gsa
Well-Known Member
One thing that confuses me about believers is the issue of authenticity of belief. Increasingly, I have a hard time taking their belief claims seriously.
I have avoided describing myself as an atheist for a few years now, largely because of a willingness to entertain the idea that there was something more significant to meaningful coincidences than false pattern recognition and because of some experiences that seemed to correspond to mystical ones. But I have always admitted my doubts about the cosmic significance, if any, of these experiences, both in private to myself and in public when discussing the issue with others.
The more I listen to the accounts of “believers,” however, the more I have the sense that they are not being genuine about their own internal estimates of their beliefs. Call it “bad faith” in the existentialist sense: The more I listen to them or read their accounts, the more I sense self-deception. In the case of more orthodox believers, I think that this is largely a result of unwillingness to relinquish social or political conservatism and/or live with uncertainty or a more mundane and indifferent universe, even though they do not truly believe it. With more open minded believers, I get the sense that they are hanging onto religious language, tradition and identity out of a sense of obligation or familial and communal pressure.
This may very well be different for religious extremists who simply cannot understand evolution or cosmology, of course, but even there I detect more than a hint of willful ignorance. Does anyone else have the impression that, in matters of belief, believers are just not being honest?
I have avoided describing myself as an atheist for a few years now, largely because of a willingness to entertain the idea that there was something more significant to meaningful coincidences than false pattern recognition and because of some experiences that seemed to correspond to mystical ones. But I have always admitted my doubts about the cosmic significance, if any, of these experiences, both in private to myself and in public when discussing the issue with others.
The more I listen to the accounts of “believers,” however, the more I have the sense that they are not being genuine about their own internal estimates of their beliefs. Call it “bad faith” in the existentialist sense: The more I listen to them or read their accounts, the more I sense self-deception. In the case of more orthodox believers, I think that this is largely a result of unwillingness to relinquish social or political conservatism and/or live with uncertainty or a more mundane and indifferent universe, even though they do not truly believe it. With more open minded believers, I get the sense that they are hanging onto religious language, tradition and identity out of a sense of obligation or familial and communal pressure.
This may very well be different for religious extremists who simply cannot understand evolution or cosmology, of course, but even there I detect more than a hint of willful ignorance. Does anyone else have the impression that, in matters of belief, believers are just not being honest?