This Christmas season, we bring the yearly reminder to make mankind your business. "A Christmas Carol" is a long beloved story that describes the transformation of Ebenezer Scrooge from a misanthropic, greedy, old miser to a deeply caring and altruistic person. Perhaps most importantly, the text is a meditation on poverty and how those in positions of power create and justify their power by using poverty as a tool for exploitation. Scrooge's past, present, and future not only plug at Scrooge's heartstrings due to nostalgia but they also show Scrooge how his actions directly impact those in need, particularly Tiny Tim.
Take some time this Christmas season to not only give us a listen but to read the text for yourself and become transformed as Scrooge was. In today's world, it is needed, lest our future become a bleak and desolate hellscape no longer fit for life.
Happy Halloween!
A riddle for you: what do you get when you cross Charles Fort with Henry David Thoreau? You get Danny B. Stewart, folklorist extrordinaire!
Danny Stewart is an on-the-ground folklorist who has collected hundreds of original stories in the greater Utah area. These stories consist of encounters with the fantastic, the impossible, the ghoulish, the loving, the benign, and the banal. They range from angry flying monkeys bouncing from tree to tree at elementary schools, headless children that haunt the Provo Tabernacle (now known as the Provo City Center Temple) and downtown Provo, gnomes and faeries that roam Lions Park in Provo, UT, ghosts that haunt basements in bars, and many different ventures into what Danny calls the Provo Vortex on Grandview Hill.
Danny’s ultimate charge is to challenge closely held assumptions of both academics and lay people. Reality is far stranger than we tend to think, but that strangeness need not be thought of as entirely evil and needing to be avoided. Indeed, life is far richer than the stale and paranoid realities we tend to create for ourselves, and we have people like Danny to thank for bringing that richness to our attention.
For more information on Danny and his ghost tours, check out his Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/provoutahghosttour
Check out this interview Danny did in Canada earlier thisyear: https://open.spotify.com/episode/01XH4hqCO4aKIJ7bPAgvA4?si=s1gJHghgTQm3gGE5nPJhOA
Special thanks to Emily Van Dyke for her photo graphic design.
On this week’s episode of Horsin’ Around we are pleased to have one of our dear classmates at CGU, Shiloh Logan, join us. Our conversation revolves around the intricacies of the Mormon “Liberty Community,” groups of Latter-day Saints that are informally organized around Ezra Taft Benson’s “Proper Role of Government” and the writings of W. Cleon Skousen. We further explore the ways that Satan lurks in the background of these ideologies, as well as Shiloh’s own professional, philosophical, and spiritual journey with the Liberty Community and Latter-day Saint conservatism more broadly. It truly is a Religious Studies romp as we delve into the ways that we “scripturalize” certain impulses in our political worlds by incorporating cosmic narratives that orient these political orientations, framing them as governed by God, Satan, and/or their emissaries. These narratives and their significance are then constantly renegotiated and incorporated when new events and people become introduced into the political world.
We also briefly touch on what was then breaking news (we recorded this conversation last Fall) about Operation Underground Railroad’s founder Tim Ballard getting into hot water both legally and with the institutional Mormon church and the early shockwaves that were beginning to go through Mormondom. In light of this last topic, we may have to bring Shiloh back to speak more about more recent developments in that infinitely fascinating interaction between an influential layperson and the upper echelons of Mormon leadership.
After Christian and Brandon descended into unmitigated madness after their first two dates, their spouses looked over at them and said "Hey guys, pass some of that good stuff over!"
We now venture east from Greece to the roots of the Himalayas to show that philosophy is not just a thing for Westerners and especially that Buddhism is not merely a "religion." Indeed, "Buddhism" itself is not a thing until European imperial forces travel east and categorize the myriad ways of the Dharma as such. This makes understanding the Buddha, his teachings, and how they spread across the Asian and, reportedly, African and European continents a rather sticky endeavor.
After this necessary preface, we cover the life of Siddartha Gautama, a prince in the Indian peninsula around 600 BCE, who left palace life and eventually became the Buddha, the enlightened one. The Dhammapada is a collection of reported teachings of the Buddha, or, in other words, constitute his various upaya, or skillful means, to aid humanity in becoming liberated from the cycle of rebirth and dissolve back into the cosmic void. We also cover the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path, or the Eight-Pointed Wheel of the Dharma.
Buddhism in its entirety is far too vast and deep to cover in one episode. Consider this a basic crash course to whet your palate to want to seek out more on your own.
For those who would like to learn more about European imperialism and how it created almost everything we know about "the Orient," Buddhism, and religion more broadly, we recommend the following texts:
"The Invention of World Religions: Or, How European Universalism Was Preserved in the Language of Pluralism" by Tomoko Masuzawa
"Orientalism" by Edward Said (we will likely cover this in a much later episode)
Here is the Big Joel video that we mention in the episode: https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=big+joel+ben+shapiro
In this episode of Latter-day Saint Thinkers, we cover one of Christian’s favorite figures in Mormon thought: the inimitable Eugene “Gene” England. From his early years growing up in Downey, Idaho to his retirement from BYU, England lived his life in an organically liberal Mormon way. “Liberal” with a little “l” being the key, here. Gene fiercely believed in and was willing to accept opinions that were different than his own and lived his life devoted to the ways that Mormonism provided folks the tools to drink deeply from all sources of information in a way that enriched and strengthened faith. To this end, as a graduate student at Stanford, he founded Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, which sought to bring diverse voices into dialogue with one another in the hopes of creating a robust conversation about Mormonism for both intellectuals and lay people alike. However, England found himself ensconced in the bourgeoning culture war that had been brewing between Mormon intellectuals and the institutional Church for some time. At BYU he found himself labeled as both too liberal and not liberal enough. All while he simultaneously received apostolic beatdowns for progressive theological views on God and writing a biography of Brigham Young. In short, Gene found himself at a crossroads in the history of Mormon thought. He was born too late to be among the “golden years” of Mormon thought and theology in the early 1900s but born too soon to be among scholars of Mormonism that apply a critical lens to their faith and still be accepted that we see nowadays. We owe much of our intellectual freedom to Gene, and we are all the better for it.
Christian cries in the episode too, so that means it must be a good one!
Here are links to the resources we drew from to create this episode:
Stretching the Heavens: The Life of Eugene England and the Crisis of Modern Mormonism by Terryl Givens:
https://www.amazon.com/Stretching-Heavens-Eugene-England-Mormonism/dp/146966433X
Eugene England: A Mormon Liberal (Introductions to Mormon Thought) by Kathleen Haglund:
https://www.amazon.com/Eugene-England-Kristine-L-Haglund/dp/0252043936
The Eugene England Foundation:
In recent years, Latter-day Saints have emphasized spiritual experiences as their epistemological vantage point that upholds their respective worldviews. This shift is exemplified by the Church drastically changing its approach to missionary work in 2004 with "Preach My Gospel" which emphasizes that missionaries urge potential converts to have and continuously cultivate their own experiences with God. Even further, Pres. Russell M. Nelson has also persistently urged members to do the same, such as his prophecy where he said "In coming days, it will not be possible to survive spiritually without the guiding, directing, comforting, and constant influence of the Holy Ghost. My beloved brothers and sisters, I plead with you to increase your spiritual capacity to receive revelation.” Truman G. Madsen was a primary influence in this shift where--recalling back to Armand Mauss' episode--retrenchment became so tight that its borders began to crack a bit leading to a shift in the Church's philosophical approach. Madsen's approach to the faith was less about hashing out minute arguments and apologetics and instead hammering home the primacy of personal experience. Using William James' radical empiricism as his basis, Madsen states that Mormonism is true because it feels true for those whom Joseph Smith's story resonates with. The Book of Mormon need not be true due to historical facts, but can instead be true on the basis of how it transforms lives in the here and now. All solidified facts and philosophies, according to William James and Truman G. Madsen, are the results of people hashing out what experiences they find meaningful and that they are always subject to change.
Suggested Reading for Overachievers:
"Five Classics by Truman G. Madsen" by Truman G. Madsen
"Joseph Smith The Prophet" by Truman G. Madsen
"The Truman G. Madsen Story" by Barnard N. Madsen
Feel free to look over his entire corpus which cane be found on his website here: https://trumanmadsen.com/new/?page_id=45
In this episode, Christian and Brandon tackle one of the defining pinnacles of "Western" philosophy. This text is of the utmost importance because Aristotle's rationality, especially as it pertains to metaphysics, ethics, and politics, is very much still alive today. Have you ever heard the saying "The truth is somewhere in between two extremes"? Or that the highest virtue that leads to happiness is contemplation? Have you ever been moved by the art of Dante or Dickens? Aristotle.
The Nichomachean Ethics is famous for introducing, what Aristotle calls, "the golden mean." In all forms of action, Aristotle says, there are two polar extremes. Virtue is learning how to find the proper ratios between these two polarities. For example, cowardice and recklessness are two polar extremes; courage is the virtue that comes from discerning and acting upon the proper course of action between these two extremes. Through constant practice--what Aristotle calls habituation--moral virtues are acquired which will gradually lead one to intellectual virtues. As one masters all virtues, through the act of contemplation, a man will be a god on earth, leading and helping the rest of humanity on their journey.
It should come as no surprise that Aristotle played a chief role in the formation of Christian, Jewish, and Muslim theologies. He further established rational values that flourished during the Enlightenment period, that we are today reaping the fruits of.
In this episode, we jump into new territory--altered states, if you will. We are pleased to welcome Connor Storck onto the show to discuss his work with psychedelic law in the United States.
Connor is currently a law student at the University of Detroit Mercy School of Law where he hopes to complete his J.D. and sit for the bar in 2024. He is also the current Director of Operations for the Intercollegiate Psychedelics Network (website can be found here: https://www.intercollegiatepsychedelics.net).
Connor and Brandon were in the same cohort at Rice University where they both received their respective MA degrees in 2019. Connor's perspectives on psychedelics and the prominence of altered states of consciousness within religious communities proved to be transformative for Brandon--so much so, that it blew open his brain to the possibility of Mormonism being founded on such substance use (more on that in the future--stay tuned).
In this episode, Connor and Brandon start out by reminiscing about their days at Rice (where Christian feels left out for missing all the fun). They then jump into the tumultuous, Sisyphus-like battle over the legality of psychedelics and trying to close the Pandora's box opened by Richard Nixon's and Ronald Reagan's respective "war on drugs." Psychedelics, and altered states of consciousness more broadly, are foundational to the history of humanity --past, present, and future--and the creation of culture and mythology itself. It is simply unavoidable and has even proven to be deeply valuable in therapeutic settings. While the legal future of psychedelics is perhaps a few decades from becoming more normalized, there is hope!
After losing their sanity on their previous date, Christian and Brandon will now bare their souls to each other for your listening pleasure. Buckle up y'all, we ain't in Kansas no more!
In this week of Horsin' Around, we welcome His Holiness, Father Marxus Stelios onto the show... Wait... we're being told that their name is actually Lewis Chapman and they are a fellow student at Claremont Graduate University. Our bad! This week we bring Lewis Chapman onto the show to discuss their work as well as to mediate on the political and economic world of the United States. We discuss things such as how to deal with homelessness, what makes a functional economy, and whether there is any connection between Lewis not seeing Monty Python and the Holy Grail and their neuroses. We also discuss Jordan Peterson's viral video, "Message to CEOs" (access here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3d8qLkoYMk) and the tenability of his proposal and what is driving him to say what he says. This episode is also a crash course into basic Marxism, how it is typically misunderstood by the general public, and what Marxism would or could actually look like when it's not implemented by totalitarian regimes. For further questions or suggestions, please reach out to us at theanalystandthefool@gmail.com
***This episode contains brief and sensitive discussions of racist views--The Analyst & The Fool does not condone these views--Listener discretion is advised***
Bruce R. McConkie (1915-1985) stands as one of the most authoritative voices in present-day Mormonism; his views are pervasive and oftentimes considered to represent Mormonism itself. In lesson manuals that were in use from the mid-to-late-1970s until the Church implemented the "Come Follow Me" program in 2019, Bruce R, McConkie was quoted more than any other General Authority of the Church, including past leaders like Joseph Smith and Brigham Young. His book Mormon Doctrine (1st ed. published in 1958, 2nd ed. in 1968 with a revised version in 1979) is still one of Deseret Book's best-selling texts, despite its removal from shelves in 2010. His Messiah series and his Doctrinal Commentaries series are still available for purchase at Deseret Book.
But what is it about Bruce R. McConkie that made him so authoritative and ubiquitous?
The answer, in short, is that he spoke loudly and carried a big stick!
McConkie is an incredibly controversial figure in Mormon history, despite his authoritative pervasiveness. In fact, it was the authoritative and charismatic way he wrote and spoke that made him so controversial to Church leaders at the time he first published Mormon Doctrine and made a big splash on the Mormon scene. His version of a strict, Puritanical, and law-driven Mormonism made understanding the faith resolute in an era where the Church had been fighting to remain neutral on certain stances (e.g., evolution and the nature of God). McConkie was anti-evolution, anti-creed, and anti-human nature, all while preaching a "particular universalist" salvation where all are saved, but only a select few will be exalted in the Celestial Kingdom. He knew the scriptures inside and out, being able to quote verses perfectly from memory and provide cross-references to other scriptures to provide further context and commentary. He, like Joseph Smith, will forever be known for good and evil in how instrumental he was in shaping Mormon discourse in the present day.
For any questions or comments, please reach out to us at theanalystandthefool@gmail.com
Suggested reading for overachievers:
Mormons and the Bible: The Place of the Latter-day Saints in American Religion by Philip Barlow
David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism by Gregory Prince
Mormon Doctrine by Bruce R. McConkie
The Messiah Series by Bruce R. McConkie
"What Think Ye of Salvation by Grace?" by Bruce R. McConkie (access here: https://speeches.byu.edu/talks/bruce-r-mcconkie/think-ye-salvation-grace/)
"The Seven Deadly Heresies" by Bruce R. McConkie (access here: https://speeches.byu.edu/talks/bruce-r-mcconkie/seven-deadly-heresies/)
"All Are Alike Unto God" by Bruce R. McConkie (This is the talk that Pres. Spencer W. Kimball commanded McConkie to give at BYU following the removal of the priesthood ban in 1978); access here: https://speeches.byu.edu/talks/bruce-r-mcconkie/alike-unto-god/)