stevevw
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- Nov 4, 2013
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As far as I understand it a natural cognitive thought process is not a bias. They cover biases in the study and state that this can also influence people with believing or not believing. But they still state that religious concepts are still a natural thought process regardless of any outside influence. The thing is any study would obviously address biases and other factors that may influence the results and cause people to think a certain way. That is always covered in these studies and to not cover these things would invalidate the study in the first place. It would be a basic mistake and one that qualified experts in their field would not overlook.In what way does it detract from my earlier point?
But you are making out that these natural thoughts that children have and then can be also found in adults is some sort of outside influence that is put there from other people or society just like indoctrination. Is this what you are inferring as I am not sure what you are trying to imply. From what I understand the study is stating the opposite. It is saying that these thoughts are not the product of any bias as they have filtered those possibilities out. They are natural thoughts that children have and are born with. It is later on that they can be influenced as they grow.How many times must it be repeated? Many inclinations come "naturally" to us. It doesn't follow that we should accept whatever our inclinations lead us to believe. We know our inclinations are not infallible. We know that we are prone to error and cognitive biases. That alone is enough to give us pause to reflect.
Some of peoples beliefs can be sub conscious. They may say they dont believe but then act in certain situation like they do believe. That is why some say there is no such thing as a real atheist. Deep down we all have some sort of belief in something beyond what we can see.
http://artsci.wustl.edu/~pboyer/PBoyerHomeSite/articles/2008BoyerReligionEssay.pdf
As I recall it was your opinion that the evidence supported what you said. Thats the problem with evolution in that both sides can make a case for the evidence supporting what they believe. But you have to be clear on what it is you are trying to point out. Just like with this debate you keep focusing on natural biases when the study is not stating this at all. They have taken biases and other influences into account.If you recall, in our discussion on evolution, you cited a number of studies as support for your position, and I demonstrated to you that those studies did not support your position. In fact, in some cases, the authors' stated the opposite! Do you really want to go down that road again?
Just think about it for a minute. Why would they make a point to say that religion is a natural thought process if it stems from a bias. If it comes from a bias then there is no point in making a case for religion coming natural to children or adults. It would be based on a false premise. I think you need to read the article in full to get what I am saying.
Well in some ways yes. We should learn to accept out naked self no matter what we think. That is a major problem for many with self worth and acceptance. But that doesn't mean we go to the extreme like you are inferring and run around naked. The same for belief. We should accept that the thought processes of divine agents, the afterlife and things that are beyond our material world are thoughts we should accept as part and parcel of who we are. We shouldn't reject them as being deluded but we shouldn't also run around living with our heads in the clouds either.We also start out naked. By your argument then, we should embrace nudity. It's normal.
I think that is all this study is saying. Its not jumping to extremes or saying God is true or that we should become monks. It is just stating that thoughts about things that are what people call religious like divinity are natural thoughts to humans especially children. And a belief in them is something we can all do at times especially children.
No I think you are taking things to that level. I think some people balk at the suggestion of belief and divinity. They immediately reject all notion and dont want anything to do with it as its something they think is stupid or unreal. Its either all or nothing. If you think about it in one way or another all people will have thoughts along the lines of believing in something beyond this material world. Even a belief if UFOs and aliens is a form of believing in life beyond our reality.I don't see anything "balanced" about your suggestion. Your argument seems to be the equivalent of saying that, because we are born naked, we should remain naked all our lives. It's "natural".
But I'm not saying everyone has to become religious or follow aliens or some other group like the Masons. I am saying and the study is saying that we need to acknowledge that the type of thinking that leads to believing in these things is a part of being human. Its the thinking process that is important here and not the things that people end up believing that the study is focusing on.Some people will go overboard and believe all sorts of things. But its the fact that people have a need to believe in something is the point in the first place is the point and that this is a part of being human that we need to accept.
Yes I agree.Maybe our natural tendency toward questioning claims is there for a reason too? So that we don't end up duped, perhaps?
Yes I agree. But the thinking that goes into believing is not hog wash. That is a natural part of being human.Questioning beliefs is also a real part of being human. Investigating a claim and finding that it is "hog wash" is also a real part of being human.
It also doesn't follow that we should reject our nakedness completely.It also doesn't follow that we should remain naked because we are born naked.
Finally, a 2001 paper in Cognitive Psychology6 finds that while parents and communities can have a profound influence on what children believe about origins, middle-school and elementary-aged students tend towards creationist beliefs even if those beliefs weren't taught by the parents:
Early adolescents (11 to 13 years), like their parents, embraced the dominant beliefs of their community, be they creationist or evolutionist. Their younger siblings, especially those in the middle elementary school years (8 to 10 years) were more apt to be exclusively creationist, whatever their community of origin. Early elementary school children (5 to 7 years) endorsed creationism more strongly if they had been to a fundamentalist school or if they were reminded of creationist explanations, as in the forced-choice measures.
http://www.evolutionnews.org/2014/08/more_studies_sh088551.html
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