Yes, I know. I am not sure why you think I forgot this, though.
Here, it seems you are relying on a logical fallacy called
begging the question. (or perhaps circular reasoning).
Description of Begging the Question
Begging the Question is a fallacy in which the premises include the claim that the conclusion is true or (directly or indirectly) assume that the conclusion is true. This sort of “reasoning” typically has the following form.
- Premises in which the truth of the conclusion is claimed or the truth of the conclusion is assumed (either directly or indirectly).
- Claim C (the conclusion) is true.
This sort of “reasoning” is fallacious because simply assuming that the conclusion is true (directly or indirectly) in the premises does not constitute evidence for that conclusion. **Obviously, simply assuming a claim is true does not serve as evidence for that claim. **This is especially clear in particularly blatant cases: “X is true. The evidence for this claim is that X is true.”
So, to say that “the Holy Ghost will not, and indeed
cannot, bear witness of the truth of the Book of Mormon
in conjunction with any other Church than the LDS Church. Why? Because it is the only one that is true.” appears to be circular logica and/or begging the question.
Well, actually, the “logic” that you have used appears to be a fallacy, so it really can’t be applied to
anyone, (Mormon or not), who wishes to be logically consistent. This is not to say that I doubt that you believe as you do, however. Rather, I am only questioning (some of) the *explanations *that you are offering in this forum which appear to be illogical and thus cannot really be used by those who value logical reasoning as a part of their faith.
ETA: Just wanted to add that I have seen logically fallacious arguments made by Catholics on these forums as well (and people of other faiths, or no faith, to boot). I want to be clear that I don’t think that this is something that is unique to LDS. If someone argues that the RCC is “true” because of X, and X is a logical fallacy, I am not going to buy that statement either.
I have noticed that there seems to be a correlation between how “fundamentalist” (I am referring to a mindset that applies to ANY religion, rather than the phenomenon of Fundamentalist Protestants) one is in one’s religious beliefs, and how much one is prone to making logical fallacies to support those beliefs. It just so happens that a majority of LDS people (at least most of the ones that I know personally, and most of the ones I’m familiar with on CAF) tend to be of this mindset and therefore seem to use logically fallacious statements quite often.
But I’ve seen fundamentalist reasoning in other faiths as well. Including the Jewish tradition from which I hail. And most definitely in among some Catholics here on CAF. IOW, I have trouble buying into this kind of reasoning no matter where it is coming from!