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Title: The Post-Mormon Metamorphosis:


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The Post-Mormon Metamorphosis How to Maximize
Creation and Minimize Destruction
bob mccue2006 Ex-Mormon
Foundation Annual ConferenceSalt Lake City, Utah
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  • Introduction
  • If there are any artists here, I suggest
    something that shows the human form emerging from
    a map of Utah, or the SLC temple.
  • Do you remember the day when your Mormon shell
    cracked open?
  • It is painful to get out.
  • As Gloria Steinem said, The Truth will set you
    free, but first it will piss you off.
  • This talk is about how to get through the
    pissing off part and into the free part ASAP.

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  • Introduction
  • Remember that everyone is mistaken, especially me
    because you are listening to me right now.
  • All I can do is share with you my attempts to
    understand my experience.
  • I promise that I will be frank with you. Those
    who have ears to hear shall hear is an insight
    based in this accurate observation of human kind.

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  • We will talk about Re-storying
  • What role do meta-narratives or myths play in
    our lives?
  • Where do meta-narratives come from?
  • What causes them to break down?
  • How much choice do we have in creating new
    meta-narratives for ourselves?

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  • Get ready to drink from the fire hose.
  • This is a buffet, not a formal banquet.
  • Huge amounts of great research out there as to
    how religions organizations function.
  • I dont expect you to remember than two or three
    concepts and your ears to hear will pick those
    for you.
  • So enjoy the ride, and read my notes later if you
    want.

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  • We want the broadest perspective possible.

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  • Bill Brysons A Brief History of Everything

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  • Our meta-narratives (mythology) largely determine
    which parts of reality we see and how we
    interpret them.
  • When they shatter, it is serious business.
  • DSM IV Religious or spiritual disorder.
  • Treatment Restorying.
  • Why? Humans are narrative animals.

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  • More meta-narrative examples
  • Suicide bombers.

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  • More meta-narrative examples
  • Subjecting gay people to therapy so that they
    can overcome their challenge.
  • Gay Suicide rates Institution v. individual
  • The Hindu abuse of widows as depicted by the
    movie Water abuse of untouchables etc.
  • Couple could not have children. Decided to have
    child by surrogate. Grandma strongly objected.
    Why? Sperm would have to be obtained by
    masturbation.
  • Lingerie at bridal shower. Why would her friends
    give her those? Wont they will look terrible
    with garments on underneath?

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  • What we value determines much of our behavior.
  • Our meta-narratives determine much of what we
    value.

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  • We will discuss
  • Where meta-narratives originate.
  • The stages we go through while rejecting one
    meta-narrative and finding another.
  • How long the process usually takes.
  • What causes this to occur in some people and not
    others.
  • What we can do to help this process along.

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  • Process overview
  • No model captures all of reality.
  • We will review several.

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  • Process overview
  • Stages of Faith analysis (James Fowler)
  • Stage one Early childhood. Wide open learning
    about cultural taboos and rules.
  • Stage two Literal faith usually lasts from
    age seven through twelve but can be maintained
    for life.

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  • Process overview
  • Stages of Faith analysis (James Fowler)
  • Stage three Conventional faith is where most
    adults spend most of their lives. Characterized
    by conformity and strong identification with a
    group.
  • Fowler says that in many ways religious
    institutions "work best" if they are peopled with
    a majority of committed folk best described as
    Stage 3
  • Stage four Individuative faith The cracks
    form. Anger. Despair.
  • Months at least.
  • Years in most cases.
  • Gradual healing. Think of tree that has grown
    around a boulder and then the boulder is moved.

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  • Process overview
  • Stages of Faith analysis (James Fowler)
  • Stage five Conjunctive faith a person grasps
    the reality behind the symbols of her
    foundational belief systems, and is also drawn to
    and acknowledges of the symbols of other systems.
  • Stage six - Universalizing faith. This is Buddha,
    Gandhi etc.
  • Moral judgement and spiritual stages correlate.

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  • Process overview
  • Elizabeth Kubler-Ross Stages of Grief The
    transition from Fowler Stage 3 to 5
  • Loss of meta-narrative like death or divorce.
  • Stages
  • Denial
  • Anger
  • Bargaining
  • Depression
  • Acceptance.
  • Symmetry The more painful the road out, the more
    joyous the creative process on the other side.
  • Birth canals are dark, frightening, and painful.

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  • Process overview
  • Dogmatism
  • Relativism
  • Realism
  • Teach your kids science.
  • This is how we connect to reality.

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  • Process overview
  • Creative destruction.
  • Death is necessary for life.
  • Destruction is necessary to creation.
  • This is more than a relativist statement.

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  • Process overview
  • Help develop the model at www.postmormon.org
  • See Arza Evans handout Recovery from Mormonism
    at front table.

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  • Back to meta-narratives.
  • They are the backbone of life.
  • Each of the processes we talked about are driven
    by meta-narrative formation and reformation.
  • Review Fowler and Kubler-Ross

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  • Back to meta-narratives.
  • Where do they come from?
  • We inherit them.
  • They grow roots as we live their stories.
  • The deeper the roots, the harder they are to
    change.
  • The better we understand how this works, the more
    likely we are to be able to deal with it in a
    healthy manner.

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  • Meta-narrative roots
  • Evolutionary landscapes and attractor basins
  • Belief maps and hierarchies
  • The edge of chaos
  • The Rider on the elephant.

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Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
Groups Star Island 2006

Think of the basins between the peaks as
attractor basins.
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  • I received a testimony bearing email from a
    stranger last night You cant avoid eternity!
  • Exactly how do we know what happens after death
    or what God is like?
  • Elohim v. The Holy Trinity v. Allah v. The Pink
    Unicorn etc.
  • Emotional knowing anchors most religious
    attractor basins.

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  • In yesterdays paper I read
  • Three stories about Muslim violence and
  • One story about a highly respect Canadian scholar
    and author telling about how she discovered
    God.
  • My deconversion was like having a vice removed
    from he head, or finding out that the shoes I
    have always worn are two sizes too small.

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  • I felt like Tarzan watching the slide projector
    absorbing massive amounts of information with in
    intensity that I dont expect to ever duplicate.
  • Necessity brings us to life.
  • The acknowledgement of ignorance creates
    curiosity.

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Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
Groups Star Island 2006
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  • How to help the healing process along
  • Understand as much as possible about it.
  • Pain results from collision between false
    expectations and reality.
  • Understand yourself.
  • The personality type connection.
  • The influence of the unconscious (elephant on the
    rider).
  • You need chaos to grow, but too much will kill
    you.
  • So look for appropriate, controlled chaos.
  • Democracy v. revolution.
  • Market economy v. regulated economy.

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  • How to help the process along
  • You need order to grow, but too much will kill
    you.
  • So look for stable environments that are open to
    change.
  • Recognize your mimetic nature (elephant on the
    rider).
  • Accept the pendulum.
  • Accept the wisdom of smart crowds.
  • James Surowiecki, The Wisdom of Crowds.
  • Develop your creative side.
  • See as artists see.

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  • Evolutionary or energy landscapes.
  • Concept of energy minima.
  • Two laws of the universe
  • Minimize energy loss.
  • Maximize irony.

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  • Or how about
  • I know that Mormonism is Gods only true church
    on earth and if you wont agree with me you are
    an arrogant intellectual.
  • If you say that Islam is violent and bigoted one
    more time, I will rip out your throat and send
    you to hell where infidel dogs like you belong.

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  • Religious literalists are irony impaired.

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Think of the basins between the peaks as
attractor basins Areas that are dominated by one
kind of social behavior.
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  • Evolutionary or energy landscapes
  • Individuals are marbles.
  • As landscape changes, roll toward valleys.
  • These are energy minima or efficient states.

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  • Evolutionary or energy landscapes
  • As valleys become shallow, not much appears to
    happen.
  • Then all of a sudden, the marbles start to roll
    out.
  • Phase transition.
  • This can be thought of as a movement from one
    attractor basin (dominant pattern of behavior) to
    another.

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  • Evolutionary or energy landscapes.
  • Phase Transition
  • Kuhns paradigm shift describes this in global
    terms and its used colloquially to describe for
    individuals.
  • The abused spouse who finally realizes she is
    being abused
  • Human phase transitions are often painful.

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Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
Groups Star Island 2006

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  • Evolutionary or energy landscapes
  • Light colored moths on light tree trunks.
  • Soot changes trees.
  • Landscape changes.
  • At what point does the phase transition occur?
  • Light moths now on a hill.
  • Dark moths in the comfortable valley.

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  • Evolutionary or energy landscapes
  • Moths change by evolutionary pressure from one
    generation to the next.
  • Human individuals can change radically.
  • The younger we start, the more we can change.
  • New neurons, and connections between neurons,
    grow right up to death.

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  • Evolutionary or energy landscapes
  • Sandpiles
  • Nature of grains and rate of flow of sand
    determines size of landslides.
  • System always returns to state near or critical
    point.
  • Self organizing criticality.
  • Shape of grains.
  • Analogy to information flows.
  • Denial has limits.

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  • Evolutionary or energy landscapes
  • If try to control change restrict chaos this
    can make problems that cause change become far
    greater.
  • Forest fires.
  • Traffic jams.
  • Flooding on the Mississippi.
  • Change within social systems Eastern Europe.

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  • Evolutionary or energy landscapes
  • Perception is reality in social landscapes.
  • As perception changes, landscapes change.
  • Information flows are the key to perception
    changes.
  • A meta-narrative change means a huge landscape
    chance.

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  • Evolutionary or energy landscapes
  • Communications Networks

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  • Evolutionary or energy landscapes
  • Communications Networks
  • Information flows within the Mormon Mormon
    Churchs has been like a friendship network with
    spokes going from each group into a central node
    that controls information.

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Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
Groups Star Island 2006
Complex in this case includes SOC.
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  • Evolutionary or energy landscapes
  • Communications Networks
  • This is a classic phase transition.
  • Mormon leader, marriage concepts, randomness, and
    an apostate teaches Sunday School.

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  • Evolutionary or energy landscapes
  • Best to think of one individual and her place on
    landscape.
  • Mormon landscape is different for each
    individual.
  • Perspective is king.

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  • The adjacent possible.
  • Light moths can become dark moths, not birds.
  • Adjacent valleys represent what is reasonable
    possible.
  • Where is Mormon missionary work successful?

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  • The adjacent possible.
  • One might travel from
  • Literalist Mormon,
  • to metaphoric Mormon,
  • to intelligent design Christian,
  • to extremely liberal Christian,
  • to agnostic.

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  • The adjacent possible.
  • Once out of the deep basin, many people tend to
    avoid deep basins.
  • Pluralism has been the wests strength.
  • The mask metaphor.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Genes and History
  • Degree of conditioning (mission? callings?
    etc.)
  • What do your half dozen closest associates do?
  • Iannaccones research.
  • Consistency of behavior within group (family
    especially).
  • Social capital.
  • Lack of information.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Monism v. pluralism
  • The one true church.
  • Harsh environment.
  • Bushman initiation rites.
  • Female circumcision leading to suicide.
  • The movie Water and the Hindu caste system.
  • Military.
  • War against evil meta-narrative within Mormonism.
  • Perception is reality.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Attachment theory .
  • Secure v. insecure attachments.
  • Unhealthy dependency.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • For example, consider a religion that does not
    differ much from secular society.
  • Hence, the fundamental values that the perception
    of utility drive behavior in the secular culture
    and this religious culture are similar.
  • Liberal Judaism and Christianity (including
    liberal Mormonism) are fairly described this way.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • Tops of the two curves indicate difference
    between values.
  • Height of the curves indicates perceived relative
    superiority.
  • Rational choice theory would predict that the
    religious persons behavior would likely
    gravitate toward where the two lines intersect in
    order to maximize utility.
  • Little unique social capital will be created by
    the religious group and its attractor basin
    created will be shallow.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • What if the religion in question is radically
    different from the secular culture that surrounds
    it.
  • Like literalist religions of many types,
    including the fundamentalist Mormons now and
    mainstream Mormonism 100 years ago.
  • Here is how this relationship could be depicted.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • This is the We are really different, and really
    better, than you model.
  • Young religions are like young ant colonies,
    erratic and aggressive.
  • This forces members to choose between the two
    world and live almost completely in one.
  • Think of the Old Order Amish, for example.
  • The further apart the curves, the steeper the
    sides of the attractor basin.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • What happens as these worlds move a bit closer to
    each other?

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • As literalists learn more about other religions,
    they see more similarities but may also continue
    to perceive a large difference in terms of
    utility.
  • For example, as non-Mormons moved into Utah
    during the late 1800s this began to occur within
    the Mormon community and that continues to this
    day.
  • There is still a huge cost to be paid by those
    who move to the edges of the religious system as
    they try to take advantage of secular life.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • The next diagram illustrates that it does not
    help much as the perceived utility of the
    religious life comes down relative to that of the
    secular life.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • Those who wish to remain in both systems are
    stuck in a place that can be counted on to
    produce lots of cognitive dissonance.
  • So, as long as the gap between the two groups is
    too wide, it is unlikely that people will try to
    play both sides.
  • Some liberal Mormons in this position. The cost
    of open disbelief is too high even through they
    dont see a lot of value in the LDS system.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • These people are up on the sides of a steep
    attractor basin.
  • Painful cognitive dissonance.
  • Mind warping.
  • A recent email from former bishop who has known
    about LDS Inc.s problems for many years
    described how his continual bowing to corrupt
    authority has made him a weak thing.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • What about the situation shown just below?

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • This is a risky position for the religious
    organism.
  • If the basis for the perception of value comes
    undone, many people will perceive that as a loss
    and may defect on that basis alone.
  • The Internet has dramatically increased the risk
    that this may occur as more people learn about
    the foundational problems of their faith and
    realize that most religions operate on the basis
    of similar values.
  • Will hopefully have time to talk about phase
    transitions tipping points where social systems
    suddenly change social landslides.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • From a global social point of view, it will be
    healthy for religious groups to gravitate toward
    the kind of relationship to society, and
    relatively shallow attractor basins, that are
    illustrated below.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • Mature religions and ant colonies are less
    erratic and aggressive.
  • Shallow attractor basins mean that religious
    institutions will lose power and individuals will
    gain it.
  • The World Value Survey has identified this trend.
  • Institutions will resist.
  • Think of the Catholic Church.

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  • What makes for steep v. shallow attractor basins?
  • Social Capital
  • David Oler and his group of Jewish atheist
    synagogues .
  • Difference in objective utility is small, but I
    wish to remain within my tradition and enjoy
    its unique aesthetic experience and meanings.
  • This creates enough utility to keep a religious
    group together.
  • Consistent with the evaporation of creed trend.

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  • Belief maps and hierarchies

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Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
Groups Star Island 2006

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  • Why do Mormons accept for the most part the age
    of the earth and biological evolution, while
    being ignorant of the history of human migration
    as described by DNA research, linguistic
    research, etc.?
  • Tower of Babel is the Book of Mormon and so must
    be true.

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  • Why put science first?
  • Galileo.
  • Gays.
  • Word of Wisdom as a health code.

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  • Religion does not have a good batting average
    when it steps up to the plate while science is
    pitching.
  • So, why not make that part of your religion?

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  • Why put science first?
  • Jon Haidt, The Happiness Hypothesis and Martin
    Seligman, Authentic Happiness on living the
    good life.
  • John Gottman on marriage.
  • James Surowiecki, The Wisdom of Crowds on
    decisions making.
  • For example, when should I get married Should I
    stay married?

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  • Dont make decisions while impaired.
  • The you only have enough blood to run one of
    your two heads applies to women as well as men.
  • Understand why you feel the way you do.
  • Choose the kind of life you want to live.

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  • John Gottman on relationships.
  • Degree of resonance.
  • Disrespect.
  • 80 post-Mormon divorce rate where one spouse
    remains in.

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  • The edge of chaos

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Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
Groups Star Island 2006
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  • Biological evolution
  • Change occurs by generation.
  • Human capacity for learning makes many changes
    possible with an individual.
  • But learning from one generation to the next is
    probably key to human dominance.

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  • The edge of chaos in
  • Democracy
  • Market economies
  • Societal evolution
  • Personal evolution
  • Relationships

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  • The edge of chaos in
  • Mythology This shows how pervasive the edge of
    chaos has been in human life.
  • Joseph Campbell Master story teller

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  • The hero myth
  • The hero is called.
  • The hero leaves safety (order) and goes into the
    unknown (chaos)
  • Alternative sources of wisdom or power within
    society authorize the adventure.

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  • The hero myth
  • The hero often displays childlike qualities, and
    in particular is open to learning and doing new
    things.
  • The hero is changed by his adventure, and often
    returns with a treasure quite different from the
    one he set out to find.
  • The treasure is often found only upon arriving
    home.
  • Near Eastern myth - treasure was buried under the
    heroes own porch.

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  • Stages of the heros journey
  • Separation A time of great excitement or angst
    as the hero leaves or is torn from the known and
    thrust into the unknown.
  • Liminality
  • Hero is outside society.
  • Rules of normal behavior do not apply.
  • Chaos requires new behavior.
  • This combination causes reconstruction.
  • Reintegration
  • The hero rejoins his social group.
  • The hero has changed and sometimes his group has
    as well. This causes difficulty.

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  • Frodo and the Ring
  • Classic hero myth.
  • Fits the post-Mormon journey.
  • Frodo did not want to be the ring bearer.
  • Others were stronger better suited to the task,
    etc.
  • Discovered hidden strengths as faced chaos
    challenge.

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  • The Night Passage
  • Jonah and the whale.
  • Jonah was an unlikely hero.
  • God called him to a difficult mission, and he
    declined.
  • God sent a great fish to swallow Jonah up
  • Jonah reconsiders his options.
  • Jonah accepts mission, and is transformed while
    performing his duty.
  • The Jonah narrative has roots in many other
    preceding Near Eastern myths that I am not going
    to trace. However, a review of certain common
    themes is useful.

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  • The Night Passage
  • Heracles and Tiamat.
  • Tiamat swallows Heracles.
  • While in the belly of the beast, hero is stripped
    of powers.
  • Heracles loses his hair, so becoming childlike.
  • The loss of old powers causes new ones to
    coalesce.
  • The hero emerges from this womb-like state
    humbled, reconstructed and ironically, more
    powerful.

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  • Garden of Eden
  • The Fall

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The Lone and Dreary World
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  • Christ

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  • The Matrix
  • Star Trek
  • Etc.

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  • Being pushed into the unknown and then being
    reconstructed by a combination of personal choice
    and chaos is one of the most basic of all human
    stories.
  • And it is the story of recovery from Mormonism.

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  • The Mormon pioneers.
  • You are a pioneer.
  • Find your story.

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  • The Rider on the elephant

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  • Caring for your elephant
  • Small group animals.
  • Instinct is to stay with the group.
  • Deeply mimetic Choose your context and you
    choose your behavior.
  • Capacity for learning.
  • Cognitive Biases.
  • Responds to perceived necessity.

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  • Caring for your elephant
  • Hoarding.
  • Overeating.
  • Novelty.
  • Fear and desire.
  • Order and chaos.
  • Survive, propagate, improve.

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  • Got all that?
  • Mostly unconscious rider and elephant flirting
    with deadening boredom and threatening but
    enlivening chaos as they wander around their
    valley (and very occasionally other valleys)
    looking for comfortable places.

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  • I just told you a myth a meta-narrative based in
    science that is my best guess as to how it all
    works.
  • This meta-narrative includes the idea that it may
    be wrong.

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  • Meta-narratives are mostly unconscious, in spite
    of all we do to try to make them conscious.

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  • Exercise
  • Close eyes etc.
  • Imagine the kind of landscape (path, river, etc.)
    that is the best analogy to your various stages
    of life child teenager young adult etc.
  • This terrified me the first time I did it. I had
    to stop.
  • This is a dominant image no one operates on the
    same imagery all the time.

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  • Complex Systems Theory
  • Universal graph Thanks to Guy Hoelzer
  • Hierarchical graph
  • Nodes on graph are agents, like individual
    humans, or ants, or molecules.
  • Lines are connections communication between
    agents.
  • Start a lowest possible level saw quarks and
    draw a graph.
  • This will represent how agents relate to each
    other within a system.

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Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
GroupsStar Island 2006
  • Complex Systems Theory
  • Universal graph
  • Communication means information flows.
  • Is messy often messy.
  • That is, there is often a high noise to signal
    frequency in communication of all kinds.

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  • Complex Systems Theory
  • Universal graph
  • Stand back and look for clusters. Atoms?
  • Treat them as agents.
  • Draw a graph of communication among them.

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  • Complex Systems Theory
  • Universal graph
  • Stand back and look for clusters. Molecules?
  • Cells, individuals, social groups, ecosystems,
    etc.
  • Think of graph of solar system, galaxy, known
    universe.
  • We end up with a set of nested, multidimensional
    systems.
  • Systems within systems does not capture this
    complexity, and our graphic illustration helps to
    understand what is going on without accurately
    describing it.

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  • Complex Systems Theory
  • Universal graph
  • It is connected all the way up and down.
  • We can analyze systems in isolation to a degree.
  • But some effects at every low levels ripple a
    long way up, or at high levels ripple a long way
    down.
  • Changes in large scale patterns of social
    behavior can start with a neural tipping point
    caused by one bit of information.
  • The formation of important patterns of neural
    connections can be tipped by a small change at
    the societal level and changes social patterns.

185
  • Complex Systems Theory
  • Organization within level
  • Agents must be simple relative to system.
  • This requires that agents give up some
    properties, or ability to choose, to be part of
    system.
  • Giving up much of the agents individual
    adjacent possible.
  • These constraints on agent behavior are required
    for the complex interaction that creates
    creativity at the system level.
  • Must dumb down, in a sense.

186
  • Complex Systems Theory
  • Humans in social groups.
  • Social rules reduce decision making capacity of
    individuals.
  • Denial, lack of consciousness etc. makes it so
    humans do not even know that they have the
    degrees of freedom they do in social contexts
    thus making complex social interaction possible.
    Denial is hence adaptive to a degree.
  • And as is so often the case, an adaptive trait is
    used within the system by exploitive purposes.
  • Commercial sales techniques.
  • Cheaters, freeriders and parasites of various
    kinds.
  • We see the same behavior in this regard in the
    business, religious and other communities.

187

188
  • Complex Systems Theory
  • Humans in social groups.
  • Rules structures are required to strain cheating,
    parasitic etc. behavior.
  • Rules, mores etc. of this type are a form of
    wisdom.
  • Democracy.
  • Securities laws.

189
  • Complex Systems Theory
  • Definition of agent relative to system as we
    work up and down the clustering scale works on
    the basis of information flow.
  • Lots of information flow within agent, and
    relatively little between agent and the system
    that contains it the environment.
  • Information flow within a cell v. inter-cellular
    communication.
  • Information flow within a human individual v.
    inter-cellular communication.
  • Information flow within a small social group v.
    inter-group communication.

190
  • Complex Systems Theory
  • Boundaries between agents and systems, and
    between attractor basins within system, are
    areas of low information flow.
  • These information differentials create
    differences between the properties of agents and
    behavior between attractor basins.
  • Attractor basins are conditions that cause a
    certain type of relatively consistent behaviour
    among agents, like the weather patterns in the
    Artic v. the US Gulf Coast, or Federal voting
    patterns in New England v. Utah.
  • Attractor basins create clustering that could
    lead to something that would be defined as an
    agent at a higher order of analysis in the
    universal model.

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Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
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Think of the basins between the peaks as
attractor basins. Or think of the peaks as
fitness peaks in an evolutionary landscape.
192
The Post Mormon Metamorphosis
  • Complex Systems Theory
  • Traffic example.
  • Driving on right hand side or left hand side.
  • Make decision on the basis of first few
    interactions. Ripple out.
  • If homogenous environment, pockets of left and
    right would develop, with turbulence between.
  • In real environment
  • traffic would tend to go one way within a
    particular populated region,
  • sparsely populated regions would be turbulent and
    hence dangerous,
  • clear boundaries would reduce turbulence.
  • England and Europe.
  • Need for safety and proximity to other drivers in
    densely populated areas creates an attractor
    that causes a consistent behavioral pattern.

193
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
GroupsStar Island 2006
  • Complex Systems Theory
  • Traffic example.
  • A phase transition occurs when the state of the
    system changes radically.
  • For example, gradually increasing traffic flow in
    the relatively empty chaotic state between
    cities would eventually produce a systematizing
    of traffic flows there.
  • This change would likely be sudden, even though
    traffic flows increased slowly.
  • This can be thought of as a movement from one
    attractor basin (dominant pattern of behavior) to
    another.

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195
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
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196
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
GroupsStar Island 2006
  • Complex Systems Theory
  • Phase Transition
  • For smart humans in denial to keep a social
    system running, phase transitions often relate to
    changes in perception more than changes in
    reality.
  • Kuhns paradigm shift describes this in global
    terms and its used colloquially to describe for
    individuals.
  • The abused spouse who finally realizes she is
    being abused
  • Human phase transitions are often painful.

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198
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
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  • Social Science relevant Complexity Models
  • Communications Networks
  • What kind of disturbing information might be
    distributed?
  • Joseph Smiths untrustworthiness.
  • The Book of Mormons likely 19th century origins.
  • Smiths deceptive history when trying to get his
    followers to do what he wanted is well
    documented.
  • Lying about his sexual activities takes the cake
    here.
  • His history as a treasure seeker/charlatan for
    hire runs along same lines.
  • The simple question is, Should this man be
    trusted?
  • His perceptions were wrong so often that it does
    not matter why they were wrong whether he had
    epileptic visions was a pious fraud was a
    fraud etc.

199
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
GroupsStar Island 2006
  • Social Science relevant Complexity Models
  • Communications Networks
  • Research testing the Book of Mormons claim to be
    a history of the Americas from 600 BCE to 400 CE
    has been tested in many ways and found to be
    highly improbable.
  • Some of the best has used DNA data to test the
    BofM claim that Amerindians have Israelite
    ancestry.
  • Research by a bio-tech profession at Stanford
    will be published later this year or early next
    that uses complexity based pattern recognition
    programs to show to a high degree of probably
    that an identifiable person other than Joseph
    Smith wrote the Book of Mormon, plagiarizing
    another identifiable person.
  • Steve Farmer at Harvard uses complexity theory
    based pattern recognition programs to
    approximately date purportedly ancient documents.
  • Farmer has expressed interest to me in using his
    program to date the Book of Mormon.

200
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
GroupsStar Island 2006
  • Social Science relevant Complexity Models
  • Communications Networks
  • Growth rate in wired world already plummeting
    due to fact that much of sales pitch has a high
    probability of being false, and this information
    is available to potential converts on the
    Internet.
  • At the same time, JWs and Evangelicals are
    growing rapidly through the use of a much harder
    to falsify message.
  • I hasten to add that I do not see this as a good
    thing.

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Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
GroupsStar Island 2006
  • Social Science relevant Complexity Models
  • Communications Networks
  • Respected members like me regularly leave or
    quietly reduce their levels of commitment.
  • This information is suppressed, formally and
    informally, but still echoes to a degree.
  • Often speaking out is treated by both Mormon
    leaders and family members as a greater offence
    than the worst sins.
  • Studies re. suicide and many other social trends
    indicate that this giving of permission by
    respected community members is crucial to the
    spread of behavioral trends.
  • Hence, the Mormon effort to suppress this
    information, and to tar those who leave with a
    black brush.
  • Rumors re. my immoral behavior spread like
    wildfire.
  • Social psych research indicates this is to be
    expected.
  • This internet makes suppression of this type much
    harder.

202
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
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  • Social Science relevant Complexity Models
  • The Mormon attractor basin is maintained by a
    perception of utility.
  • This depends on a combination of absence of
    information and distorted perception (denial).
  • The information leveling function performed by
    the internet will put great pressure on this
    attractor basin.
  • There are limits as to how much in denial can
    restrain.

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204
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
GroupsStar Island 2006
  • Social Science relevant Complexity Models
  • Mormonism Model
  • Pressure - Awareness of disconfirming information
    related to Mormonisms advertised utility (the
    probability that only Mormons will go to Heaven
    and live with their families, for example).
  • Temperature Perceived net cost of Remaining
    Mormon
  • Density Likelihood of continued adherence to
    Mormonism

205
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
GroupsStar Island 2006
  • Social Science relevant Complexity Models
  • Mormonism Model
  • The trump factor in most cases is likely the
    effects of the closest associates.
  • Mormonism wont collapse.
  • It will mutate.
  • Loss of founder.
  • Loss of polygamy.
  • Loss of racist policy.

206
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
GroupsStar Island 2006
  • Social Science relevant Complexity Models
  • Mormonism Model
  • Think of the side of an attractor basin
    collapsing.
  • Mormonism has one or two generations to fix this.
  • Unlikely to go toward greater fundamentalism.
  • Too old and large.
  • Hard to grow.
  • Radical change would likely break it apart.

207
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
GroupsStar Island 2006
  • Social Science relevant Complexity Models
  • Mormonism Model
  • Likely to follow the lead of the Seventh Day
    Adventists, Mennonites and to an extent the
    FLDS/Community of Christ.
  • De-emphasize J. Smith and the Book of Mormon.
  • Allow creed to evaporate.
  • Dont talk about it anymore.
  • When pressed, plead postmodernism and humble
    agnosticism as required.

208
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
GroupsStar Island 2006
  • Social Science relevant Complexity Models
  • Mormonism Model
  • Likely to follow the lead of the Seventh Day
    Adventists, Mennonites and to an extent the
    FLDS/Community of Christ.
  • Emphasize importance of tradition.
  • Focus on praxis.
  • Emphasize science friendly aspects of Mormon
    dogma.
  • Keep cost of membership as high as possible while
    generating more goods and services that would be
    perceived by secularly oriented people to have
    value.
  • Follow the Evangelical Christian model.

209
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
GroupsStar Island 2006
  • Social Science relevant Complexity Models
  • Mormonism Model
  • These changes will not be planned.
  • Mormon leadership very unlikely to surrender
    power.
  • Internet and other alternative sources of
    authority will gradually put them in a position
    like the Catholics.

210
Complexity Theory and the Evolution of Religious
GroupsStar Island 2006
  • Social Science relevant Complexity Models
  • Mormonism Model
  • What is the difference between Mormons and
    Catholics?
  • They disbelieve opposite dogmas.
  • Catholic dogma states that the Pope is infallible
    in certain conditions, and virtually no Catholics
    believe that.
  • Mormon dogma states that Mormon prophets are
    fallible, and v
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