Watchtower Dishonesty

by caspian 6 Replies latest jw friends

  • caspian
    caspian

    Another fine example of the Watch Tower dishonestly quoting and taking out of context what people believe and say.

    This fine example was emailed to me by a good friend an ex District Overseer in the USA

    Let me offer a good example of the use of selective quotations. For many, many years the Society has quoted famed British astronomer Sir Fred Hoyle out of context. They have portrayed him as against evolution and as a creationist. Ill be charitable and say that writer after writer trotted out the same stuff for years, without checking. You can find the citations for yourself, so Ill just supply Hoyles.

    Take a look at the dust jacket of his book "The Intelligent Universe" which speaks for itself: "The **Darwinian** theory of evolution is shown to be plainly wrong. Life has evolved [!!!] because biological components of cosmic origin have been progressively assembled here on Earth. These components have arrived from outside, borne in from the cosmos on comets" ... "The key to understanding evolution is the virus. The viruses responsible for evolution and the viruses responsible for diseases are very similar." (Published first in 1983 by Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York.)

    Note that it is DARWINISM and not evolution that Sir Fred takes issue with. He believes that our planet is an "assembly station" that was "seeded" from outer space and that life did indeed evolve, just not from inanimate matter. Please also note that his thesis is not buried somewhere in his books; they are the heart and soul of his clearly written argument.

    It is difficult to believe that the Societys writers have never read an entire publication by Sir Fred or more than a line or two. If they have not, their misrepresentations are indefensible. If they have read his books, they are obviously suppressing or misrepresenting what the distinguished astronomer really espouses, because it is quite impossible to read his books without understanding what he clearly articulates.

    In using this and similar books in the past, perhaps the Societys writer looked only at the FRONT of the books dust jacket, whose subtitle is "A New View of Creation and Evolution," and did not look at the BACK, on which there is a picture of the astronomer and in large print the words, "We have DESCENDED FROM LIFE SEEDED FROM THE DEPTHS OF SPACE." (Caps mine.)

    On page 41 of the Creator book under the heading "A Deliberate Intellectual Act" in another, longer quotation we read (finally after all these years) the all-but-buried clause referring to Hoyle, "even espousing that life on earth arrived from outer space," while the paragraph ends by quoting him that "it seemed better to suppose that the origin of life was a deliberate intellectual act." (You are encouraged to read the entire page for yourself.)

    Sounds great, he believes in God and creation, right? Once again the sentences are taken out of context, so that the reader will infer what the author does not imply. The reader readily concludes that a toweringly important scientist believes what JWs believe.

    Read for yourself Hoyles discussions about cosmic intelligences superior to ours. And what does he actually believe about creation?

    In his own words: "It makes little difference whether the Universe was created in 4004 BC as Archbishop Ussher asserted, or 10,000,000 years ago, if indeed there ever was a creation, which as we have seen there are plenty of reasons to doubt." [!]

    Hoyle winds up his argument by noting: "Because the correct logical procedure is to build upwards from precisely formed subroutines, we on the Earth had to evolve [!] from a seemingly elementary starting point. Yet so powerful was the onward surge, so urgent the climb up the great mountain, that on Earth a creature at last arose with an inkling in its mind of what it really was, a whisper of its identity: We are the intelligence that preceded us in its new material representationor rather, we are the re-emergence of that intelligence, the latest embodiment of its struggle for survival." (Pp. 238, 239.)

    You be the judge: Does Sir Fred Hoyle believe what the Society would have you think? Is the basic belief of Sir Fred Hoyle supportive of the Societys position? Absolutely not. That hasnt stopped them from misquoting him for years.

    A final thought: When teaching at Gilead School, Bert Schroeder (now an aged and frail member of the GB) used to cite the rule "falsus in uno, falsus in toto" as a standard to determine trustworthiness"untrue in one, untrue in all."

    Time to apply this yardstick.

    Caspian

  • hillary_step
    hillary_step

    Maximus re-visited,

    Thank you for bringing this well researched information to the Board again Caspian.

    Best regards - HS

  • metatron
    metatron

    I hope to be publishing a post on the name 'Jehovah' soon that similarily exposes Watchtower dishonesty.

    metatron

  • AMNESIAN
    AMNESIAN

    I've only recently begun to allow myself to consider the charge of intellectual dishonesty on the part of the Society as regards the evolution vs. creation arguments it advances in its literature. I continue to be stunned.

    It is difficult to believe that the Societys writers have never read an entire publication by Sir Fred or more than a line or two. If they have not, their misrepresentations are indefensible. If they have read his books, they are obviously suppressing or misrepresenting what the distinguished astronomer really espouses, because it is quite impossible to read his books without understanding what he clearly articulates.

    On the contrary, I'd be fairly shocked to learn that any writer, when composing any article on any subject, ever reads an entire publication--- by Hoyle or virtually anyone else cited. I usually imagine the articles being composed in much the same manner as many Witnesses "study" their WT Study article for the week: scan the paragraph, locate and hi-lite the sentence(s) containing those words that match. Admittedly a hyper-cynical view of the process, but, based on my many years of reading WT literature, I sincerely wonder if much more academic due diligence is involved (or required!).

    That is not to say, though, that I don't believe the writers are aware of their blatant misrepresentations.

    Take a look at the dust jacket of his book "The Intelligent Universe" which speaks for itself: "The **Darwinian** theory of evolution is shown to be plainly wrong. Life has evolved [!!!] because biological components of cosmic origin have been progressively assembled here on Earth. These components have arrived from outside, borne in from the cosmos on comets" ... "The key to understanding evolution is the virus. The viruses responsible for evolution and the viruses responsible for diseases are very similar."

    Even the most overworked, simply lazy, and/or plain dishonest writer realizes the crux of the author's position from this dust jacket commentary alone (and thus the dishonesty of any citation claiming the author's argument in support of creation) whether he reads any part of the book's actual contents or not. Tsk, tsk, shameful.

    A final thought: When teaching at Gilead School, Bert Schroeder (now an aged and frail member of the GB) used to cite the rule "falsus in uno, falsus in toto" as a standard to determine trustworthiness"untrue in one, untrue in all."

    Perhaps, then, Schroeder is responsible for this self same standard by which the Society has always condemned all other religions---i.e., any single half-truth or outright falsehood in a teaching serves to discredit the entire faith regardless of how many other of its teachings are scripturally-based (one cannot easily forget the "one drop of ink contaminating a glass of otherwise crystal clear and pure water" analogy employed ad nauseum with Bible student after Bible student back in the "Truth Book" heydays!)

    Time to apply this yardstick.

    As if. That was "standard by which the Society has always condemned all other religions."

    Thanks for the post. Well worth considering.

    AMNESIAN

    Edited by - AMNESIAN on 27 August 2002 14:15:22

  • twain30
    twain30

    The same thing has been done with Carl Sagan, they made him out to be someone who believed in a direct creation when it just wasn't so.

  • funkyderek
    funkyderek

    If I recall correctly, the Creation book selectively quoted from Hoyle's book Evolution from Space. I find it hard to believe that anyone could quote from a book with such a title and believe its author was a creationist.

    Edited by - funkyderek on 28 August 2002 10:37:38

  • freeman
    freeman

    The dishonesty I found in this WT publication is what finally opened my eyes.

    Freeman

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