But it doesn’t even stand up to common sense. I think the problem is your assumption that everyone in the society is practising polygamy which is impossible.
This is an important assertion, but it won’t be an argument until you show where my argument actually depends on the claim that polygamy was a universal practice. Obviously, if I made that absurd assumption, which would require the female population in Utah to be at least double the men, it would be fatal. But I have done no such thing, and you have not pointed out where that assumption figures into my claims. Quite to the contrary, it is crucial to my argument that one polygamous man deprives other men of potential spouses, so that there is less opportunity even for mere monogamy. Part of the problem is that when men equal or outnumber women, as was the case in nineteenth-century Utah, polygamy for one man necessitates celibacy for others.
That is why in the first paragraph of my first post, I brought up a scenario of seven men and seven women. Do you think there will be more children produced if one man makes takes all seven women, or if they all pair up one-to-one? Even if we suppose that female fertility is a constant, and that each women has, say, seven children in either scenario, then the average man will not have any children more or less regardless of whether we take polygamy or monogamy. Under monogamy, all seven men will have seven children each, by one wife each, for a total of 49 kids. Under polygamy, one man can have all 49 kids, but the others are all left out in the cold with zero; here the average is still seven children for each man, but they will be distributed unequally to one man only. Thus if we view the situation solely from the male side, polygamy in the best scenario offers us only a zero-sum game. As a result, the impossibility of universal polygamy provides me with my grounds for saying that female fertility must be the decisive factor. Polygamy would only increase the population if the wives of the one polygamous man would have more children by sharing him than they would if they married off several to each of the seven. Hence, I reduced the entire problem to one question, which I now reiterate:
Is a woman going to have as many children when her husband shares his attention with three other women as when he is devoted only to her?
If common sense is really on your side, then the commonsense answer to this question should be “yes.” Is that what you think?
My co-worker from Nigeria, her father had 5 wives and 15 children. If I had 15 children from one wife, it would be an astonishing feat.
This example demonstrates that you are still very far from grasping my argument. You are comparing your personal fertility as a male to another man’s personal fertility as a male, when the argument is about the effect of polygamy upon
whole populations. If the Nigerian father has five wives, then there are four other Nigerian men who have none. That means that to his fifteen children there correspond not one, but five males in the preceding generation, for a ratio of only 3-to-one. That’s a good number, but nowhere near astonishing. If here were not keeping all the women to himself they might each have four or five children by marrying four other men monogamously, for a happy total of 20-25 children, a big increase over 15.
Or how about this? Leaving aside the leftover males, what if we just changed our approach to the example. Don’t compare yourself to the polygamous father. Instead, compare your wife to one of his. I know nothing of your family, how many children you have, how old you are, so I will just speak for myself. I have been married five years and have two children. My wife is still under 30. If in the next 15-20 years, my wife succeeds in having only two more children, she will exceed the average of the Nigerian man’s wives (three each) by a whopping 33%. I bet it’s a realistic hope than we can even have three more children, giving her a dominating lead of 67% over the average wife of the Nigerian man. You see where this is going? Obviously, the Nigerian father is a man who wants children, and we are a couple who wants children. While I will personally have fewer than he does, my wife can hope to do much better than anyone of his, so that our family will provide a greater percentage increase to the population than his.
Note as well: if we get those two more kids, we will also be doing better than Brigham Young. Young had 16 wives who bore children, and they got him 56. Since 56/16 = 3.5, his wives averaged better than the Nigerian’s. Yet if my wife has just those two more children, she will already exceed the average in the Young household by a comfy 14%. I promise not to boast until we get there.
Agreed. When Carolyn Jessop met with the Utah Attorney General, she made a list of 17 abuses that led to seizure the FLDS properties in Utah. She mentions a few of them in the book but does not give the complete list. Are you interested in them? If this is just going to be another bash the Mormon thread, I won’t bother.
Yes, I would be interested. And I would change some of my claims about the comparability of Jeffs and Smith if there were anything different in kind between them. For instance, if Jeffs beat his wives brutally, then I would have to submit that point, just as I wouldn’t compare him to Smith insofar as Jeff’s probably has committed sodomy. (I should’a checked that before I wrote, dang it.)