolerable to the mass of less imaginative persons. Artist, inventors, military people, scientist and scholars all need to be creative, but responsibly and socially creative lest they be ostracized from the human sphere. To learn this double bind of unfettering the imagination then carefully fettering what is shared with others is the skill of creative thinking, which every good thinker may master, but especially can master if they are a creative facilitator.

    6. Evaluation. The necessary companion skill for creativity must be evaluation. Evaluation is comparison of things with an idea. Having ideals is itself a matter of evaluation, for one must select good ideals or the process flounders. To pretend there is no good and no evil is to eliminate the possibility of evaluation. Some persons so pretend, but must introduce good and evil by the back door to avoid being flooded with the trivial and the obnoxious.

    The strategy of evaluation is to have an acute sensitivity to value, which sensitivity can be enhanced by the deliberate thinking and experiences of a desiring individual, even it it cannot be taught. Like most other things, evaluation is a matter of experimentation, learning from the results of our choices. Admittedly this is circular, and a person who has no clue as to what is good and evil to begin with cannot learn evaluation, even from a lifetime of experience. But most persons do seem to have that starter ability to evaluate. Careful cultivation of that ability by good example and by special exercises then places evaluation in the repertoire of the thinker, enabling him to evaluate all of his own thinking and also those things communicated by other persons. Most people can tell physical garbage when they see it. But curiously many do not see intellectual garbage unless they are directed in thinking about it. The propaganda machines, acculturation techniques, and cultural pressures to conform seem to have done such a good job that not only is creativity rare but the ability to be a forthright and obviously responsible evaluator is at least as rare.

    Evaluation is a social skill, even as creativity is. One must not be too far away from the sensibility and norms of the social milieu, or one will not be heard. To evaluate clearly in one’s own mind, then to make public only that which will be socially acceptable and helpful is the test of good thinking. Those who promote evil suffer the same social strictures, for they must not be too different from their contemporaries either. But promoting evil seems to be like rolling stones down a mountain; given the right social situation, it is easy. But promoting good is like rolling the stone back up the mountain. Not only does one need to evaluate correctly and carefully, but to affect the social scene you usually need to assist others to learn to think, to learn to evaluate; it is not enough to propound you own evaluation as it often is in the promotion of evil.

    There are many other strategies, such as that of philosophy, persuasion, and entertainment. There are strategies of facilitation of learning, as there are specialized strategies that form the background of every profession. The more strategies of thinking a person masters, the more powerful he or she will be. But the emphasis in the teaching of thinking must be on those which are fundamental to the successful utilization of all other strategies, such as those discussed above.

    e.   Relevant general knowledge.

    The thinking skills discussed above mostly fall into the category of the processing of information in special ways, which we stipulated in the beginning was the first priority in the teaching of thinking. The second priority was that of special knowledge, or truth. We turn now to a discussion of that area, focusing on the subjects of epistemology, metaphysics, ethics and worldviews.

    1. Epistemology. Epistemology is the discussion of how human beings know. Understanding what can be known and how it can be known is indispensable to good thinking and to the proper skepticism which every thinking person must constantly employ. To bring someone to a realization of the ways of knowing, with their strengths and limitations, is to give those persons a great freedom of perspective with which to evaluate the sayings of mankind.

    The epistemologies which seem important to bring every thinker’s attention are the following:

    a.   Authoritarianism: Forming beliefs on the basis of information communicated from other human beings.

    b.   Rationalism: Ideas deduced from what one already believes or which is consistent with what one believes.

    c.   Empiricism: Forming beliefs on the basis of one’s own sensory observations.

    d.   Scientific empiricism: Forming beliefs on the basis of arrays of empirical data which have been mathematically treated to reveal justifiable generalizations.

    e.   Pragmatism: Forming and accepting ideas because they seem to work.

    f.    Skepticism: Rejecting ideas when there is not sufficient warrant to believe them.

    g.   Mysticism: The substitution of feeling for mental evidence in the accepting of ideas.

    h.   Non-human authoritarianism: Forming or accepting ideas on the basis of communication from non-human persons, should one encounter such.

    i.    Fabrication: The invention of ideas where there is a need and no other epistemology offers help.

    j.    Sensitivity to good and evil: The basic ability to make value judgments not based on personal preference. This is often seen in children but tends to be covered up in the process of acculturation. It is an epistemology which focuses not on truth, as do the others (with the possible exception of mysticism), but on values.

    This list of epistemologies is longer than the standard philosophic categorization. It is deliberately longer to include all of the kinds of knowledge and knowing which are important to human beings in this world, even though some are not popular in academic circles. But it is important to understand them all, and to use each of them as needed. The best approach to thinking seems to be to use them in concert, as so many organ stops which enrich the flow of ideas. It is assumed that the ultimate justification for any epistemology is pragmatic: the source is judged by what it produces. But clearly, one who is ignorant of epistemological possibilities is woefully hindered. To know how to know and the limitations of what can be known is a great advance in the process of knowing and thinking.

    2. Metaphysics. Metaphysics is the study of the unseen world. While it is not implied that there is no value in studying the seen world, the seen world is rather well-known to human beings both through their own observations and through the cultural and scientific deposits which are the cultural heritage of particular peoples. But everyone is confused about metaphysics, for by definition it is the area of truth about which there is no established procedure for defining what is true and what is not.

    What is crucial about metaphysics is not so much to have a set of answers but to have a set of questions. If one has answers, they cannot be verified. But if one has an understanding of the questions, then at least he or she can be wary whenever anyone propounds an idea which is clearly metaphysical or which is based on some metaphysical conclusion. Which is to say, of course, that the study of metaphysics makes one very skeptical about most things, because most human ideas of truth are demonstrably based on and intertwined with metaphysical presuppositions.

    The questions of metaphysics are such as the following:

    ·    Is the universe material, ideal, or both?

    ·    Are universals or particulars more real, or do they have different status in different realities?

    ·    What is the nature of time and space?

    ·    Is there a genuine uniformity which guarantees our inductions, or is the universe an assemblage of curious chance events?

    ·    What is the true nature of human beings? Is there more to a person than the physical body?

    Some questions are borderline, as might be expected, bridging the seen and unseen worlds, such as:

    ·    Are there intelligent beings other places in the universe?

    ·    Are human beings part of a race which also exists elsewhere?

    These questions are quasi-metaphysical because solid physical evidence would answer the question but in the absence of such evidence answers to the questions remain metaphysical speculations.

    To be aware of metaphysical snares is again to be a wary purchaser in the marketplace of ideas. To be without this ability to think and to evaluate leaves one in a position of great naivete, which is unbecoming of one who likes to think that he thinks well.

    3. Ethics. Ethics is the study of different value systems. Of itself, ethics does not make a person more moral, a better citizen of the world. But it does make a person more conscious of the alternatives and can assist a person to sharpen his or her perceptions of value if one cares to do so.

    It is important for both personal decisions and for cultural awareness to be knowledgeable about the great historic value systems. These include the Cyrenaic emphasis on physical pleasure, the Platonic emphasis on knowing, the Aristotelian emphasis on the golden mean, the Epicurean emphasis on the balance of higher and lower pleasures, the Stoic tradition of apatheia, the moral sense of doctrine, the Kantian categorical imperative, and the utilitarian social emphasis on the greatest pleasure for the greatest number. A brush with one or two less traditional schemes is also valuable and invites the student to explore the great variety of these on his or her own.

    One conclusion that seems important to emphasize is that all of these schemes mentioned are “rational” systems of ethics. They give an adherent a rule or principle on which to base practical decisions. But they fail to give any surety that the result one obtains from following them is in any way guaranteed to deliver the kind of reward the user anticipates. That is a way of saying that human ethical systems cannot deliver wisdom. They are not powerful enough to cover all contingencies, and therefore each fails, even in its own terms, at times. Not to learn this great lesson which Socrates taught so clearly is to miss one of the greatest cornerstones of good thinking. The moral of the story is, of course, that one must search beyond the rational systems of ethics to obtain a system of value considerations which has any hope of being a sure deliverer of sure and enduring wisdom.

    Since all practical thinking and planning in this world involves value considerations and commitments, the study of ethics is indispensable to the learning of good thinking. If one cannot be sure, one can at least be wary, and that of itself is a great boon to thinking.

    4. Worldviews. Having examined epistemology, metaphysics and ethics, it is next important to emphasize the systemic function of these areas of thought. To put answers to the questions of each area of thought together in a consistent whole is the business of building worldviews. A worldview is a person’s belief and planning system, and includes each of the above named disciplines and more, even if the person is not aware of it. But to become aware of one’s own thinking is one mark of a good thinker.

    The study of worldviews asks and answers three basic questions. The first question is, “How do I know this?” The second question is, “What is the truth about this matter?” The question about truth must be answered in two separate phases, one relating to the seen or knowable world of nature (physics in the Greek sense), and the other relating to the unseen world of metaphysics. The third question relates to values and choices, and asks “What should be done in this situation?” The last question is the area of ethics.

    Putting together the areas of epistemology, physics, metaphysics and ethics enables one to build a coherent worldview. Or, starting at the other end, one can take a person’s thinking and analyze it into the components of a worldview. For purposes of teaching a person to analyze a worldview, twenty or so questions suffice to elicit the information to give a picture of a person’s mind-set or worldview.

    This ability to analyze and to synthesize worldview gives a person great power over his own thinking. Most persons have subscribed to a worldview in their youth as they learned their language but are almost totally oblivious to the fact that the view they have is in many aspects arbitrary and may indeed be false or undesirable in some points. But teaching that person to discover his own worldview as well as those of other persons gives the individual great power over his own thinking, for he or she can then alter that worldview in accordance with personal desires and experiences.

    5. Applications. Armed with the skills and knowledge described above, students are then exposed to a number of readings in the subjects of personal responsibility, education, science, history, technology, education, politics and religion. They are challenged to ferret out of each area the issues which are of crucial importance and to evaluate and rank the answers to those issues. This is that part of the course which seems most rewarding to students, for they see and feel the power of their skills in working with the traditional problems of mankind.

    IV. Conclusion

    This approach to the teaching of thinking thus focuses on systems thinking. Individuals are taught to ask questions that elicit the systems characteristics of everything which they investigate, then to pursue the best way to conceive of these matters using background knowledge from the areas of philosophy, science, scholarship and common sense. As they learn to and do solve their problems, they will know that their thinking is good. As they compare the success they have in attaining personal goals with the success others around them have, they gain a sense of the comparative value of their thinking skills. But only as they look back over a lifetime of good thinking will they be able to see the value of their thinking powers in any ultimate perspective. The owl of Minerva looks only backwards.

    But hope looks forward. There are a good many problems yet to solve to make this human world a fit place for all human beings to live. Good thinking, responsible thinking, systematic thinking which takes everything and every person into account is one thing that will help all of us towards that goal.

  • Truth and Language

    Chauncey C. Riddle
    Brigham Young University
    14 Mar. 1989

    Riddle, Chauncey C. (1989) “Truth and Language,” Deseret Language and Linguistic Society Symposium: Vol. 15: Iss. 1, Article 4. Available at: http://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/dlls/vol15/iss1/4

    The challenge of this paper is to say enough about the subject of truth in a short space so that the picture of truth that emerges is not a false witness.

    You may be aware that in the long history of the problem of truth there have been some principal answers as to what truth is. The correspondence theory of truth holds that truth is ideas or statements which are perceived empirically to correspond to the nature of the universe. The main problem with the correspondence theory is that empiricism often yields false results. Another historic theory is that truth is the property of propositions which rationally cohere with certain fundamental truths; this coherence would be good if we could only find those fundamental truths. The pragmatic theory of truth says that what works may be taken as true; but what that theory supports is that what works does work, not why it works or what it is that works. A recent entry into the arena is the linguistic theory of truth as initiated by Wittgenstein and articulated by Garth L. Hallett in the book Language and Truth (Yale University Press, New Haven, 1988). This linguistic theory holds that statements are true if they are faithful to the linguistic norms of the culture in which they are uttered. I believe there is a good deal of merit in Hallett’s formulation in that he does well represent how the word “true” is actually used in society, but that his theory also falls short by not giving a clear statement as to what truth is and in failing to handle the problem of untruth in ordinary usage.

    I therefore now proceed to give my own theory of truth and true, hoping to shed light on this important subject.

    I define truth as a synonym for reality. Reality is all that exists, or has existed or yet will come into existence. One cannot discuss reality without making fundamental metaphysical commitments, which I now proceed to stipulate for my ideas of truth.

    I understand existence to be composed of material things in various orders, arrangements and functions. These material things and their relationships constitute a whole, each part of which is essential. Thus truth is one, and cannot be divided. To be grasped as truth, it must be grasped as a whole, all that is and was and will be in all of its whys and wherefores, particles, subsystems and totality. Needless to say, this truth is beyond the grasp of any human being.

    Each human being is a particular part of the whole of truth, a participant. Each of the feelings, ideas, and representations of a human being are part of the whole truth. The pertinent and pressing question about any given human being is then how he or she represents the truth of the universe to self and to others, and how intelligently one takes ones place in that great truth.

    Of principal concern to us is representation of truth. We shall define “true” as a quality of something which measures up to a standard. Thus human beings are true to their word if they do what they have promised to do, and their statements are true if and as those statements measure up favorably to the truth of the universe. What are the possibilities that what an individual thinks or says can be called “true”? To answer that question, a taxonomy of human representations must be posited. We will now explore a taxonomy which begins with representations which have the greatest possibility of being most true and ends with those least true.

    The general label which I give to all human representations of truth is “factitions,” from the Latin facere. I use this term to emphasize that in every case, human attempts to characterize truth are for each individual a creative making and doing. Human beings do not passively reflect the universe at any time in their characterizing of it. There is a personal element in each factition which is ineradicable. To use the analogy of a landscape painter, every human factition of truth is an attempt to paint some piece of the universe in a helpful manner. But the painting is never exactly true relative to the truth for at least two constant reasons: first, every human representation is an abstraction from truth, leaving out much that is true; second, no human representation can capture the whole, and only the whole is the truth.

    The first level of human representation is perception. Perception, or conocer, kennen knowledge, is the direct sensory inspection of some aspect of the universe. In that direct sensory relationship perception is as close to the truth of things as a human being can get. Sensation is always particulars and of particulars. But this perception is ordinarily flawed by the fact that sensation is not perception until it is interpreted by the mind of the person. That interpretation is done on the basis of the total contents of the mind of the person; all of his previous sensations, ideas, theories, hopes, fears and inhibitions color his interpretation of sensation. Sensations must be read, just as a book must be read, to make any “sense.”

    The categories of understanding which the person uses to interpret the particular sensations are usually themselves universals. These universals are theories as to what is important and true in the universe and what is not. The more truth the person already has in mind, the more true will be his perceptions. But it is quite safe to say that no human ever perceives ill things truly. The best and paradigm case of human perception is found in the direct, continuous, present, proximal sensing of a limited and very familiar aspect of the universe by one who is an expert on that subject. At best direct perception is once removed from the truth, which is to say that the best representation of the truth a human can make may yet be false.

    The second degree or echelon of representation is the understanding of an experienced person. This is saber, or wissen knowledge of the world. At its best and surest this understanding is limited to the spatial, temporal, and causal sequences with which the person is very familiar. Identities, differences, continuities, etc., are part of this domain. At its weakest, this type of representation may be so flawed by false theories of the universe as to render the individual without a workable hypothesis as to what is being perceived, as is seen in certain types of mental illness. At best, these representations are twice removed from truth; at worst they are wholly untrue.

    The third echelon of human representation of truth is found in the ability to do what one wishes to do. This ability exists only in doing what one wishes to do. This is koennen knowledge, can do in English. This kind of representation of truth comes after perception because the desire to do things comes only after understanding the possibility that they might be done. This can-do knowledge is a representation of truth by emphasizing what works, what the effective sequences of action are that are necessary to produce a certain result. Producing results does give us the truth that a certain action has produced a result, which is a specialized form of understanding, but knowing that a thing has happened does not involve knowing why that thing happened. Thus a full understanding of echelon two is a better representation of truth than the partial understanding of what works as found in echelon three. And echelon three is thrice removed from the truth.

    Perception, understanding and the ability to do something are personal representations of truth within the individual. They have been the inspiration for the correspondence,   the coherence, and the pragmatic theories of truth. Though not truth, they are the representations of truth closest to the truth and therefore the most true ideas which the individual may have. They are not linguistic, but they reflect heavily the prior linguistic experience of the individual. The remaining categories of representation of truth by persons are all linguistic functions.

    The fourth echelon of human representation of the truth is found in the individual’s witness of his own perceptions. Using his own personal perceptions as a base, the person formulates some verbal means of expressing a new perception. All words represent universals. When an individual tries to express the particulars of his experience in words he always faces a mismatch between what sensations are and what words can do. That problem, compounded with the universals of interpretation and understanding which color all perception, make an individual’s testimony as to what he has personally perceived four times removed from the truth.

    The fifth echelon of human representation is in the witness an individual gives of his understanding of actual experiences he has had. All of the problems of perception and the reporting of perception are here augmented by the potential flaws in his understanding. A person might honestly report a temporal or spatial or causal sequence which he has observed, but be so thoroughly mistaken as to what actually was happening as to be a totally misleading witness. This fifth echelon is five times removed from the truth.

    The sixth echelon of human representation of the truth is in the individual’s linguistic representation of what has worked for him as he has tried to fulfill his objectives as a person. Colored by his perceptions and limited by his understanding of the truth, this echelon is further hampered by the fact that when an individual is successful in accomplishing something he seldom can give an exhaustive account of all that he did and of all that the environment furnished to bring about his desired result. The individual knows that in situation X he did Y and obtained Z, but cannot give a full and accurate account of X or Y or Z. Therefore, this sixth echelon of representation is six times removed from the truth.

    The seventh echelon of human representation is human witness as to inductive generalizations he has made about the world out of his own experience. We have now crossed the line from the possibility of inadvertent error in representing truth to the overt and deliberate embellishment of what the individual has experienced. In other words, we are now in the realm where pure guesswork characterizes the attempts of the individual to represent the truth. All interpolations and extrapolations are technically guesses, and these guesses suffer even more from the possibility of wishful thinking than do the previous levels of factitions. Valuable and useful as some inductive generalizations of experience may be, such representations are at least seven steps removed from the truth.

    The eighth echelon of representation is theory. Theories are understandings that are deliberately invented to characterize some aspect of truth which cannot be the subject of direct empirical observation. Thus discussion of the nature of atoms, of space-time matrices, of how man came to be on the earth, of what is good and evil—all such are inventions of men to try to overcome their lack of ability to see for themselves the truths of these matters. All historical accounts and all interpretations of linguistic formulations are types of theories. This echelon includes all quotation of other human beings. While it is true that logical consequences of a theory sometimes offer the possibility of empirical confirmation, no empirical experience necessitates either the adoption or the rejection of any theory. Theories are often accepted and rejected on non-experiential criteria. Theories are eight times removed from the truth.

    The ninth echelon of human representation of truth is found in overt fictions. These are counted as representations of truth because one main use and value of fiction is to   present ideas as to the way things really are in some respect using non-historical characterizations. These characterizations are usually attempts to present inductive generalizations or theories of truth in an artistic form, one that is pleasing or attention-getting. But as representations of truth, fictions are at least nine steps removed from the truth of things.

    The tenth and final echelon of human representation of the truth in this taxonomy is found in the deliberate lie. This lie is a deliberate mis-representation which is known to the positor of the lie to be a lie but which he hopes he can get other humans to accept as true, as adequately representing truth. Lies are very effective in a world where truth is important and valued, where truth is difficult to come by, and where people are not always very careful as to what they accept as a representation of truth. Such is the world in which we live. Thus lies are ten steps removed from the truth. But they are not very far removed from those representations which are close to it in the echelons of representation.

    Sometimes human beings do recognize the importance of truth and take special precautions to try to eliminate falsehood from linguistic exchanges. In law there is a recognition that the personal testimony of an eyewitness to an event is more valuable in establishing the true representation of an historic event than any other kind of representation, and that the testimony of several witnesses is better than that of only one. Also recognized is the testimony of expert witnesses, who are allowed to tell of their understanding and can-do knowledge, sometimes even of their inductive generalizations and theories. But since that kind or representation is from four to eight times removed from the real truth, the justice of our courts of law sometimes miscarries because it must accept such a poor representation of the truth as this, for want of better. The scholarly world recognizes that primary sources (fourth echelon representations) are much better evidence of the truth than are secondary sources (eighth echelon representations).

    Science as an institution has sought to rid itself of the problem of representing truth by eliminating all personal knowledge and witness of truth, the first four echelons, and by replacing them with inductive generalizations and theories which are agreed upon by the majority of competent scientists. Science thus focuses on the seventh and eight echelons of truth representation. Scientists essentially say to the rest of mankind: We will manage your truth concerns for you; just put your trust in us and we will deliver you from error, because anything different from or outside of what we propound is error. Historical insight reveals that science is not omniscient but advances by replacing one scientific representation by another through time. The power of science is of course not in its representations. Its power and prestige come ultimately from the fact that the technology associated with modern science is formidable. Science is accepted as a painter of truth because of the fireworks it can produce. Producing fireworks does show that sometimes the inductive generalizations and theories of science do have some positive relationship to the truth.

    Art in some of its forms is a non-literal attempt to represent truth, as discussed above in the matter of deliberate and overt fictions. Another side of art is that it attempts to create truth, to bring to pass new being which is valuable in some way. The attempt to capture ideals in artistic production is the attempt to “realize” things which are taken to be true, good and beautiful. The question about such art is, does it fully embody the ideal which the artist set out to create? Inasmuch as an artist does create, his artistic production becomes truth, part of the whole being of truth, which itself must and may then be represented by some one of the above delineated ten echelons of human representations of truth.

    We come now to some conclusions and applications.  

    1. Truth is a whole and cannot be represented adequately by human beings. Therefore a large measure of humility is appropriate in every human attempt to find or state something which could be called true.

    2. There are no degrees of truth. Something is either the truth or it is not. But human representations of truth certainly do come in degrees, in at least the ten steps of removal from the truth as explicated in this paper. The trueness of a representation is thus a qualitative variable which may vary from 1 to 10, 1 being best. But human beings have no human means of being sure that their representation of the truth is true. Error always lurks as a real possibility.

    3. There is also a quantitative measure of truth as well as a qualitative measure. How much truth a human being represents is a function of the amount of experience he has had with whatever fraction of the universe he has experienced.

    4. All human representations of the truth are creative, factitious, and are therefore as much a measure of the artificer as they are of the truth being represented.

    5. It is easier to know truth, to represent it to oneself, than it is to speak truth, to represent it to others.

    6. Most of human discourse, statistically speaking, lies at the untruth end of the spectrum rather than at the truth end.

    Which brings us to the necessity of including in what we say some mention of spiritual matters. Spiritual matters are part of the reality of the universe, and to try to discuss truth without saying something about spiritual experience would be deliberately to falsify everything that has been said. There are two troublesome problems that must be dealt with in connection with spiritual matters. One problem is that every human being is more an expert on his own spiritual experience than is any other human being. This is good in that it fosters individual initiative and independent thinking. The other problem is that because there are two spiritual sources, many persons latch onto a spirit that fosters untruth, and in their independence, are difficult to assist. A typical human attempt to overcome these problems is to encourage people to denigrate all spiritual experience in favor of trusting in some human authority. We shall show that that is a poor expedient, if getting close to the truth is the goal.

    The individual in his own personal experience of truth can be closer to the truth than any linguistic and socially acceptable account of the universe could ever be. Personal experience is always spiritual, and furthermore each honest person knows that there are at least two spirits besides his own which affect him constantly. Let us then make a brief account of truth in light of those two spirits which affect human beings.

    One spirit is the spirit of truth and the other spirit is a lying spirit. By whatever names these spirits are known to men, they are known to men. Whenever a person attempts to characterize the truth, to know it or to speak about it, one or both of those spirits is at hand to assist in the process.

    It is the mission of the spirit of truth to assist the person to see, to understand, and to be able to do all that he needs to do in this world. But the spirit of truth is not primarily interested in truth. What the spirit of truth is more concerned about is righteousness, doing good in the world. Truth is a means to doing good, but knowing truth is never more important than doing good. So the spirit of truth comes to a person first to tell them the importance of doing good, then to tell them what truly is the good to be done by them in their situation, then to tell them any other truth they need to know to be able to do the good they should do. Should what that person needs to do to do good involve linguistic characterizing of the truth about the universe for the benefit of another human being, the spirit of truth will instruct the speaker as to what to say,   and then will interpret for the hearer, so that the exact portion and quality of truth necessary for both the speaker and the hearer to do good will be communicated.

    The lying spirit is of course also not principally interested in truth and error. That spirit is principally interested in getting human beings to do evil to one another, to damn and hurt one another. The chief weapon of this spirit is lies, thus this is a lying spirit. He will tell truth and will influence human beings to know and speak truth whenever that will bring about evil, and he promotes lying whenever it will bring about evil.

    So if a human being understands the difficulties of representing truth and also knows these two spirits, how can or should he or she act? We shall first delineate the case of the follower of the spirit of truth, and then the case of the person who follows the lying spirit.

    How will a follower of the spirit of truth act in this world? Such a person will seek to feel the influence of the spirit of truth in all situations. He or she will be apt to listen to and quick to do that good which that spirit of truth commends, seeking also to gain true perceptions, true understanding, and true ability to do that which needs to be done. Should this person need to speak of the truth, he or she will assiduously strive to measure every gesture, word and characterization to itself become a good and a true representation, acting and speaking as humbly as possible under the influence of the spirit of truth. When one speaks by the spirit of truth, though words cannot convey the truth, the truth of the matter can be manifest to the hearer by that same spirit of truth by which the speaker speaks. Thus it is the spirit of truth that is responsible for the truth, not the human speaker. This does not give license for the speaker to be careless with the truth, for he must attempt always to speak truly, by the spirit of truth. But truth is yet the province of the spirit of truth.

    Should the follower of the spirit of truth encounter the words of another human being who speaks by the spirit of truth, that hearer will pay close attention to the personal witness of particulars which the speaker relates out of his own experience. If the matter is important, the hearer will go to see for himself. He does not want to depend on the word of another, even a good word, because words are always further removed from the truth than is personal observation under the influence of the spirit of truth. Should the good speaker speak of things not in his personal knowledge, that person will speak only under the influence of the spirit of truth, and the hearer will then apply to the spirit of truth to receive a personal manifestation of the matter from the spirit of truth for himself. He knows that personal knowledge is always closer to the truth than a manifestation reported by another, even if the speaker is truly saying what he has been led to say by the spirit of truth. Thus the influence of the spirit of truth is to cause every person to seek to know for himself both the natural things he may observe and the unseeable things concerning which he may receive his own personal instruction from the spirit of truth.

    When one who hears by the spirit of truth hears a person who speaks by the lying spirit, the results are much the same. The hearer will not accept the reported personal knowledge of the speaker, but will go see for himself. Neither will he accept the witness of things which are not personal knowledge, but will seek further from the spirit of truth the truth about the matters on which the person of the lying spirit speaks.

    What happens when one of a lying spirit hears another who speaks by the spirit of truth? In this case the person of the lying spirit will accept whatever is in the personal knowledge witness that the speaker gives which the hearer finds to be useful or pleasing, and will reject the rest. The person of the lying spirit hears the speaker who speaks of unseeable matters by the spirit of truth in such a way as to reject what is said unless it can be twisted or interpreted to become pleasing or useful to the hearer.  

    When one of a lying spirit hears one who speaks by a lying spirit, the witness of personal knowledge is again accepted if it is pleasing or useful. But if the hearer wants to use that knowledge to accomplish something in the real world, he will go find out the truth of the matter by his own personal observation, for even liars must abide truth in that which they wish to accomplish. But in the matters which are not the personal knowledge of the speaker, the hearer of the lying spirit will hear what pleases himself or what he will find useful in promoting lies with others.

    Now for some conclusions and generalizations about spiritual matters related to truth.

    1. A person of the spirit of truth wants the real truth no matter how unpleasing it is, because only the truth enables him to work in a real way to solve the real problems with which he is confronted.

    2. A person of a lying spirit must leave that lying spirit and seek truth to be able to do anything in the natural world, for nature cannot be flattered into cooperation by lies as people can.

    3. People who speak truly by the spirit of truth will often be rejected by those who hear with the lying spirit, because the truth does not please them. If truth pleased them, they would seek and hold to the spirit of truth rather than the lying spirit.

    4. Persons who seek influence in society by the lying spirit only need to tell those who hear by a lying spirit what pleases them in order to gain power.

    5. No person can assure any other person of the truth. That is the domain of the spirit of truth.

    The conclusion of the matter is then that two factors must be accounted for by one who would make truth his standard. First he must be more interested in righteousness than he is in truth, for then he will be able to find the spirit of truth and to hold to abide in it without error. Second, he must understand the difficulties and problems in knowing and speaking truth, so that he will believe and speak only by the spirit of truth, and not be tempted to let go of the spirit of truth and propound on his own as if he were some sort of non-human paragon of truth. For to propound on our own that which pleases us is to have fallen into the arms of the lying spirit.

  • The Gifts of God, 1988

    August 1988

    The gifts of God are the grace(s) by which we are saved. The great envelope gift is the Atonement of Jesus Christ. The list below is the list of individual gifts which enable us to partake fully of the Atonement. To be able to receive any gift on this list after the first one, one must receive and use well the preceding gift. These gifts of God lead to a person becoming as Christ is, to attain the fulness of His stature and being, thus to become exalted. As we grow from grace to grace, we become more and more like Christ, more and more able to receive the blessings of God, more and more able to do real good (God’s good) for our fellowmen.

    1. The Light of Christ: The knowledge of the differences between good and evil which comes to every human being who has normal mentality.
    2. Prayer: The gift to be able to speak directly to our Heavenly Father, no matter where, when, or what the problem might be, to seek and find the good instead of evil.
    3. The Gospel of Jesus Christ: The gift of understanding the principles and ordinances which enable us to come to Christ, to become as He is.
    4. The Witness of the Holy Ghost: To receive answer to prayer to know that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is true, and who has the true authority to administer the ordinances thereof.
    5. Baptism of water and of the Spirit: The gift to be able to be baptized by divine authority and to receive the right to the gift of the Holy Ghost from one who has the power to bestow it.
    6. The Gift of the Holy Ghost: The constant companionship of the Holy Spirit given to those who have been baptized by proper authority and who earnestly pray for this companionship.
    7. The Gifts of the Holy Ghost: The special powers given to those who have received the gift of the Holy Ghost, given according to their needs, desires, and worthiness. Examples: The gift of knowledge, the gift of wisdom, the ability to speak in tongues, the ability to understand the scriptures, etc.
    8. The Gift of the Holy Priesthood: To be ordained by those who have authority to administer the blessings of God to others.
    9. The Gift of the Temple Endowment: An enlargement of the gift of the Holy Priesthood: special blessings and powers and gifts given to those who honor the priesthood.
    10. Temple Sealing: A second enlargement of the gift of the Holy Priesthood: special blessings given to a man and woman to be appointed by God to the highest callings, those of husband and wife, father and mother, and the special help they need to succeed in those highest callings.
  • The Book of Mormon Mind vs the Humanist Mind

    Chauncey C. Riddle
    25 May 1988

    1. Assumptions:
      1. Book of Mormon Mind—The mind of the Book of Mormon prophets
      2. The Book of Mormon prophets were of one mind.
      3. We understand by comparison: The Book of Mormon mind will be compared with the mind of contemporary Humanism (which is not of one mind).
      4. It is impossible to separate a description of mind from theology (theology is metaphysics).
      5. This study creates a social commentary.
    2. Epistemology
    Book of Mormon MindHumanist Mind
    Heart fundamental, mind importantMind fundamental, heart said not to be important
    Vertical orientation: manticHorizontal orientation: sophic
    Base: Natural man: Carnal, sensual devilish unless redeemedBase: Ordinary man: superstitious, inept unless educated
    Redemption: Yield to the light of Christ, and choose good; it will lead one to the Holy Ghost, by which one learns the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Upon accepting it, the ordinances, and the Holy Ghost, one may know what to do in all cases. If one then does what one knows one should, one will be redeemed by Jesus Christ.Rescue: Go to the best schools, learn the learning and wisdom of men, especially science. Science is a description of the universe which has been empirically grounded, rationally articulated and socially accepted by certified human beings.

    Test: Power to be righteous.Test: Power to do what one desires.
    (This leads to a showdown of power.)
    Evaluates the confirmed Humanist as hard-hearted.Evaluates Book of Mormon mind as insane.

    Fundamental Concepts

    Book of Mormon MindHumanist Mind
    God and SatanMyself, and everyone else
    Choosing good over evilAttaining pleasure, avoiding pain
    Saint/Natural manLearned, powerful/ unlearned, impotent
    Space for repentanceLong life to have much pleasure
    Place to prosperTurf to dominate
    Redemption: To be restored to the presence of GodAdvantage: Some edge on others by which to be superior to someone
    (No human competition)(Based on human competition)

    Dichotomies

    Book of Mormon MindHumanist Mind
    Good/evilGood/bad
    Righteousness/sinSuccess/stupidity
    Righteous/ wickedAdvantaged/disadvantaged
    Nephites (covenant people)/ Lamanites (non-covenant)Enlightened/backward
    Throne of God/ gulf of miseryAll the latest technology/primitive conditions
    Tree of Life/spacious buildingHonors of men/ignominy
    Heaven/hellWealth/poverty
    Happiness/miseryPleasure/pain
    Church of Jesus Christ/secret combinationsLiberal civilization/reactionary persons
    Liberty/captivityFreedom from economic concerns/ fending for oneself
    Records of prophecies/ records of kings and warsReligious/ secular

    3. Metaphysics

    Book of Mormon MindHumanist mind
    Time is finite for the group and the person.Time is infinite for the group, finite for the person.
    Eternity is infinite for each person.Eternity does not exist.
    Space is finite, assigned by God for repentance.Space is infinite, waiting to be conquered.
    Causation: God creates all opportunities. Man determines those opportunities. No such thing as luck or chance.Causation: Blind chance creates all opportunities. Man chooses according to his conditioning. Luck and chance important.
    History: All is foreknown: men act out the play.History is not determined; men create history in existential angst.
    Groups exist to help individuals.Individuals exist for the sake of the group.
    Reality is spiritual and physicalReality is only physical
    Universals are guides to particulars.Particulars are guides to universals.
    Particulars are the true and the good, to be treasured.Universals are the true and the good, to be treasured.

    4. Ethics

    Book of Mormon MindHumanist Mind
    Man should rejoiceBlue is the common theme
    Wisdom is Faith in Jesus ChristWisdom is prudence
    Means to wisdom: Yield heart to GodMeans to wisdom: Shake off traditional religion and embrace the learning of men.
    Duty of man: To love God with all of one’s heart, might, mind and strength.Duty of man: To thine own self be true.
    Classes of men: Servants and those served.Classes of men: Leaders (intelligensia) and masses.
    Social mobility: attained by personal repentance (abundance economy).Social mobility: attained by gaining some advantage over others (scarcity economy).
    Success is to gain a pure heart.Success is to attain pleasure, acclaim, and might.
    Lineage is all important.Belonging to the right contemporary group is important; lineage is only a burden.
    Doing is most important.Knowing is most important.
    The good: RighteousnessThe good: Pleasure, acclaim and might.

  • Language and Human Being

    Chauncey C. Riddle
    Brigham Young University
    18 Mar. 1988

    Riddle, Chauncey C. (1988) “Language and Human Being,” Deseret Language and Linguistic Society Symposium: Vol. 14: Iss. 1, Article 17. Available at: http://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/dlls/vol14/iss1/17

    Introduction

    The human be-ing considered in this paper is the dynamic becoming of Aristotle, the concern with what happens as one acts as a human being rather than the static essence of being projected in a Platonic fashion. This paper is thus the attempt to answer the questions, What happens to human beings as they use language? What is the unique contribution to being a human being which the use of language affords?

    An initial attempt was made to cast the answers to these questions in naturalistic terms. It was soon perceived that such an approach, in addition to being a deliberate falsification of the context, yielded but a very impoverished account of the human situation. There are two pieces of knowledge which we have that bear powerfully on the questions at hand: all men are the literal children of the gods, and those parent-gods have given to men the language which they enjoy. This second point is not meant to deny the historic development of individual languages, which may be considered naturalistically. It is simply to note that there was an initial endowment of language, a superior language, which was given to men no more than two hundred human generations ago. The effect of that endowment is the subject of this paper.

    Theses

    Normal acquisition of any “natural” human language accomplishes four things:

    1. Language enables each human being to attain to a fullness of agency and to accountability, which are the measures of being a fully functioning human being. The power of language unto choosing good or evil is so great and so important that everyone who enters mortality must acquire language before his or her mortal probation is complete.
    2. Language enables each human being to understand the message of salvation from God, to enter into a covenant with God to receive that salvation, and to abide that covenant unto the receiving of salvation.
    3. How we communicate is a large part of our salvation; using language correctly is the key to that perfect communication.
    4. The choices one makes between good and evil using language thrust one beyond being a human being into becoming either a devil or a servant of Jesus Christ.

    1. Agency and accountability.

    Definition of agency: There are three necessary and sufficient conditions for agency: There must be (1) an intelligent (goal-oriented) being, who has (2) knowledge of alternatives among which to choose to solve his problems (fulfill his goals or desires), and who has (3) power to carry out the choices he makes to fulfill his desires. There is a rudimentary agency which higher animals may be said to have, for instance, as they select a preference as to where to rest or what to cat as they fulfill desire by doing as they choose. Human beings without language (e.g., wolf children) have this rudimentary agency after the animal fashion.

    But a fullness of human agency comes only with linguistic development. Language and the rich communication it makes possible greatly expand the range of desire (expands the horizon of possibilities) for each individual. Language and the resulting communication furnish vastly increased knowledge, including the possibility of tapping the corporate memory of humankind (the writings and memories of other persons), thus to increase the range of means available for choice unto the satisfaction of desire. Language and communication bring to men vastly increased technical and other ability to implement the means chosen for the fulfillment of desire. The end result of this increased agency is what we call civilization, a plethora of choices, understandings and power which enables human beings seek successfully and revel in a marvelous panoply of satisfactions. Language enables a human being to desire things both real and imaginary, to reach for the stars or to plumb the depths.

    Accountability, unlike agency, is made possible only through language acquisition. Accountability is the ability of a person to give a linguistic account of what, how and why he or she has acted. Accountability presupposes normal human agency: that the person accounting acted out of choice as to what, how and why he or she acted. While agency is relative (one person has vastly different powers of choice, knowledge and action than another), accountability only demands that the person acted by choosing and can give an account of that choosing. This accountability is what enables human beings to act rationally, according to a principle or rule, for if one can give account of the past, one can also bind oneself to act in a certain manner in the future. This ability is the basis of most cooperation, of contracts and legal arrangements, of law and order in civilization. Two great barriers to civilization are thus inability to communicate through language and mendacity when communication is possible. Clearly it is the communication of good things in a truthful manner which advances civilization.

    Choice always involves values as well as mere physical alternatives, thus necessitating a consideration of good and evil. One construal of the value dichotomy is to see good as that which one has learned by induction fulfills his desires, or is sufficiently like what has fulfilled his desires that it is reasonable to believe by induction that the desire will be fulfilled again by the look-alike. Evil is the value attached to things which are undesirable, which past experience has shown to bring pain or dissatisfaction, and this value is extended by induction to things which appear to be like the bearers of dissatisfaction in the past. This definition of good and evil explains the actions of human beings and of many species of animals, all of whom have a measure of agency and can learn from experience.

    The Restored Gospel perspective tells us that the definition of good and evil given above is not sufficient, that there is another good and evil which may be considered the real thing, with the former being but a preliminary. In the Restored Gospel, Good is the will of God and only the will of God. The will of man in choosing either the good or the evil under the first definition of them constitute what is Evil in the Restored Gospel. Thus in the Restored Gospel, the emphasis shifts from the anticipated utility or non-utility of making a choice to a recognition of whose will it is that is determining the choice. Motive or reason for choosing becomes more important than what is being chosen. Thus the new standard is that only God is good, and men to become good-doers must relinquish doing their own will to doing the will of God if they desire to escape from the doing of evil.

    Thus men may and do choose between good and evil pre-linguistically, even as do animals. But to be able to choose between Good and Evil one must have normal human linguistic development so that the understanding of Good and Evil may be made manifest to an individual. Good and Evil are abstractions which have no physical exemplifications, whereas good and evil are based on physical experience. Thus Good and Evil are seen only through the eye of faith, which is believing in the revelations of an actual non-human being who speaks to men, to each person in his own natural language and concepts, to explain to each the new understanding of Good and Evil. One then learns that he has known Good all along, for it is the light of Christ which is given to all men.

    It is what one has done with the knowledge of the Good, given by revelation, that each man must account before his Father and his Maker. This agency to know the Good and the Evil, and to be able to account for what one has done with that agency is so important that no human being is ever judged by God until he or she has received full linguistic development to enjoy that agency.

    2. Language and Salvation.

    Salvation in the Restored Gospel is to be placed beyond the power of our enemies. It is essentially a passive matter, though it requires all we can do. What we can do is never sufficient, but does enable us to receive the gifts of salvation from Jesus Christ.

    Jesus Christ saves men from four things. He saves them from the grave (from the power of Satan to prevent a reuniting of body and spirit in the resurrection). He can save them from the eternal consequences of having committed sins. He can save them from the littleness of knowledge and power and righteousness which so characterizes human beings. And he can save them from the evil in their own hearts which makes them unable to love God and keep his commandments. Resurrection, the salvation of the body, is given as a free gift to all mankind. Rut the other forms of salvation, which are sanctification, justification and purification, come only by covenant, by contract. One has to enter into an agreement with God to act in a certain manner (to choose and do only the Good). It is not possible to understand either the offerer of that covenant or the covenant except through language. There must be an understanding of things which are not seen, and an agreement to live by influences which are not seen; these things can only be accomplished by way of language, building on what is seen. Thus language is an indispensable clement in the salvation offered to men through Jesus Christ from anything but the grave.

    3. The covenant of salvation involves how we communicate and how we use language.

    Communication is any affect which one being has upon another. The following is a taxonomy of communication:

    1. Sensory communication:
    2. Visual: Seeing or appearing (to be seen).
    3. Auditory: Making noise or hearing.  
    4. Tactile: Touching or being touched (e.g., shaking hands).
    5. Olfactory: To emit or to detect an odor.
    6. Gustatory: To taste or be tasted.
    7. Impact communication: To apply sufficient force or energy to another person to move or change some part of their body; or to receive the same.
    8. Substance communication: To give or take from another person’s possession something material.
    9. Chemical communication: To introduce a substance into the body of another person which changes their body chemistry; or to receive the same.
    10. Indirect communication: To affect something another person owns or holds dear by any of the means of communication; or to be affected in this manner.
    11. Privative: to deny another person any of the above communication modes when that person desires and expects the same, or to suffer this same treatment from another person.

    We honor other persons in the Restored Gospel manner only by communicating to preserve their agency. When we use language to communicate with them to gain their full cooperation and agreement as to other possible means of communicating with them, we honor their agency, their choice. Thus we will not communicate with others except visually, and through language (which may involve auditory or tactile language forms), until we have their full permission to do so. Thus a doctor would not operate on someone who has agency until he has explained the proposed procedure and has gained the patient’s cooperation (unless the patient is unconscious or not accountable for some other reason).

    We can and do honor God in the Restored Gospel only by communicating with anything or anyone just as he instructs us. Thus God instructs his servants as to how to pray, how to speak, how to govern, how to teach, how to administer, how to preach; in all things we are to do his will.

    We cannot abide the covenants of the Restored Gospel except we communicate as he, God, directs: to honor and love him and our fellow human beings. Thus our keeping the covenants and obtaining salvation involves using language, the increase in agency which he gives us, in a very special manner.

    One of the special manners of communication which God makes available to his faithful servants is the power of the priesthood. The priesthood is the power of God, which faithful servants may use as he directs. To use the priesthood is to speak in the name of God, to command or to instruct using the power of God to bring to pass his eternal purposes. As men increase in righteousness, their priesthood power increases and the necessity of communicating to control or to subdue evil by physical communication is lessened, as when Enoch set at defiance the armies of the enemies of Zion by using his priesthood power. By speaking, the gods created the heavens and the earth. By speaking, the mind and will of God arc brought to pass by one who has learned to abide the mind and will of God by obedience to every word that proceedeth forth from his mouth.

    4. Language, the tool which makes us fully human, is so powerful that the experience of using it thrust us beyond be a human being to become a devil or an eternal servant of Jesus Christ.

    It is language which makes us fully conscious of good and evil and which enables us to understand clearly Good and Evil. Thus men have become as the gods, knowing good and evil. Knowing good and evil, men must choose between good and evil in all things. That choosing has eternal consequences, one of which is the fact that human choices are either for Good or for Evil in all we do. Thus in all things man gives allegiance to God, or to Satan (who is the author and proprietor of Evil).

    As a man chooses the way of Good and of God, he becomes godly and a candidate for glory. Eventually everyone except the sons of perdition will choose the Good and God, and will inherit glory. Some will make that choice late, and will be inheritors of a telestial glory. Others will choose earlier, and will inherit a terrestrial glory. Some choose Good and God when they first have the opportunity, and thus qualify for the celestial glory, the presence of the Father and the Son. But all who choose Good are servants of Jesus Christ, doing his will and furthering the cause of Good in the universe, of their own free will and choice, to all eternity.

    Those who first know the way of Good and God, accept it, try it, taste of the powers it brings—and then renounce Good and God, are the sons of perdition. Through language they come to understand the spirit and manner of God in pursuit of Good, then they use language to lie, to deceive, to curse, to fight against the Good. Thus if they go down to their deaths in such a condition, they are past the possibility of repentance and thus must remain in the state they have chosen to all eternity, servants to Satan, whom they have chosen over God.

    Thus language is the power which makes us fully human, but is so powerful that we cannot remain in this human condition. The power of language is so great in giving us knowledge and opportunity and in enabling us to act for Good or for Evil, that we are thrust beyond being human beings to become immortal beings, persons who espouse and promote Good or Evil, according to their own choice, for all eternity.

    Conclusion

    Thus language is the greatest power and instrumentality which human beings possess. It is the power which opens the whole expanse of eternity to each person, then closes one’s own choices upon one alternative for that eternity. It is difficult to overestimate the importance and place of language in the human scheme. We are judged by what we do. But only through language can we do the greatest Good or the greatest Evil.

  • Theory of Syntax, 1988

    March 1988

    Syntax: The typical patterns of word and sentence formation used to control meaning in a given language.

    Grammar: The rules for producing the typical word and sentence formation used to control meaning in a given language.

    Typicality: Syntactic usage of a given language may be represented by a bell-shaped curve divided by standard deviations. More than one standard deviation on the left of the mode will be called non-typical incompetent use of the language, but approaching competence from the side of zero competence. Between one and one-half standard deviations on the left will be called learning non-typical competence. One-half standard deviation on the left to one-half standard deviation on the right will be called typicality, or the modal use of language. Between one-half and one standard deviations on the right of the mode will be called the atypical or expert use of language (because its power derives from knowing and being able to use the typical use with slight but unusual variations.) Beyond one standard deviation to the right will be called the esoteric use of language. The curve is established for any language by a statistical compilation of observations of language usage by a community. All language used by all members of the community on a given day would be analyzed for syntactic patterns. Each type of syntactic pattern would be assigned a place on the curve by its frequency of occurrence with equal distribution on each side of the mode. Then in a second operation a given individual’s data could be assigned to the left side of the curve if his/her syntactic patterns were more than one standard deviation deviant; to the right side if less than one standard deviation deviant.

    Every well-formed sentence is based on a well-formed assertion. False starts and sentences formed without care are excluded from this analysis on the premise that grammar seeks to explain and to facilitate the best use of language, not the worst use.

    Every well-formed assertion has three parts:

    • 1.   One subject class.
    • 2.   One predicate class.
    • 3.   An explicit relationship of predication.

    A basic sentence is one that faithfully represents one assertion.

    The creation of a basic sentence involves three basic operations:

    • 1.   The creation of a subject (subject raising).
    • 2.   The creation of a predicate (predicate raising).
    • 3.   The creation of a predication. (predication raising).

    Subject raising is the creation of a phrase which designates the number and nature of the class mentioned as the subject.

    Predicate raising is the creation of a phrase which designates the nature of the class with which the subject is being paired.

    Predication raising is the creation of a verb/copula which specifies which possible relationship is being asserted between the subject and predicate classes, including a strategic placing of negative markers.

    Complex sentences are produced by creating a single sentence from two or more assertions by one of the following processes:

    • 1.   Embedding one sentence in another. (Relative clauses or speaker-related qualifiers. I hope that X).
    • 2.   Adding one or more subjects or predicates. (The optimum greatest number of classes being related is six, which is determined by the capacity of the short-term memory).
    • 3.   Adding two or more sentences by conjunction or alternation. Again the limit of six informational items is important.

    Typical ways of combining basic sentences to form complex sentences are as follows:

    • 1.   X and Y: concatenation.
    • 2.   X, but Y: to show contrast.
    • 3.   X, although Y: to show qualification.
    • 4.   X; nevertheless, to show that y happened in spite of X
    • 5.   X; therefore Y: to show the relation of antecedent to necessary consequent (which includes the premise followed by conclusion.)
    • 6.   X; so, Y: to show natural consequent.

    Sentence length is increased by the desires of the speaker:

    • 1.   The desire to produce phatic communication.
    • 2.   The desire to be explicit.
    • 3.   The desire to be confusing.

    Sentence length is (relatively) decreased by the desires of the speaker:

    • 1.   The desire to be understood.
    • 2.   The desire to be emphatic.
    • 3.   The desire to have the sentence remembered.

    Rules for subject-raising:

    1.   Adjectives which qualify the target noun of the subject are placed before the noun in reverse order of importance. This includes the optional designation of quantity of the target noun.

    2.   Prepositional phrases and relative clauses which qualify the target noun follow the target noun of the subject in order of importance.

    3.   Pronominalized reflexives repeat the pronoun in the object case with the addition of the singular or plural form of “self” to the repeated pronoun.

    4.   Plurals are typically formed by adding “s” or “es”. Plurals of nouns are best learned individually, especially those from other languages and some have been anglicized.

    5.   Prepositional phrases are typically formed by the following sequence:

    • a.   the preposition.
    • b.   an article or relative pronoun (pointer).
    • c.   adjectival quantifiers in reverse order of importance.
    • d.   the target noun of the phrase.
    • e.   qualifying relative clauses in order of importance.

    6.   Relative clauses are typically formed by the following sequence:

    • a.   the relative pronoun.
    • b.   the verb or copula.
    • c.   any adverbial qualifiers of the verb.
    • d.   any prepositional phrase qualifiers of the verb (for non-transitive verbs).
    • e.   any noun phrase which serves as the object of a transitive verb.

    7.   Possession is typically indicated by adding “‘s” to the name of the possessor or by using a prepositional phrase such as “of the X” or a gerundive phrase such as “belonging to the X”.

    Rules for predicate raising follow those for subject raising but are modified by:

    • 1.   The occasion of negative class relationships. For the universal case, “No” is added before the name of the subject class. For other quantities, “not” is added immediately after the verb/copula.
    • 2.   No quantity is required for the predicate class.

    Rules for predication raising:

    • 1.   Relationships which designate inclusion/exclusion or appearance/probability typically use or are used with a form of the verb “to be” as a copula.
    • 2.   Regular action verbs are followed by any adverbial qualifiers and then added to the beginning of the words which designate the predicate class.
    • 3.   If the target noun is cast in an agentive role or if the action of the target subject noun is seen to be acting on the target noun of the predicate class in a natural way, typical usage would be the active voice of the verb.
    • 4.   If the target noun of the subject is cast in a non-agentive role, typical usage would be the passive voice of the verb. Passive voice is formed from the active voice by preceding the active verb with an appropriate form of the verb “to be” (correct tense and number) and the addition of “-ed” to the active verb.
    • 5.   (Here would follow the rules for tense and mood in verbs.)

    Example of sentence raising:

    SubjectPrediction and predicate
    Sentence:The snowmelted.

    Assertion: All (the snow which fell last night) is now in the class of (formerly solid things which have now melted).

  • As a Prophet Thinketh in His Heart, So Is He: The Mind of Joseph Smith

    Chauncey C. Riddle
    Professor of Philosophy
    Brigham Young University
    Originally given in 1988

    Chapter 15 in The Prophet Joseph: Essays on the Life and Mission of Joseph Smith, edited by Larry C. Porter and Susan Easton Black, (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1988), pp. 261–279.

    One important question a thinking Latter-day Saint might ask concerning Joseph Smith is, What are the basic beliefs of his thinking? In other words, what are the fundamental ideas which are part of all that he felt, thought, and did?

    This question is important because the mind of Joseph Smith was shaped by God himself; the thinking as represented in the scriptures which came through him is a prime clue to the nature of the mind of God. And since it is the opportunity of each Latter-day Saint to come to have one mind with God and with all of the holy prophets since the beginning, this question also comes down to what each of us should believe.

    I will attempt to isolate the most important features of the thinking of the Prophet Joseph Smith. This is not a work of scholarship, for no scholarly methodology enables one to make the value judgments necessary to this task. This writing is more a personal testimony, an editorial on the life and thought of the Prophet. Admittedly it represents my personal opinions, based on a lifetime of study of the scriptures and pondering of the doctrines of the restored gospel. A similar effort on the part of everyone is an important labor in establishing Zion as we strive to attain one mind, the Savior’s mind.

    This paper lists and elaborates the ideas which I believe are central to the thought of Joseph Smith and to the thought of all others who pursue the revelations of the true and living God in the hope of being saved from ignorance and impurity. My method is to give the reader a trisection by which to contemplate these ideas. One aspect will be quotations from the nonscriptural writings of the Prophet, another will be scriptural references, and still another will be my comments.

    1. The heart of man is the key, the most important factor of man’s being. “Thus you see, my dear brother, the willingness of our heavenly Father to forgive sins, and restore to favor all those who are willing to humble themselves before Him and confess their sins, and forsake them, and return to Him with full purpose of heart, acting no hypocrisy, to serve Him to the end.” 1

    The four parts of man are the heart, which is the function of desiring and choosing; the mind, which is the function of understanding, knowing, and planning; the strength, which is the physical body of man, having the functions of sensing, acting, and procreating; and the might, which is the influence of a person (of the heart, mind, and strength) as that person acts in the world. Thus the four important things to understand about any person in a given situation are the person’s motive (heart), intention (mind), action (strength), and resulting influence (might)—the most important of these being heart, for it is the independent variable. (2 Nephi 31:13: “Follow the Son, with full purpose of heart.”).

    2. Man’s life consists of using one’s heart and mind to choose and act.“A man may be saved, after the judgment, in the terrestrial kingdom, or in the telestial kingdom, but he can never see the celestial kingdom of God, without being born pf water and the Spirit. He may receive a glory like unto   the moon [i.e., of which the light of the moon is typical] or a star, [i.e., of which the light of the stars is typical]: but can never come unto Mount Zion, and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels; to the general assembly and Church of the Firstborn, which are written in heaven and to God the judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus the Mediator of the new covenant unless he becomes as a little child, and is taught by the Spirit of God.”2

    To live is to act. To act is to sense a problem, perceive the situation, choose and plan a solution, and act to create a change the odd in the hope of solving the problem. The world is ones environment. A person acts to change that environment so that the desires of the person will be fulfilled. Actions do not always result in the fulfillment of desire, but persons always act to fulfill desire. (Proverbs 23.7. “As he thinketh in his heart, so is he.”)

    To every action there is an equal and opposite reaction in people as well as in particles, so whenever a person act; to change hi environment, that action also changes himself. (2 Nephi 2:1: “Opposition in all things.”) The specific change of self-involved in a given action is that every choosing creates a propensity to make a similar choice at a later time. That propensity, if reinforced with similar choices, will eventually create a habit in the person, and habits create a character. (Alma 62:41: “Hardened, … softened.”)

    To live a human life is to attempt to reshape one’s environment; this attempt may or may not succeed, but the attempt always creates a set of habits, a character, in the person. A person always succeeds in shaping the self into the image of that person’s own desires. (D&C 123:11–17. “Cheerfully do all things that lie in our power.”)

    To live spiritually is to act under the direction of the Holy Spirit, which leads to eternal life, which is the fulness of acting spiritually. (Moses 6:59: “Enjoy the words of eternal life in this world, and eternal life in the world to come even immortal glory.”)  

    3. In every action man must choose between what he believes to be the better and the worse, between darkness and light.“We again make remark here—for we find that the very principle upon which the disciples were accounted blessed, was because they were permitted to see with their eyes and hear with their ears—that the condemnation which rested upon the multitude that received not His saying, was because they were not willing to see with their eyes, and hear with their ears; not because they could not, and were not privileged to see and hear, but because their hearts were full of iniquity and abominations; ‘as your fathers did, so do ye.’ The prophet, foreseeing that they would thus harden their hearts, plainly declared it; and herein is the condemnation of the world; that light hath come into the world, and men choose darkness rather than light, because their deeds are evil. This is so plainly taught by the Savior, that a wayfaring man need not mistake it.”3

    What a person thinks is better, the person calls good; and what a person thinks is worse may be called evil. This is to say that every human has agency. The agency consists in being subject to a person’s own desires, thus enabling that person to call some things good because they are desired by the person, and to call some things evil, or bad, or undesirable, because they are not desired by the person.

    (Alma 42:7: “Subjects to follow after their own will.”)

    Every person has some desires that he or she may act upon and others which he or she is powerless to attain. But in either case, the desiring and planning when one is powerless to act and the desiring and planning and acting when one is able to act both result in habit and character formation. (Mosiah 4:24–25: “you who deny the [poor] … say in your hearts.”)

    4. In every action one is influenced toward the good by God and toward evil by Satan. “We admit that God is the great source and fountain from whence proceeds all good; that He is perfect intelligence, and that His wisdom is alone sufficient to govern and regulate the mighty creations and worlds which shine and blaze with such magnificence and splendor over our heads, as though touched with His finger and moved by His Almighty word. And if so, it is done and regulated by law; for without law all must certainly fall into chaos. If, then, we admit that God is the source of all wisdom and understanding, we must admit that by His direct inspiration He has taught man that law is necessary in order to govern and regulate His own immediate interest and welfare; for this reason, that law is beneficial to promote peace and happiness among men. And as before remarked, God is the source from whence proceeds all good; and if man is benefitted by law, then certainly, law is good; and if law is good, then law, or the principle of it emanated from God; for God is the source of all good; consequently, then, he was the first Author of law, or the principle of it, to mankind.” 4

    God and Satan may influence man directly or indirectly. Direct influence comes in the form of personal revelation from either, God acting upon the spirit (heart and mind) and body of man, and Satan working upon the body. Or the influence may be indirect, through other human beings, through illness or calamity, or through natural events. The person receiving these influences might not recognize either God or Satan as existing or having any effect in a given situation. But it is fundamental to scripture-based thinking to recognize that all good that is really good comes from God and that everything that is evil is sent forth by the power of Satan. (Moroni 7:11–12: “All things which are good cometh from God; and that which is evil cometh of the devil.”)

    Every person who attains accountability in this world knows both good and evil. But they do not come labeled. Thus there may be a difference between what a given person says is good and what God commends as good. The things individuals call good are relative goods, the desires of the person, and may differ from person to person. (See Moroni 7:14.) The good of God is righteousness and is absolute. Righteousness is so absolute that no human being can find it on his own. Thus it is that the true and living God of righteousness, which is Jesus Christ, is also “the fountain of all righteousness” to mortals on this earth. (Ether 12:28.)

    Evil is inherently relative, never absolute, because it is always simply anything other than the righteousness which God commends at any given moment. Evil admits of degrees; some things are more evil than others. But righteousness admits of no degree: one is either righteous or not, which is to say that one is either yielding to the influence of God to do what is right at a given moment, or one is not. (James 2:10: “Offend in one point, he is guilty of all”; italics added.)

    5. The righteousness of God is wise sharing in love; the evil of Satan is selfishness. “Let the Saints remember that great things depend on their individual exertion, and that they are called to be co-workers with us and the Holy Spirit in accomplishing the great work of the last days; and in consideration of the extent, the blessings and glories of the same let every selfish feeling be not only buried, but annihilated; and let love to God and man predominate, and reign triumphant in every mind, that their hearts may become like unto Enoch’s of old, and comprehend all things, present, past and future, and come behind in no gift, waiting for the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ.” 5

    Righteousness is of God. It is acting under the direction of God to share the good things one has and can do with others in such a way that the eternal happiness of any beings affected by that action is maximized. (2 Nephi 26:24: “He doeth not anything save it be for the benefit of the world.”) Selfishness is to shorten the God-ordained blessings of some being in order to try to fulfill one’s own personal desires. (3 Nephi 1:29: “They became for themselves.”) One work of God among men is to direct them as to where and how to be generous with those who are less fortunate than they are. Satan essentially says to each human that one should look out for himself first, that one should feather his own nest. (Moses 5:29–31: “Murder and get gain.”)

    As a person yields to the influence of God, that person grows in generosity and care for the welfare of others until his love is full, pure, and universal. Thus, over time, that person acquires the character of God. As unselfishness becomes the essence of the person, God is able to share with that person his own purity of heart and fullness of mind and strength. Thus the person grows to be as God, which process eventuates in becoming a god. (D&C 50:24: “Until the perfect day.”)

    As a person who was once cleansed by the blood of Jesus Christ yields to the influence of Satan, he becomes selfish and possessive in character. If he does not repent of that selfishness before temporal death, then Satan seals that one to himself. (Alma 34:35: “He doth seal you his.”) But if one turns away from selfishness before one’s character is finally fixed and partakes to some degree of righteousness through Jesus Christ, that one may become righteous in character to that same degree and able to endure a kingdom of glory in eternity. (D&C 76:50–106: “Just men made perfect.”)

    It follows also that no action of any human being is temporal only. Every action has moral ramifications and eternal consequences. Every action is either a yielding to the influence of God to do the work of righteousness, or it is yielding to the influence of Satan to sin. In every act, humans fill the God-given opportunity to make the world a place of happiness, wisdom, and truth; or, they fulfill the Satan-inspired opportunity to be self-indulgent, uncaring for others, promoting darkness and lies. (D&C 29:34–35: “Not at any time have I given unto you a law which was temporal.”)

    One measure of the degree of evil a person is perpetrating when he acts is the limits of the circle within which that person is willing to be good to others. Thus an absolute devil has concern only for himself; everything and anything else, including all human beings, God, and Satan are simply tools to be used by that person to get what he wants. A less evil being is “good” to perhaps one other person but acts selfishly toward anyone else. A being yet less evil may include in the circle of persons with whom he desires to share all of his immediate or extended family.  

    A being still less evil may extend the boundaries of his positive concern to his village, state, or nation. But a being cannot become righteous until he is willing to share with everyone—with his enemies, with all other human beings regardless of their nationality, religion, class orientation, education, health, or gender, and also with God, Satan, rocks, trees, animals, stars, etc., ready to share with all in the manner commended to him by God. (2 Nephi 26:24: “Benefit of the world.”)

    Human tragedy is made when a person attempts to do good for those whom he loves, tries to do evil to those whom he does not love, and finds that the evil he tries to do to the unloved ones destroys those whom he desires to love. The tragedy is occasioned, of course, by the fact that his love for those whom he desires to love is not pure love, because it does not first focus on love of God. Thus the person finds that his relative, personal love is another form of evil, of which he must repent if he wishes to come to God and be reconciled to true righteousness. (See Matthew 5:43–48.)

    6. Acuteness of heart and mind in man consists in learning to discern the influence of God and to distinguish it from the influence of Satan. “The Spirit of Revelation is in connection with these blessings. A person may profit by noticing the first intimation of the spirit of revelation; for instance, when you feel pure intelligence flowing into you, it may give you sudden strokes of ideas, so that by noticing it, you may find it fulfilled the same day or soon; (i.e.) those things what were presented unto your minds by the Spirit of God, will come to pass; and thus by learning the Spirit of God and understanding it, you may grow into the principle of revelation, until you become perfect in Christ Jesus.”6

    Life is an intelligence test. Of all the things a person may attempt in this life, the most important and for some the most difficult task is that of sorting out his or her own heart and mind. Three things must be carefully and accurately identified: the influence of God, the desires and ideas of the self, and the influences of Satan. (D&C 46:7: “Not be seduced by evil spirits.”) This is not strictly a mind problem, as many would make it. It is a heart and a mind problem.

    God is to be identified by the fact that he is the source of good and of truth. The self is to be identified as a source of desires and ideas which do not always square with good and truth. Satan is to be identified by his insistence that our own desires and ideas are really very good when we ourselves in our “heart of hearts” know that they are not. (Moroni 7:16–17: “The way to judge.”)

    The person who has not made such identifications lives life in a fog where everything is relative and nothing is holy except perhaps himself. This person is driven to and fro with every wind of doctrine, having no anchor and no rudder. He or she will likely be an imperfect copy of some stronger nearby human being. (James 1:5–7: “He that wavereth.”)

    One begins to live as an individual only when one makes these discriminations and begins to use them. One then knows that God exists and is good, that Satan exists and is evil, and that one’s self is not either God or Satan but that one may choose between them. This can be an auspicious beginning of good things in the person’s life.

    7. Wisdom for man is to learn to act only under the influence of God. “There is one thing under the sun which I have learned and that is that the righteousness of man is sin because it exacteth over much; nevertheless, the righteousness of God is just, because it exacteth nothing at all, but sendeth rain on the just and the unjust, seed time and harvest, for all of which man is ungrateful.”7

    “Every word that proceedeth from the mouth of Jehovah has such an influence over the human mind the logical mind that it is convincing without other testimony. Faith cometh by hearing. If 10000 men testify to a truth you know would it add to your faith? No, or will 1000 testimonies destroy your knowledge of a fact? No.” 8

    Man is free to serve God or to serve himself. Satan’s only leverage is to encourage an individual to disobey God in following his own desires. (James 1:13–14: “Own lust.”)   But by paying careful attention, a person may learn to serve God only, never to indulge the desires of self. (Helaman 3:35: “Purifying … sanctification.”)

    The self is motivated to make this dedication only after it has learned to identify and distinguish carefully between the influence of God and the influence of Satan. Having attained that enlightenment, the self will then quickly discern that when one follows the influence of God, things go well: one’s beliefs then are regularly discovered to be true, and one’s actions are seen to lead to kindness, love, sharing, and an increase of the happiness of others whom one affects. Having observed such results, the self then sees that the only intelligent thing to do is to yield to the influence of God in all things. (Alma 32:26–43: “Ye must needs know that the seed is good.”)

    There will be momentary doubts for most. To satisfy those doubts one needs but to relapse into selfishness for a season and bask in its misery to be reassured that the way of God is real and correct. God is kind and permits such experiments, but not forever. Before mortal death, each person who has heard the gospel of Jesus Christ must declare himself or herself. (D&C 88:83: “Seeketh me early.”)

    8. The only way wisdom can be attained is to learn to love with God’s love.“The names of the faithful are what I wish to record in this place. These I have met in prosperity, and they were my friends; and I now meet them in adversity, and they are still my warmer friends. These love the God that I serve; they love the truths that I promulgate; they love those virtuous, and those holy doctrines that I cherish in my bosom with the warmest feelings of my heart, and with that zeal which cannot be denied. I love friendship and truth; I love virtue and law; I love the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob; and they are my brethren, and I shall live; and because I live they shall live also.” 9

    “Until we have perfect love we are liable to fall and when we have a testimony that our names are sealed in the Lamb’s book of life we have perfect love and then it is impossible for false Christs to deceive us.” 10 

    This is to say that one must not just play at learning to yield to the influence of God in all things. One must throw one’s whole heart and soul into the fray. Until one fastens all the affections of his heart on God and his righteousness, so much so that serving God and establishing his righteousness on earth become an all-consuming passion, one will not be able to yield to the influence of God unerringly. (Alma 37:37: “Counsel with the Lord.”) The pressures to care for self are so great and so pervasive that mind alone can never deliver a soul to God. (Matthew 13:22–23: “Care of the world … choke the word.”) Nevertheless, heart and mind combined and dedicated can make this all-important delivery. But heart must lead the way, for heart is stronger and more important than mind. Mind facilitates, and that in a most ingenious and admirable manner, but heart points the mind and controls the occupation of the mind almost entirely. (D&C 59:5: “Thou shalt love.”)

    9. The only way one can love God with all of one’s heart, might, mind, and strength is through the law and the ordinances of the new and everlasting covenant. “It is a duty which every Saint ought to render to his brethren freely—to always love them, and ever succor them. To be justified before God we must love one another: we must overcome evil; we must visit the fatherless and the widow in their affliction, and we must keep ourselves unspotted from the world: for such virtues flow from the great fountain of pure religion. Strengthening our faith by adding every good quality that adorns the children of the blessed Jesus, we can pray in the season of prayer; we can love our neighbor as ourselves, and be faithful in tribulation, knowing that the reward of such is greater in the kingdom of heaven. What a consolation! What a joy! Let me live the life of the righteous, and let my reward be like this!” 11

    To be able to deliver oneself—heart, might, mind, and strength—to Jesus Christ is a matter of power. No human being has that power naturally, though many go a remarkable distance toward that goal outside the covenant. The power that makes that delivery possible is the gift of the Holy Ghost, which is the pearl of great price. Through the Holy Ghost a person’s heart may be purified, cleansed of all selfishness; then the soul can reflect back to God that pure love and also extend it to a neighbor. By that power the mind can eliminate all errors of belief, which are the chains of hell inflicted by Satan on the world, and also gain that precious knowledge of the truth which one must have to be saved. Through the power of the Holy Spirit, one may keep his body clean and pure and have it renewed in rebirth unto sufficiency to accomplish every mission to which the person is appointed by God. And through that power one receives priesthood might, enough might to show that one will use it obediently and fully in the service of God. (Moroni 7:25–48: “Lay hold upon every good thing.”)

    Thus through the new and everlasting covenant one can fulfill all that is possible for man: to become as God is. (D&C 132:19–20: “Then shall they be gods.”) This new creation will not be accomplished completely in this mortality, but enough will be accomplished here that the individual may become a great power in extending the influence of God in the earth. (Mosiah 8:15–18: “Becometh a great benefit.”)

    The law of the celestial kingdom is that one must act only in faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. (D&C 132:12: “No man shall come unto the Father but by me or by my word, which is my law.”) All righteous acts are acts of faith in him, and whatsoever is not that faith is sin. To say that we should love the Lord, our God, with all of our heart, might, mind, and strength is linguistically equivalent to saying that we should exercise full faith in Jesus Christ through the new and everlasting covenant.

    10. The key to knowledge (truth) is to learn first of the whole, which is God, then of the parts, which are nature and man.

    2. Let us here observe, that three things are necessary in order that any rational and intelligent being may exercise faith in God unto life and salvation.

    3. First, the idea that he actually exists.  

    4. Secondly, a correct idea of his character, perfections and attributes.

    5. Thirdly, an actual knowledge that the course of life which he is pursuing is according to his will. For without an acquaintance with these three important facts the faith of every rational being must be imperfect and unproductive, but with this understanding it can become perfect and fruitful, abounding in righteousness, unto the praise and glory of God the Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ. 12

    The world would have one study the parts and through them discern the whole. But this is not really possible. No one can intelligently study a part of something without having at least a working hypothesis of the nature of the hole of that something. If the hypothesis about the whole is faulty, the part will be analyzed in a faulty way. This is the real lesson of systems thinking, thinking popularized in the present century but employed by responsible thinkers from time immemorial.

    The whole is God. The universe is personal, not natural, because the hand of God is in every thing. (D&C 59:21: “Confess … his hand in all things.”) Until one understands the nature and being of God, one cannot understand correctly the rest of the universe. Nature is the handiwork of God, and when one sees any natural occurrence in the universe, one is beholding “God moving in his majesty and power.” (D&C 88:46–47.) Men are the children of God, and when one sees a human being one sees the literal offspring of gods, a potential heir of Jesus Christ. Whatsoever one does to any of those heirs, Jesus Christ counts it as done unto himself. (Matthew 25:40: “Ye have done it unto me.”) Each of these heirs may inherit all He is and has if that heir will only deny selfishness and grow in spiritual stature unto the measure of the fulness of his stature through faith in Him and through the power brought by the covenants. (Ephesians 4:13: “Fullness of Christ.”)

    11. Jesus Christ is the Truth. The gospel of Jesus Christ is the truth which points the way to find the Truth. “And now what remains to be done, under circumstances like these?   I will proceed to tell you what the Lord requires of all people, high and low, rich and poor, male and female, ministers and people, professors of religion and non-professors, in order that they may enjoy the Holy Spirit of God to a fullness and escape the judgments of God, which are almost ready to burst upon the nations of the earth. Repent of all your sins, and be baptized in water for the remission of them, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, and receive the ordinance of the laying on of the hands of him who is ordained and sealed unto this power, that ye may receive the Holy Spirit of God; and this is according to the Holy Scriptures, and the Book of Mormon; and the only way that man can enter into the celestial kingdom. These are the requirements of the new covenant, or first principles of the Gospel of Christ: then ‘Add to your faith, virtue; and to virtue, knowledge; and to knowledge, temperance; and to temperance, patience; and to patience, godliness; and to godliness, brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness, charity [or love]; for if these things be in you, and abound, they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful, in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.’” 13

    “Again, if others’ blessings are not your blessings, others’ curses are not your curses; you stand then in these last days, as all have stood before you, agents unto yourselves, to be judged according to your works.” 14

    Man is saved no faster than he gains knowledge of the Truth. This truth one must know is not just any truth, such as one would encounter in a phone book or on a topographic map. The truth which saves is Jesus Christ. Only he can and will save from sinning, from hell, from death. Only as one comes to know him personally can one be saved. (John 8:31–36: “Ye shall know the truth.”)

    Everyone on earth is invited to come to know the Truth through the teaching of the gospel of Jesus Christ. If a person accepts that gospel and lives it completely, the path entered upon will lead such a one to know the Savior personally. The scriptures speak of the gospel as the truth because it is that portion of truth in the world which everyone must come to know to fulfill their mortal probation in accepting or rejecting Jesus Christ. (D&C 123:11–12: “Know not where to find [the truth].”)

    The responsibility for seeing that every child of God encounters the gospel of Jesus Christ rests on the shoulders of the Savior himself. He enlists others to assist him, that they too might become as he is through faithful service. But he also respects the agency of men. He allows men to teach their children the truth or lies, as they will. Some teach the lies of Satan or part truths in ignorance, but some do not. (D&C 123:7–8: “Chains … of hell.”) It suffices to know that God is just, and thus every soul will hear the truth taught to him in his own tongue, in all humility, by a servant of Jesus Christ. This will happen before he or she becomes fully accountable for his or her sins and therefore liable for the final judgment which will come to all human beings. Partial accountability comes to each person through the light of Christ. But the light of Christ witnesses of truth and good. It does not tell one how to repent of sinning nor how to be able to make amends for all the evil one has done. That is the message of the gospel of Jesus Christ. (Moses 6:55–62: another law: all men must repent through Christ.)

    As defined by the Lord himself in scripture (see 3 Nephi 27:13–21), there are but a few simple, powerful ideas which constitute the truth, the gospel of Jesus Christ. These are as follows:

    1. Jesus Christ was sent into this world to do the will of God, his Father.
    2. His Father’s will was that he be lifted up upon the cross and atone for the sins of all men.
    3. After Jesus had been lifted up, he was to draw all men to himself, that each might receive a final judgment as to whether each one’s works were good or evil.
    4. Whosoever would desire to be found guiltless at the day of judgment must:
      1. Exercise full faith in Jesus Christ, unto
      2. Repenting of sinning, and
      3. Being baptized in his name, of water; then to  
      4. Receive the Holy Ghost unto the remission of sins; then to
      5. Endure to the end.
    5. Whosoever receives the Holy Ghost and endures not unto the end will be hewn down and cast into the fire.

    12. Family is the important social relationship.

    Except a man and his wife enter into an everlasting covenant and be married for eternity, while in this probation, by the power and authority of the Holy Priesthood, they will cease to increase when they die; that is, they will not have any children after the resurrection. But those who are married by the power and authority of the priesthood in this life, and continue without committing the sin against the Holy Ghost, will continue to increase and have children in the celestial glory. The unpardonable sin is to shed innocent blood, or be accessory thereto. All other sins will be visited with judgment in the flesh, and the spirit being delivered to the buffetings of Satan unto the day of the Lord Jesus.

    Salvation means a man’s being placed beyond the power of all his enemies. The more sure word of prophecy means a man’s knowing that he is sealed up unto eternal life by revelation and the spirit of prophecy, through the power of the holy priesthood. It is impossible for a man to be saved in ignorance. 15

    All human beings have one literal Heavenly Father and thus are brothers and sisters in the spirit. All human beings have one physical set of parents, Adam and Eve, and thus are brothers and sisters in the flesh. One purpose of the gospel of Jesus Christ is to allow men to know and affirm this family relationship, that all might learn again to serve their Father, the true and living God. (Acts 17:22–31: “God that made the world.”)

    The marriage covenant is of God, and marriage and the begetting of children unto God are to be holy undertakings, functions of the holy priesthood of God. The most important personal bond between any two persons is the bond between any human being and the Savior, as one learns to love the Savior, his new father, with all of his heart, might, mind, and strength. (Ether 12:4; Mosiah 5:7: “Children of Christ.”) The next most important bond for any human being is the bond of love which the new and everlasting covenant makes possible between husband and wife. This second bond can be successful only if the first one is in place, the bond of love between each individual and the Savior, When a husband and wife bond in the pure love of Christ, they create an eternal unit and they can then be exalted. It is that nuclear, bonded family consisting of three persons, the Savior as father, and the faithful husband and the faithful wife, which is and can be exalted, not the individuals separately. (D&C 132:8–25: singly saved.)

    13. The greatest power on earth is the Holy Priesthood.“It has been the design of Jehovah, from the commencement of the world, and is His purpose now, to regulate the affairs of the world in His own time, to stand as a head of the universe, and take the reins of government in His own hand. When that is done, judgment will be administered in righteousness; anarchy and confusion will be destroyed, and ‘nations will learn war no more.’” 16

    “Other attempts to promote universal peace and happiness in the human family have proved abortive; every effort has failed; every plan and design has fallen to the ground; it needs the wisdom of God, the intelligence of God, and the power of God to accomplish this. The world has had a fair trial for six thousand years; the Lord will try the seventh thousand Himself; ‘He whose right it is will possess the kingdom, and reign until He has put all things under His feet;’ iniquity will hide its hoary head, Satan will be bound, and the works of darkness destroyed; righteousness will be put to the line, and judgment to the plummet, and ‘he that fears the Lord will alone be exalted in that day.’” 17

    The holy priesthood is the power of God. By it the worlds are created, governed, and destroyed; and by it the work of God in all the universe is accomplished. (D&C 38:1–3: “All things came by me.”)

    Man is given the opportunity, through faith in Jesus   Christ, to receive and use this priesthood if he will use it only as God instructs him. As God commands men, they do the most important work they do on earth through the priesthood power. That work is to establish eternal family relationships between God and men through the teaching of the gospel of Jesus Christ and through the administration of the new and everlasting covenant. (D&C 128:17–18: “Tum the heart of the fathers.”)

    Because of the fall of Adam, men must do the work to earn their bread by the sweat of their brows. This is part of the individual salvation each must work out as each seeks to be obedient to God. But the time will come for the faithful, perhaps in the next world, where all work will be done by priesthood power. As one is true and faithful to his priesthood covenants here, one prepares to wield the greatest power in all of eternity, the holy priesthood of God. (D&C 84:33–38: “These two priesthoods.”)

    All associations or alliances made on earth which are not made through the new and everlasting covenant “have an end when men are dead.” (D&C 132:6–7.) The only associations which may be made eternal through that covenant are family relationships.

    The power of the holy priesthood is also the only power by which righteous and lasting government can be established on the earth. The civil governments of men are better than nothing, usually, but none can solve all problems or achieve either equity or righteousness. The nations of the earth must suffer until they are willing to accept the Savior as their lawgiver; then he will reign through love and the power of priesthood.

    The thinking of the Prophet Joseph Smith is as wide and as deep as eternity. It compasses all of God and all of space, time, and matter. Truth and righteousness are his themes, but righteousness reigns as head. For him it is the God of Righteousness who rules the universe, who is the source of truth, who is the “Spirit of Truth” to all who hunger and thirst after righteousness.

    Notes

    1. Joseph Smith, History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 7 vols., 2 ed. rev., ed. B. H. Roberts (Salt Lake City, Utah: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1932–51), 2:315.

    2. Joseph Smith, Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, sel. Joseph Fielding Smith (Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book Co., 1938), p. 12.

    3. Ibid., pp. 95–96.

    4. Ibid., pp. 55–56.

    5. Ibid., pp. 178–79.

    6. Ibid., p. 151.

    7. Ibid., p. 317.

    8. Andrew F. Ehat and Lyndon W. Cook, eds., The Words of Joseph Smith (Provo, Utah, Brigham Young University Religious Studies Center 1980), p. 237.

    9. Smith, History of the Church, 5:108–9.

    10. Smith, Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, p. 9.

    11. Smith, History of the Church, 2:229.

    12. Lectures on Faith (Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book Co., 1985) no. 3, p. 38.

    13. Smith, Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, p. 16.

    14. Ibid., p. 12.

    15. Ibid., pp. 300–301.

    16. Ibid., pp. 250–51.

    17. Ibid., p. 252.