Explantion of Methodology

A user on X posed the following question regarding the basis for my work and the validity of my critique of modern Christianity and my view of the corrupted texts used to support illogical doctrines.

When you determine something is “corrupted” or “distorted” versus true, what standard do you use to distinguish this? Is it historical manuscript evidence, personal revelation, philosophical method, or something else? You emphasize hidden knowledge lost to the institutional church. Would you say that aligns with a Gnostic view of hidden truths? How do you differentiate between trustworthy apostolic tradition and what you label as distortion? By what epistemic standard are you making those judgments?

1) What standard distinguishes “corrupted/distorted” from “true” here?

Comparative, quasi-scientific textual criticism (Origen as model)

The author explicitly holds up Origen’s Hexapla as the paradigm for detecting corruption: laying multiple textual forms side-by-side to identify “variations, omissions, and alterations,” i.e., comparison + critical reasoning + empirical analysis.
On that basis, the author claims Origen judged the Septuagint (Greek) to require “less revision” than later Hebrew/Aramaic forms, treating this as evidence of later “abbreviated, distorted, or excised” passages.

Historical method: triangulation across independent witnesses

The general historical rule: a “historical fact… must be verifiable by at least three independent sources; without that triangulation… ‘history’ is merely propaganda.”
So “distortion” is associated with single-channel, power-shaped narratives; “truth” is associated with multi-source corroboration.

Philosophical method: logic + reason + falsifiability

The author frames “wisdom” as anchored in logic and willing to discard claims that fail reality-testing (“a philosopher must discard theories that are proven false”).
And it emphasizes the classical progression: logic → observation/reason about the physical world → only then contemplation of the ethereal.

Ethical discernment: the “triple-filter test”

A key normative standard is explicitly given as the repeated filter:
“Is it true? Is it good? Is it useful?” (Socrates)
In this framework, something can be labeled “rhetoric/propaganda” (a kind of distortion) if it persuades or controls but fails truthfulness and moral purpose.

“Lived experience,” but under discipline, not carte blanche revelation

The reference does appeal to “reason, ancient wisdom, and lived experience,” especially when discussing the ethereal realm—but it pairs that with warnings about deception and insists the same triple-filter discipline applies “in every realm.”
So “experience” functions as data, not as an automatic trump card, for instance, thousands of medical cases of reincarnation or near death expereience.

2) Does the “hidden knowledge lost to the institutional church” align with a Gnostic view?

It resembles a “hidden wisdom” motif (truth preserved in allegory/parables; institutional suppression; loss/burning/rewriting of texts).
But the epistemic posture described is not “secret knowledge validated by insider authority.” Instead, it repeatedly frames recovery as publicly testable by comparison, evidence, logic, and moral evaluation (“test everything for yourself”).

So, it converges with a ‘hiddenness’ diagnosis (truth obscured by power), while diverging from an elite, authority-by-secrecy posture, because it emphasizes method (Hexapla-style comparison), triangulation, and universal discernment rather than privileged initiation.

3) How does it differentiate “trustworthy apostolic tradition” from “distortion”?

The author’s dividing line is less “apostolic succession” and more apostolic-credibility-as-tested:

Proximity to earlier strata via textual comparison
Trust increases when a tradition/text aligns with earlier recoverable forms (e.g., Septuagint judged closer than later revisions, per Origen’s comparison).

Resistance to power-driven dogma
“Distortion” is repeatedly tied to institutional power: “politically motivated” redaction, imperial councils, condemnation of Origen, rewriting/burning, and dogma as control.

Consistency with reasoned, moral wisdom
The author treats “wisdom” (logic + moral clarity) as the benchmark against propaganda/rhetoric. If a doctrinal claim functions as fear-control or contradicts moral goodness, it’s implicitly suspect.

In short: “trustworthy tradition” is what best survives comparative textual scrutiny, multi-source historical checking, and the truth/good/useful filter—and what is least explained as a product of institutional convenience.

4) By what epistemic standard are these judgments being made?

Scientific/critical method applied to texts and history (comparison, critical reasoning, empirical analysis; triangulation).

Philosophical rigor (logic-first, reality-testing, discard what fails).

Moral teleology (truth evaluated by whether it is true/good/useful; rhetoric judged as distortion when untethered from wisdom).

Disciplined experiential data (experience allowed, but explicitly warned and filtered, not treated as infallible revelation).

That is: a hybrid of textual-historical criticism + philosophical reasoning + ethical discernment, with experience admitted as supporting evidence only when it passes the same disciplined filters.

Leave a Reply