Gabriella,
As I said I think teaching beliefs to children - interpretations of experiences and personal perspectives - is part of being human. If you want to label these interpretations and perspectives as "lies" so be it. I don't intend to generalise that teaching children beliefs or "lies" if you prefer to call them that, is problematic.
You’re not getting it still. Teaching, “culture X believes Y”, “tribe A believes B” etc is fine. Teaching that Y or B are
facts though is a type of lying, or it is when those things are as epistemically broken as AB’s “soul”.
I think some beliefs can be problematic. I also think some generalisations - you can call generalisations "lies" as well if you prefer - can be problematic.
Irrelevant. See above.
For example certain beliefs about the superiority of liberal democracies can cause people to turn a blind eye to the exploitation and the export of death and destruction that those liberal democracies have inflicted on foreign communities.
Possibly it can be useful to look at the number of people negatively affected by a belief in order to form an opinion on how problematic that belief is. Having said that it is often impossible to quantify the negative impact of a particular belief as it is impossible to isolate the cause and effect to single beliefs.
I don't really have the data to decide if interpreting experiences to form a belief in a soul is particularly problematic. On the other hand I could quantify to some extent the negative impact of a belief that it is morally justified in certain circumstances to bomb innocent people to achieve political aims - whether that is the political aims of terrorists or governments. And yet it seems part of being human that people continue to teach children beliefs that justify such actions.
That’s a different conversation. This one is about whether or not it’s right to teach
as facts things to children that the teacher cannot know to be facts. Imagine that, say, after History class and Geography class the teacher then said to the assembled eight-year-olds, “And rainbows are created by unicorns pooping colours as they fly across the sky”.
There’s no definition of “unicorns”; there’s no explanation of how they’d function; there no evidence of any kind for their existence; there are robust, reason and evidence-based explanations for how rainbows really occur. And all these things have been explained to the teacher over and over again.
In epistemological terms this is identical to AB’s effort about “souls” – precisely the problems that would apply teaching “unicorns make rainbows” as facts apply to teaching “souls drive free will” as facts to children.