huckelberry wrote: ↑Thu May 29, 2025 6:40 pm
Malkie, thinking of your suggestion I find myself thinking it might be of value in trying to understand different religions to ask oneself what it might be like to actually believe this way. Of course one cannot actually be accurate about this but the reflection might help insight. It also might help understand other people a bit better.
That's certainly an interesting and (in my opinion) useful way of thinking.
Today, while on the road on our way to Utah, my wife & I were talking about what "causes" belief. Neither of us could get a handle on what it means to
choose to believe something, especially in a religious sense, though apparently some people can do so.
I think I see belief as some kind of emergent state that araises from a combination of various inputs (facts, opinions, etc.) of various strengths. As such, due to new information becoming available, or, perhaps, a new way of thinking about something, there may come a
tipping point at which a belief becomes non-belief, or
vice versa, But I don't see how I could say, for example, I've
chosen to believe in a god - either a specific god, or in the general concept of a god.