-Chieko Okazaki, "What a Friend We Have in Jesus," pp. 57-58
Sunday, July 6, 2014
"We should be the most intellectually alive and curious people on earth"
“When it comes to ideas, I’ve always enjoyed Wilson Mizner’s credo. He said, ‘I respect faith, but doubt is what gets you an education.' It’s crucially important to be able to turn a different idea around, examining it three-dimensionally, in the context of your own intellectual field and values system, cataloging the differences and noting the points of contrast, but without bringing them into conflict until the process is complete. Reasonable, healthy, needed change cannot occur if we aren’t willing to go through this process. If we hurry through the process, we may end up junking a very valuable idea without seeing its merit; or we may prematurely decide that our own system is flawed and throw out parts of it that we may later discover were not only the bath water but the baby as well. I sometimes think that we Mormons, because we belong to the true church, sometimes are very dismissive of anything we don’t remember hearing in seminary or Sunday School class. That’s wrong. We should be the most intellectually alive and curious people on earth.”
-Chieko Okazaki, "What a Friend We Have in Jesus," pp. 57-58
-Chieko Okazaki, "What a Friend We Have in Jesus," pp. 57-58
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1 comment:
It is my experience that many people only ask 'questions' which reinforce their own belief systems or attack the belief systems of others.
Few are those who carefully examine their own belief systems, assumptions, and axioms.
Fewer still are those who seek for ultimate truth.
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