T.G.G. Moogly
Traditional Atheist
I figured to repost this brief exchange from another thread:
The question I have is in any matter at all, be it religious or not, how does a person who believes in ghosts and spirits and souls and gods, a non physical reality, make decisions about what is real and what is not real. Maybe the better question is how such a person makes a decision on what is worth their time at all.
Do religious people just have a greater need for authority and so they are more likely to believe something I would casually dismiss? How do they know what to dismiss and what to take seriously? Found this informative article:
Monsters, Ghosts and Gods - Why We Believe
Are you referring to faith?
I'm referring to certainty in any matter where the truth cannot be known.
I can be be absolutely certain about some matter notwithstanding your inability to know what I know.
The question I have is in any matter at all, be it religious or not, how does a person who believes in ghosts and spirits and souls and gods, a non physical reality, make decisions about what is real and what is not real. Maybe the better question is how such a person makes a decision on what is worth their time at all.
Do religious people just have a greater need for authority and so they are more likely to believe something I would casually dismiss? How do they know what to dismiss and what to take seriously? Found this informative article:
Monsters, Ghosts and Gods - Why We Believe
"Humans first started believing in the supernatural because they were trying to understand things they couldn't explain," says Benjamin Radford, a book author, paranormal investigator and managing editor of Skeptical Inquirer magazine. "It's basically the same process as mythology: At one point people didn't understand why the sun rose and set each day, so they suggested that a chariot pulled the sun across the heavens."
Before modern scientific explanations of germ theory, explained Radford, who writes the "Bad Science" column for LiveScience, people didn't understand how diseases could travel from one person to another. "They didn't understand why a child was stillborn, or why a drought occurred, so they came to believe that such events had supernatural causes," he said.