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I find myself questioning the critical thinking skills of anyone I meet who I find to be religious. Does anyone else find themselves doing this?

Billiwip 4 Feb 8
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0

Mostly in the States. I think religious people in other countries have better critical thinking skills because they have better education systems (in the countries I've been to).

Sure, but they still believe in a supernatural being that guides the universe with no evidence what so ever.

2

Yes indeed...they remind me of people in the South in the late 60's....just a blind spot of dumbness, even though doctor, lawyer, whatever.....

3

fuck yes. it's like someone telling you how honest they are while shoplifting. it just brings a person down to a moronic sheep mode instantly for me.

C'mon. Wild sheep species are smart enough to stay alive.

very true lol

2

I find myself trying to look away as I roll my eyes!

JK666 Level 7 Feb 8, 2018
3

I do think a lot of religious people are just taking the easy path. It is what their tribe is doing, and they go along with the crowd. And never question. And a number of them are not real smart. Think I was born a skeptic, as always had lots of questions. At 6, ask a lot of questions about religion and god, and never got what I thought were reasonable answers.

2

I find myself having difficulty having smart and critical conversations with my family because I'm the only one in my family that got anything above an Associate's degree. I want to have a smart conversation about politics and religion, but being from a Catholic family, they don't want to have an open conversation. I read somewhere that the more advanced the degree, the more likely the person is to be an atheist. It's all because of science!

Thank you Science.

7

Yes, all the time. I also do the same thing with anyone who voted for Trump.

8

My mother is one of the smartest people I know. She had a long, successful career, respects science, and is highly logical and reasonable. She also believes in god and attends church regularly. People have faith/religion for many reasons. It does not mean, necessarily, that they lack reasoning skills. Many take the things that work for them and leave the rest. However, those people who hold onto religious fairy tales as literal truth, ignoring science and reality, that’s a different story. Those people scare the living crap out of me.

i suspect you are very correct. And you give an excellent articulation of this point. It's probably a very appropriate thing to keep in mind. At least it's something that i think I should keep in mind. Because i tend, more and more as i get older, to lose patience with believers. But, at the same time, i do understand that myth and mysticism is uniquely and inherently human, and therefore valuable to our sense of self. The trick is you can't start to believe your own bullshit. That's where real problems for mankind happen. And they are real problems.

All due respect to your mother, but I believe that if intelligence is not an issue, it has to be one of two other things: apathy or weakness. I don't have much patience with either.

I think christians like your mother have the effect of legitimizing the religion in the eyes of outsiders. Which just leads to more people converting and more vulnerable people becoming fanatics. I also think many christians who appear nominal, even worldly, quietly subscribe to some of christianity's more pernicious ideas.

Wrong again. She is one of the toughest people I know. Her parents were very religious, weekly church attendees at their moderate Methodist church and the VERY best people I have ever known. Their faith was a source of strength and they were kind, wonderful people who raised three happy, successful adults who all believe in god. My mother started attending church again after her parents died - I believe because it makes her feel closer to them and because she takes comfort in the possibility that death is not the end. In spite of my strong belief that there is no god or afterlife, I would never challenge her faith because it is good for her.
Look, there are a lot of people who take the worst from religion. Who use it to justify hate and judgment and misogyny and all kinds of other terrible things.
But there are also very good, intelligent people who believe in god and choose to embody the values that religion SHOULD promote - kindness, forgiveness, generosity. And if that works for them, and they are not hurting anyone, that is good with me. @bootaski
@ReadyforaChange

@A2Jennifer I'm just speaking from my own personal, insider experience, which was very negative. There were definitely positive things involved, but as I saw them they were inextricably tied to very negative things. In an ends justify the means kind of way. I looked at things from a detached perspective, without being swayed by threats, or guilt, and the whole system seemed questionable. What is the point of having the good stuff attached to the insane stuff? I chose not to (or try not to) be a part of that stuff anymore.

@A2Jennifer No disrespect to you or your mother.

I understand that many people have very painful experiences associated with religion. And I certainly find many things done In thename id religion to be trrrible, despicable and abhorrent. My personal experience with religion wasn’t bad. It just all seemed very strange and illogical to me, and that is reason enough for me to reject religion. But given that my experience includes knowing really wonderful people who happened to be religious, I won’t begrudge them their right to their faith. AS LONG AS THEY ARENT HARMING ANYONE. @bootaski

2

Yes, each and every time

2
2

Jordan Peterson is a kind of apologist christian who has made some waves on youtube recently. He is clearly smart, but I think, like all apologists, he has to rely on analogies and indirect arguments. Which are at times tenuous or contorted. Even hidden premises maybe, but I didn't watch all of his stuff. Debate upcoming between him and Sam Harris this summer!

5

I do, but I've had some people surprise me. I think that sometimes a very intelligent person could be indoctrinated at an early age and have those beliefs stick. It's a form of conditioning.

True. I have always questioned the wisdom of exposing very young children to religious training. I understand how people can't leave all the irrational things they were raised with behind. I just wish that they could see how irrational all that nonsense is.

2

I automatically discount their IQs, at least for Christians, but not for Muslims.
In their case, they usually have no choice as to their religion, and most of the Muslims I know, or taught, were almost scary smart.
Snarky humor, too.

I think that's a crazy view point. I know several incredibly intelligent Christians. As well, believing in Islam is just as fucking crazy as believing in Christianity.

@Billiwip I do know intelligent Christians, including my parents and siblings, but the part where they can believe that some blood-thirsty god that tells his people to slaughter men, women, children, and animals, plus cut all the trees and sow the land with salt, is a "loving God" is hard to swallow.
But, to be fair, they are liberal United Methodists, and not that serious about their religion.

As for Muslims, since I don't follow their beliefs, or care, I am only making observations on their apparent intelligence, while engaging with them. This is unfair, since I'm being much more lenient on religions I've never been a part of.

Well, here's the thing believing that there is a god is crazy regardless of the religion. I know plenty of intelligent people of both religions but, I still instinctively question their critical thinking skills. Even if they're crazy smart it doesn't discount they believe in a supernatural being with no supernatural evidence to support it. I think you should give more credence to one religion just because you haven't been a part of it.

6

Yes, but we have to remember that many very intelligent folks were indoctrinated very early & have a large cultural/social/familial investment in their religion. Religious beliefs seem to be very easily compartmentalized, so that type of thinking doesn't necessarily bleed over into anything else. This is one major reason why we still have so many otherwise intelligent rational people that still "believe".

4

I could never date a religious person. I'd also stare at them judging lol

I've thought about that a lot. I wonder if I could but then I think that Stephen Hawkins was married to a deeply religious person and if he with his mind can put that a side....

@Billiwip have you not followed that marriage??? It's far from a happy union.

Just because it ended poorly doesn't mean that love between believers and non-believers can't work. If anything it was because of the non-believer that it didn't.

3

Oh Yeah. Because religion is not on my radar I tend to get on with most people, til they do something shitty or go to the religion side of a conversation. Sometimes we'll agree to dis-agree. Thing is I am expected to totally respect their view but I ALWAYS get the denigrating comment concerning my going to hell - til I call 'em on the doulbe stand THEN if we can still be friends or just get along I do not bother to think about their critical thinking skill. But that would be the day to day folk around the apartment complex. In a mate, well I would not want a religious partner.

5

My worst character flaw is the inability to tolerate stupidity. I consider religious belief to be the height of stupidity so my tendency is to unfairly judge them according to my stereotypic thinking. Sadly, the majority of those I encounter turn out to have earned my disdain.

5

Not necessarily. We all have things we're irrational about. People get emotionally invested in ideas, and emotions aren't logical. It's the same with politics. Although I find it easier to be judgy over politics because people seem to knowingly choose willful ignorance over verifiable information.

7

All the time.

4

Add Republican to the list, too.

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