Today we're going to contrast the FAITH model of analysis with the concept of a "confusopoly."
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In business, a "confusopoly" is defined as "confusing marketing designed to prevent the buyer from making informed decisions." Anyone who has tried to compare mobile phone plans has encountered a "confusopoly."
A confusopoly is effective because "confusion within the targeted consumer group is purposefully maintained, so choices are based on emotional factors" and logical fallacies, such as appeals to authority, red herrings, etc.
The director of the federal CFPB has explained that "If [the sellers] can confuse the consumer enough then the consumers won't necessary know what choice they're making and they can be talked into just about anything."
A "confusopoly" is the antithesis of "plainness" and the pursuit of clarity, charity and understanding.
So what does this have to do with LDS topics, including the origin and setting of the Book of Mormon?
Everything.
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The recent publications by Brant Gardner, Jeff Lindsay, and Royal Skousen that we've discussed on this blog are good examples of the confusopoly tactic.Other prominent LDS apologists (Jack Welch, Dan Peterson, Tyler Griffin, Scott Gordon and their respective organizations and followers) and as well as critics (John Dehlin, Dan Vogel, etc.) have long employed the "confusopoly" strategy.
None of them are willing to provide clear, cogent, side-by-side comparisons of their various assumptions, inferences, and theories because they don't want people to see clearly. They don't want people to make informed decisions. They don't trust people to make the "correct" decisions so they curate information to lead their followers to predetermined decisions and beliefs.
Like marketing experts in business, these apologists and critics know that it is easy to manipulate people through emotional appeals and logical fallacies.
There are several reasons, such as:
- people are busy with careers and other concerns, hobbies, etc.
- people defer to "experts" in all aspects of their lives
- people react emotionally to their personal experiences and abandon a broader perspective
- people don't have the patience or interest to sort through confusing, inconsistent information
- people don't have the time to study and make informed decisions
These and related factors enable the apologists and critics to skillfully employ "confusopoly" strategies to confirm the biases of their respective followers, all the while leading their followers into thinking they are "informed" because the "experts" have told them they are.
Thus, Scripture Central, FAIRLDS and the Interpreter pursue editorial policies that lead their followers to pre-determined outcomes, such as a belief in M2C and SITH. They refuse to provide comparisons or even to fully inform their followers about the teachings of the prophets on those topics.
John Dehlin and other critics pursue editorial policies that lead their followers to pre-determined outcomes, also without providing comparisons and without fully informing their followers.
Both groups are determined to avoid
(i) setting out all the facts and
(ii) providing comparisons of alternative views.
They perpetuate their income and influence by isolating their followers and insulating them from inconvenient facts that would empower people to make informed decisions.
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The contrast between the confusopoly and the FAITH model is stark.
In The Rational Restoration, I explained the FAITH model along with the All/Some/None analytical framework. I also summarized it here:
https://nomorecontention.blogspot.com/p/the-faith-model-of-analysis.html
We're going to give more detailed applications of the FAITH model in the upcoming year (2025).
Below are two good examples.
Compare the plainness of what Joseph and Oliver taught to the stream of sophistry employed by Scripture Central, FAIRLDS, the Interpreter, and Mormon Stories to justify their repudiation of these simple, clear, unambiguous statements about the origin and setting of the Book of Mormon.
Joseph Smith:
Question 4th. How, and where did you obtain the Book of Mormon?
Answer. Moroni, the person who deposited the plates, from whence the Book of Mormon was translated, in a hill in Manchester, Ontario County, New York, being dead, and raised again therefrom, appeared unto me and told me where they were and gave me directions how to obtain them. I obtained them and the Urim and Thummim with them, by the means of which I translated the plates and thus came the Book of Mormon.
(Elders’ Journal I.3:42 ¶20–43 ¶1)
https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/elders-journal-july-1838/11
Oliver Cowdery:
At about one mile west rises another ridge of less height, running parallel with the former, leaving a beautiful vale between. The soil is of the first quality for the country, and under a state of cultivation, which gives a prospect at once imposing, when one reflects on the fact, that here, between these hills, the entire power and national strength of both the Jaredites and Nephites were destroyed.
https://www.josephsmithpapers.org/paper-summary/history-1834-1836/90
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Compare the confusopoly strategy with these declarations from the scriptures.
The Apostle Paul wrote, "Seeing then that we have such hope, we use great plainness of speech: (2 Corinthians 3:12)
Nephi wrote, "my soul delighteth in plainness unto my people, that they may learn. (2 Nephi 25:4)
"For my soul delighteth in plainness; for after this manner doth the Lord God work among the children of men. For the Lord God giveth light unto the understanding; for he speaketh unto men according to their language, unto their understanding. (2 Nephi 31:3)
"they will not search knowledge, nor understand great knowledge, when it is given unto them in plainness, even as plain as word can be." (2 Nephi 32:7)