I'm not an official "Anglican" because my wife and I have not settled on a particular church yet. But at this time we mostly go to Episcopal or ACNA churches and will likely settle in one in time. But you bringing this up is entirely irrelevant because what I've stated so far in this thread is not my personal opinion, but the doctrine of the CoE as contained in the 39 Articles, which is Anglican and affirmed even by the ACNA.
Nope, you're either unaware of the difference between solo or nuda scriptura and sola scriptura, or you're just having a bad day and not making the logical inferences. I'm clearly in line with the latter since I'm quoting from Anglican "tradition." I'm also aware of Hooker's view of "the stool," but you seem unaware that "the stool" does not reject sola scriptura. One can and must include tradition and reason in one's epistemology. Sola scriptura does not reject either, but it is the final appeal. By your own words, you seem to imply that all three (or four if you want to add Wesley's "experience" to the mix) are on equal footing and that none of them has a final say. But this is an absurd and unrealistic view which Hooker himself dispels when he says:
This is sola scriptura and you'll notice the graded epistemology in it where Scripture gets the first and final say on any given issue. This is all sola scriptura means.
Regardless, article 6 is clear that the CoE does affirm sola scriptura (which does not throw away earlier tradition outright):
If this is what you understand about sola scriptura, than your view is flawed. Sola scriptura does not treat tradition as either irrelevant or not authoritative. Tradition gets a vote and is indeed a part of the epistemology, but, only Scripture has veto power because in the scheme of knowing, it has the highest authority.
Concerning prima scriptura, I'm aware many folks affirm this and want it to be the belief of Anglicanism (some Anglo-Catholics). But if one does so, they do it in defiance of the belief of the reformers and the Articles. In my opinion, to make such a claim for prima scriptura is to reject the reformation and to hop on an adrift raft that's either bound for chaos (solo scriptura/"me and my Bible"/or pick and chose your Tradition depending on which Fathers and councils you want to throw at each other) or Rome (or Constantinople) since to deny the
formal sufficiency of Scripture (which Catholics, Orthodox, and many Protestants--possibly including yourself) is according to J.I. Packer, to affirm that when it comes to Scripture, "they do not in practice fully accept it's authority, and their Christian profession, however sincere, is thereby flawed."
Again, sola scriptura is not solo scriptura. I am not talking about the latter, but the former, and post reformation Anglicanism
was clearly sola scriptura. Can the same be said today? Perhaps this is why I haven't formally committed to Anglicanism....