The Accountant, OBE, KC
I'm, unusually for me, going to start with a rather long quote. It's from
Rationality by Steven Pinker and I'm quoting it because I read it last night and thought "well, exactly!" and it puts things far more neatly an eloquently than I probably could.
People divide their worlds into two zones. One consists of the physical objects around them, the other people they deal with face to face, the memory of their interactions, and the rules and norms that regulate their lives. People have mostly accurate beliefs about this zone, and they reason rationally within it. Within this zone, they believe there’s a real world and that beliefs about it are true or false. They have no choice: that’s the only way to keep gas in the car, money in the bank, and the kids clothed and fed. Call it the reality mindset.
The other zone is the world beyond immediate experience: the distant past, the unknowable future, faraway peoples and places, remote corridors of power, the microscopic, the cosmic, the counterfactual, the metaphysical. People may entertain notions about what happens in these zones, but they have no way of finding out, and anyway it makes no discernible difference to their lives. Beliefs in these zones are narratives, which may be entertaining or inspiring or morally edifying. Whether they are literally “true” or “false” is the wrong question. The function of these beliefs is to construct a social reality that binds the tribe or sect and gives it a moral purpose. Call it the mythology mindset.
Bertrand Russell famously said, “It is undesirable to believe a proposition when there is no ground whatsoever for supposing it is true.” The key to understanding rampant irrationality is to recognize that Russell’s statement is not a truism but a revolutionary manifesto. For most of human history and prehistory, there were no grounds for supposing that propositions about remote worlds were true. But beliefs about them could be empowering or inspirational, and that made them desirable enough.
Russell’s maxim is the luxury of a technologically advanced society with science, history, journalism, and their infrastructure of truth-seeking, including archival records, digital datasets, high-tech instruments, and communities of editing, fact-checking, and peer review. We children of the Enlightenment embrace the radical creed of universal realism: we hold that all our beliefs should fall within the reality mindset. We care about whether our creation story, our founding legends, our theories of invisible nutrients and germs and forces, our conceptions of the powerful, our suspicions about our enemies, are true or false. That’s because we have the tools to get answers to these questions, or at least to assign them warranted degrees of credence. And we have a technocratic state that should, in theory, put these beliefs into practice.
But as desirable as that creed is, it is not the natural human way of believing. In granting an imperialistic mandate to the reality mindset to conquer the universe of belief and push mythology to the margins, we are the weird ones—or, as evolutionary social scientists like to say, the WEIRD ones: Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic.43 At least, the highly educated among us are, in our best moments. The human mind is adapted to understanding remote spheres of existence through a mythology mindset. It’s not because we descended from Pleistocene hunter-gatherers specifically, but because we descended from people who could not or did not sign on to the Enlightenment ideal of universal realism. Submitting all of one’s beliefs to the trials of reason and evidence is an unnatural skill, like literacy and numeracy, and must be instilled and cultivated.
Suffice to say that I unashamedly aspire to 'universal realism'.
Not sure what point you're making here. If you believe that people can choose their beliefs, do you have any objective evidence or sound reasoning for that belief?
I don't think people can choose their beliefs in the 'reality mindset'. As an example, when you discuss counterintuitive logical results (like the Monty Hall problem, for example), some people just cannot see the correct answer, even though it's logically provable, and just refuse to accept it. Basically you're either convinced or not. However, there seems to be some flexibility in ones philosophy of belief (whether you even want to be a universal realist, for example) and perhaps within in the 'mythology mindset'. I don't know because I don't think I actually have one, at least not in the same way that people with religious ideas that they admit there is no evidence for, like yourself, seem to.
You said before that you preferred the person you are as a theist to the person you were as an atheist. That sounds a bit like you were making a choice...? To be clear, that's a genuine question, I'm trying to tell you how you think.
Do you have a link I can read to studies showing evidence of a different level of magical thinking linked to 'tribal' religious identity (as opposed to 'tribal' political identity or ethnic/cultural/ moral identity) that is shown to cause an extra or different level of violence in people?
Since I qualified the statement with "seems to me" and I didn't mention violence specifically, no. But then I haven't looked as yet. Further, the point was more about fundamentalism than tribalism. Tribalism causes divisions in all spheres. In light of the above quote, I think that danger comes when extreme views are moved from the 'mythology mindset' to the 'reality mindset'. Another example from the book is extreme conspiracy theories, like QAnon. Generally speaking, people seem to keep that in the mythology mindset, in the sense that they don't do what any normal person might do if they really believed that a paedophile ring was operating from the basement of a pizza restaurant, like calling the police or something. Somebody did storm into it with a gun to 'rescue the kids' once, presumably because he'd moved the belief to the reality mindset.
So it's not unique to fundamentalist religion, but fundamentalist religion seems to be more common in the world than things like extreme conspiracy theories.
If somebody
literally believes that they will instantly go to heaven if they die - especially while "doing God's will", whatever they happen to think that is - in the same way that they believe that the sun will rise in the morning, or that rain is wet, then the potential for extreme behaviour is clearly increased.
Presumably there isn't a problem in a democracy with people holding or arguing for differing beliefs including beliefs about something existing, given the alternative is some sort of a dictatorship?
Of course not, no, so long as they don't harm other people or restrict their rights, people have the right to believe anything.
The problematic issue seems to be with people who believe in the absolute truth of their particular belief AND also believe it is not acceptable to deviate from the norms of behaviour/thought that they hold to be true AND are willing to commit violence to force others to not deviate or to accept their belief is true - presumably because they also believe the end justifies the means.
That's certainly one way things go wrong, yes. I think we could discuss your other examples at length but it would probably be a bit of a derail here.