This from an article on TheGuardian.com:
Do you believe in God? How confident are you in your view? Let’s put your belief (or lack of it) to the test.
Read aloud the following statements. Don’t just think about them or mutter them to yourself – shout them out:
I dare God to make my life miserable.
I dare God to make my home catch fire.
I dare God to turn all of my friends against me.If you found it easy, then you think of yourself as a true atheist with the courage of your convictions (Richard Dawkins would be proud). But, admit it – didn’t saying these things still make you feel just a little bit uneasy? A study conducted at the University of Helsinki found that reading these statements caused even avowed atheists to sweat just as much as religious people (literally – they were having their sweat levels monitored).
If you can’t do it, you’re either a confirmed believer or someone whose head says they’re an atheist but whose heart can’t quite accept it. Or maybe you’re just superstitious and think that talking about something bad makes it more likely to happen.
Try reading out equivalent statements that don’t mention God (for instance: “I dare all of my friends to turn against me”). The atheists in the Helsinki study found these statements stressful but still less so than the versions that did mention God.
Excellent, but I better not say it out loud.
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Islam is NOT a religion of peace! Recommended reading “The Life of Muhammad” written by the Muslim historian Ibn Ishaq in 768 AD. The book gives an accurate picture of Muhammad… The very violent and aggressive military commander who fought and killed neighboring tribes into submission.
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I’m approving your comment even though it has (IMO) absolutely nothing to do with the content of the article.
It appears rather that you are simply stating an opinion.
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Saying it despite what the conscience tells you. Of course you’d sweat.
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Saying such statements doesn’t bother me now as much as it once did, though shouting out negatives like these is not easy. I think we’re conditioned to be uncomfortable proclaiming negative statements. I wonder how the test would go if the statements were something like,” I dare the Wolfman to come bite me!” or “I dare Captain Hook to poke my eyes out with his hook!” My guess is there’ll be some discomfort even saying these things though I seriously doubt there are many werewolf or Captain Hook believers out there. It makes me no less of a non-believer that saying such statements does, indeed, cause some trepidation in me. “I DARE the Frankenstein monster to rip my head off!!! I DARE him!!!”
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I hypothesize that atheist sweated as much as the religious because the term “god” impacted the fear centers of the brain, not because they believed god existed, but because the term “god”, on a subconscious level, is representative of malevolence.
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Hmmmm. Interesting perspective. You’re probably right, tho’. It’s a psychological blockage whether one “believes” or not. Regrettably, the “fear of god” is imparted at a very young age.
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“Regrettably, the “fear of god” is imparted at a very young age.”
Indeed. I did a post on this a while back on the impact of words on the brain. Using fMRI scans, researchers found that a single negative word can increase the activity in our amygdala (the fear center of the brain), releasing dozens of stress-producing hormones and neurotransmitters, which in turn interrupts our brains’ functioning. Fear-provoking words significantly influenced the expression of genes that regulate physical and emotional stress.
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My amygdala goes ape-shit whenever I hear the words, Ben Carson and Donald Trump. Just writing them has made me break out in a cold sweat.
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Haha, Jeff. I hear ya and concur. Seeing or hearing GOP makes me physically ill.
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I second that! (And your comment as well, Victoria.)
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I suspect the same physiological would be true if shouting out a dare to bring about the death of a loved one or an invitation to be haunted by malevolent spirits. It means – as you say – something that generates a fear and not a belief response.
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I agree with your sentiment tildeb, we have an inbuilt aversion to tempting fate so to speak.
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When I first came out as an atheist, I used to have some pangs of fear about being wrong, but I could not think of any rational reason for that fear. It was just there. Now it’s not. I expect my fear echoes were not as deeply imprinted as others. I think what’s important to remember is that fear doesn’t have to be based on any truth. Some people fear ghosts, alien abductions, and monsters under their bed, but fearing something doesn’t bring it into existence.
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Unless you’re talking about the Wolfman because he’s very real. 😀
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Well said, Swarn.
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I fear IRS auditors.
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Well some things do exist, and can be reasonably feared. lol
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If we consider that finding agency in nature is inbuilt, automatic, then I think Note’s has nailed it… It triggers a very deep, very ancient part of the brain dedicated to self preservation, to survival.
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“It triggers a very deep, very ancient part of the brain dedicated to self preservation, to survival.”
Exactly, John. Recent studies show the term atheist impacts the fear center of the brain, too. They found that on an unconscious level, atheists threaten beliefs about the nature of existence itself and that atheists served as a constant reminder of death because they deny that there is a god (or gods) who regulate human affairs and promise immortality to the faithful. The studies found that thinking about atheism increased thoughts of death in believers to the same extent as thinking about death itself.
http://spp.sagepub.com/content/early/2015/04/27/1948550615584200.abstract
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Interesting (as usual).
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Oooh, this comment couldn’t be better timed! I just got a comment from Roy saying essentially this!!! Veles, He does move in mysterious ways 🙂
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Just read that dude’s comment. Hilarious! Never seen him around before, but he got my amygdala all fired up! There are some idjits out there. They always talk of love, yet radiate a Wolfman-like aura of monsterish stupidity about them.
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Leave him be, Inspired 😉
He used to frequent Prayson Daniels blog… who’s since stopped blogging.
He’s innocent enough.
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Wasn’t gonna bug ’em. Just find it very amusing is all.
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I doubt he’ll play, but if he does, it’ll be interesting. I promise you that.
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Naw. I’m just gonna watch and read and have my amygdala go nutty on me. Had a woman call me a negro narcissist and a lover of blacks the other day. When I asked for clarification as to what a negro narcissist was, she emailed me that I was the other “n” word lover. Nice.
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Nice lady. An evangelical, I’m guessing?
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I do believe so. Some of these fundie-types just need a tiny scratch and the ugliness under the surface comes flying out.
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Prayson’s gone? What happened, raptured?
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I ate him.
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I speak to him via email occasionally. His academic focus has shifted to AI and how that concerns “spirit.” To tell you the truth, I don’t think he ever believed the nonsense he was writing about. In Tanzania he was an atheist, from a family of atheists… But then along came a Belgium girl who offered a way Out of Africa. I truly think he converted, and started studying the philosophy of religion as a practical means to an ends. Encasing it all in “Academia” helped him rationalise it. Fair enough, I say. Now, that’s just my theory, but it seems to ring true given his new interest which is way, way, way removed from general Christian theology.
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Ah, those Belgian girls will do it every time.
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It’s the waffles
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Read this:
“Hello John,
If your argument is true then so be it. There is no Yahweh and there is no God(s).
Our ancient ancestors must have then been visited by advanced beings and in their primitive state they mistook them as Gods. Even the Bible speaks about craft, “wheel within a wheel”, and “pillars of smoke”, etc. Even the Hindus Vedas tells about flying vessels and wars between the Gods.
So what if the New Testament is not a telling of real facts. Would it hurt any of us to “have sincere love for each other, love one another deeply, from the heart” and “love your neighbor as yourself.”
But NO – NEVER. There is wickedness in the world. There are those that will not take instruction to love and give and build and look inward for peace. There are many that have no tolerance to let others live in peace and worship and love the way they choose, even IF it is a made-up story. They have been hurt and they will cling to that hurt and bitterness to their dying day all the while trying to bring misery to as many people as they can. They are not here to give hope but to tear down..
I find all the effort you put into this quite a waste of time. Do you really think any Creator cares one little bit about what you think? NO. Will you ever convince someone who God has branded His own that your nonsense makes sense? No. You are not His, you never were and most likely never will be.”
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“You are not His, you never were and most likely never will be.” – No ‘Him,’ no ‘His’ – and his point was –?
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Who knows… he’s cranky.
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He’s my new favorite! Where’d he come from?
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Before you descended from Heaven. I’m proud to say, I taught him biblical archaeology. Needless to say, he didn’t like the lessons 🙂
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I bet.
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Lot of that going around.
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Quite telling, John. 😉
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As a teenager, I once stood on a hilltop in a lightening storm and dared god to kill me, I’m reasonably sure that trumps* losing FaceBook friends.
*(sorry Insipred)
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AAAAAAAAA!!!!!
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I am still a work in progress and struggle to even think such things let alone say them.
It was not so much a loss of belief in God that started my deconversion but a collapse in my confidence in the Bible. I struggled to see if faith could be viable with a flawed Bible, some people seem able to accept this conflict, but I could not. If I knew the Bible was flawed how could I place confidence in any of it?
For a considerable period of time, which is now only slightly easing, I had expected ‘God’ to punish me for for turning away from him. I am only slowly emerging from that mindset, but it only takes a little emotion and stress to bring it back.
Because of this mindset I have spent countless hours investigating the Bible in great depth to confirm that my conclusion of it being a flawed human document is a sound conclusion. This research has strengthened my conviction that there most likely is no God, but has not totally removed the fear.
I saw a talk by Seth Andrews where he responded to a challenge from a Christian to pledge his life to Satan (on the basis Seth argued no such being existed). Seth did so to show he had no fear, I felt uncomfortable even watching him do that.
I had thought that the strongest argument in favour of there being some sort of God was the apparent fine tuning of the universe for life. But after watching some of Lawrence Krauss’ talks on the early universe I realise that argument in favour of a creator deity is not as strong as I had thought.
In my case uncertainty and fear still has a stronghold in my psyche. I admire those who are able to move on and not be held hostage to this fear.
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I hear you, Peter.
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I suspect, Peter, that you need to explore where all of this came from – who introduced you to religion in the first place and who fanned the flames – I think you may find that THAT is the real source of your fear.
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Arch, my mother was very influential in developing my Christian worldview, belief and commitment. But I can’t recall her ever mentioning Hell, judgment, God’s wrath or sin. That was just not her way and the Church I attended in my formative years was similar.
It was my own private study as I became more serious about Christianity that caused a fear of hell and judgement to develop, this fear fed on a deep insecurity and pessimism that seems to be at the core of my being.
What I am saying Arch, is that in my case, the misery is all self inflicted.
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“…this fear fed on a deep insecurity and pessimism that seems to be at the core of my being.” – And I’m asking where it came from, Peter – we are born blank slates.
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Arch, are you asking Peter where the “deep insecurity and pessimism” comes from?
Are we born blank slates?
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Yes X 2.
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We are not born blank slates. Gene expression can and does take place in the womb. Also:
“These epigenetic changes can be passed down from the mother or the father (see Franklin, 2010 and Champagne, 2008) and may even persist across multiple generations, being passed on from grandparents to grandchildren. Thus, acquired characteristics can sometimes be inherited.”
http://www.beginbeforebirth.org/the-science/epigenetics
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NN, be very careful granting to epigenetics any confidence whatsoever. Sure, genes expressions can be affected in utero but this is not what epigenetics strictly means. It means non genetic influences that then affect genetic expressions and this is understandably disputed in biology. Add to that the heritability claim and you’re verging on pure woo… as demonstrated by Deepak’s latest publication.
I suspect – and please correct me if I’m wrong – that you’re arguing that we aren’t born blank slates because we come with genetically based (or encoded) information… some of which may be provided or altered during in utero,/i> development. And this can be demonstrated. So we’re not blank slates: we are developed in utero to be meaning making machines once separated from the mother.
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Which was my point.
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?
Does that mean you agree with my take on your argument or am I misunderstanding it?
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So what are you saying, that his mother was exposed to too much Mormon Tabernacle Choir?
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Surly you jest.
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Of course!
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I found the Epigenetics video interesting, but the ‘Charley’s Story’ video was a stretch to try and tie it to epigenetics, considering all of the events that happened to Charley postnatally – that kind of childhood, laced with abandonment and maltreatment would affect anyone psychologically, and needn’t involve epigenetics at all.
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Of course. But that doesn’t mean that gene expression doesn’t take place in the womb, because it does. Robert Salposky states The age-old “nature versus nurture” debate is silly. The action of genes is completely intertwined with the environment in which they function; in a sense, it is pointless to even discuss what gene X does, and we should consider instead only what gene X does in environment Y.”
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Love that quote!
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Arch, I see things a bit differently to you. It is just how I am, part of my make-up, a crazy mixed up person.
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We all see things differently, Peter, through the lens of our subjective experiences – it’s part of what makes each of us as unique as snowflakes, but how I see things isn’t bothering me, yet you are clearly in angst over your own perception. I’m just trying to see where your perceptions began.
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This just in, Peter, from Carmen who, today, can read messages but can’t comment:
So there’s that —
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[…] Source: Shout It Out! (Or Not) […]
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It’s called tempting fate and you must remember there are many fatalists among us. Many believe in luck, gamblers in particular. Some see their fate written in the stars.hence the popularity of horoscopes. Other more sensible folk refuse to walk under ladders or put uo umberallas inside. The motives and reasons behind behaviour are mutifarious. If I have an accident I might say thats just my luck.
So research of this type goes nowhere but it does serve to keep the researchers busy and in work.
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Good points kaptonok! Thanks for contributing your thoughts.
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I wouldn’t dare shout this out as my dogs are sleeping next to me and if they wake up they will be pawing and nagging me for ”Foodies” and it’s not lunch time yet.
So I typed it out as if I was writing lines in detention from school and stuck it on the roof of the stoep.
God can read it at his leisure.
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Ark –
YOU got detention in school!? Say it ain’t so. . 🙂
Have a good day, all! (here, it’s ‘off to school’ time!)
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An entire week, as it happens. I bunked school to go see the Stones play the Kings Hall in Manchester!
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WELL worth a week’s detention, I’d say!! 🙂
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It’s ALIVE!
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Thanks to Carmen for her support. Though I can’t blame religion for all my issues. And despite Arch’s insinuation I would never blame my mother. Sometimes we need to accept that we are our own worst enemy.
I still think in Bible verses: “I am not at ease, nor am I quiet, And I am not at rest, but turmoil comes.” (Job 3:26)
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“And despite Arch’s insinuation I would never blame my mother.” – Did I even mention your mother? ‘Methinks he doth protest too much –‘
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Perhaps I do protest too much. My mother once observed that she knew my older brother and I had quite different personalities before we were even born based on how we acted in the womb. My brother was a real fidgeter and kicker whereas I was so still and quiet that my mother feared I might be still born.
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I really didn’t mention your mother, Peter, but since you brought it up, it might be worth exploring.
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“Try reading out equivalent statements that don’t mention God (for instance: “I dare all of my friends to turn against me”). The atheists in the Helsinki study found these statements stressful but still less so than the versions that did mention God.”
I’m not happy with this kind of a statement as a control. I think the statements need to mention daring a specific entity to do you ill, and one that really exists, as opposed to a “god”. I’d be more interested to see a stress comparison to statements like this:
I dare the IRS to make my life miserable.
I dare ISIS to make my home catch fire.
I dare my Ex to turn all of my friends against me.
If they used statements like that, and the “god” statements still elicited a bigger reaction, then they’d have something.
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I think the catch might be, ubi, that even irrational people know that just making such statements can’t actually bring about an IRS audit or an ISIS attack, whereas the superstitious among them (and even those with unrecognized superstition) COULD conceivably rationalize that a supernatural entity, utilizing magic (don’t laugh!) could bring about the wished for events.
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Possible, but until they run a better study I’m not going to make the assumption that atheists would react differently to these statements just because they inserted god. Or make the assumption that they won’t. There’s a lot of situations where our derpy human brains do not react in the way you’d expect. I want further research before I’ll accept any conclusions on this.
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I suppose it could make a good control.
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Does anyone remember the “Atheist Prayer Experiment” (circa 2012)? A Christian group out of the U.K. encouraged non-believers to do just two things: (1) pray for 40 days that God would reveal himself, and (2) be observant/watchful and as open as possible to ways that God might reveal himself (i.e. it might be more subtle than a lightning bolt).
I was in the last stages of deconversion at the time, still afraid I might be making a big mistake, and I decided this would be a good thing to do. So for 40 days, with honest intent and motives, that’s what I did. And I decided that my prayer was going to be fairly free-form… I would just let the prayer go where it would.
I kept a little journal (I missed 2 days out of the 40) with what I prayed. And on some days, I ended up praying what I would call “dangerous” prayers, along the lines of the ones mentioned in this article. I asked only that anything bad would fall on me alone, and not my family. But I prayed things like: “If you have to make me seriously ill or invalid…” “If you have to make me insane and grazing like King Nebuchadnezzar…” etc. I remember cringing a little bit, but honestly upper-most in my mind was “It would be worth it.”
And of course even though I was “as open as possible” to how God might reveal himself, I got silence and invisibility. Not even the slightest hint.
At this point I have no doubts; I’m not a Christian any more, and I’m as certain as one could be that there is (are) no god(s), nor are there supernatural events. I have no fear of Hell or what some god might do to me some day. But I am really empathetic toward those for whom those fears are still real, post-deconversion… something that deeply indoctrinated can be hard to shake!
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Brent, thank you so much for sharing this! It certainly underlines the point of the article. I’m sure there are some who read and/or contribute to this blog who envy you your freedom. But look what it took to get there! 😉
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Well… so many people were so influential and helpful in getting me to the place I am… I hope that I can be just as helpful to others. There have been a few bloggers who wonder aloud sometimes whether what they write really means anything or makes a difference, and I have replied to them (and others): “Keep writing! I was a silent lurker for **years**, and you would never have known it, but the arguments you were making made a huge difference.”
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It just could well be, Brent, that such an exercise might indeed desensitize one regarding the power of prayer (and foreboding that one may be under constant observation by an unseen observer).
Nan may not appreciate my use of a particular word in my comment, but if she will read on, she may realize that using it is the only way I can illustrate my point and forgive me. Allan Sherman, comedian of “Hello Mudder, Hello Fodder” fame, wrote one book just before he died. It was entitled, “The Rape of the A.P.E.” (which is still available used), in which he debunked the American Puritan Ethic (A.P.E.). In either chapter 4 or 6, I can’t recall exactly, he wrote the word, “Fuck.“. He followed this with six full pages of the word, one following the other for the entire six pages. At the end, he wrote that when he began the chapter, he expected the door to come crashing in and himself hauled away in shackles, but by the time he reached the end of the sixth page, he found that the word had lost all meaning for him – that it was just a combination of letters, like any other combination of letters, and hadn’t the ability to harm ANYone.
Forty days (and forty nights) of prayer to a nonexistent god just might have the same effect. You’d be in a better position to know than I.
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My wife is a huge Allan Sherman fan… she had some of his LPs growing up, and a few years ago I tracked down his first four albums in digital form and gave them to her as a Christmas gift. Our whole family is fairly musical and we all enjoy the humor.
I remember the title of that book from years ago, but I had forgotten it, and hadn’t read it. I’ve put it on my list; thanks for the rec. I think you’re right, that just as indoctrination can deeply embed a false belief, so desensitization can work to erode/remove it. But again, I know I’ve read lots of people who e.g. know and believe intellectually that Hell doesn’t exist, and yet struggle daily with the fear of it.
I’m not sure if the A.P.E. overlaps with “Christian exceptionalism” or “American exceptionalism” but I’ve had a few Christian acquaintances make the argument, as I’ve met with them post-deconversion, that not only is it impossible to make sense of reality without God as the starting point (presuppositional apologetics), but that Christianity should be credited for the rise and prosperity of the West.
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“Christianity should be credited for the rise and prosperity of the West.”
You might want to point out to them that while Christianity threw all of Europe into a thousand-year dark age that lasted from 600 CE to 1600 CE, that Muslims were creating the Arabic number system, creating algebra (the very word, al gebra, is Arabic) and naming the stars – Mecca had a society that welcomed great minds of all faiths, while in Europe, the Church was burning at the stake any who dared translate the Bible into any language other than Latin. One man was so executed for translating the Lord’s Prayer into English for his children – Rah, rah, rah, sis boom ba, yaaaaay, Yahweh!
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‘Mecca had a society that welcomed great minds of all faiths’
Sadly this open attitude to knowledge and inquiry did not last.
In regard to the West, it was the enlightenment that really seemed to be the inspiration for the great advances in the period after 1600.
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“In regard to the West, it was the enlightenment that really seemed to be the inspiration for the great advances in the period after 1600.”
And the beginning of the end for Christianity, as fact replaced fiction.
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When I studied Christian history I was struck by how the quality of Christian thinking, especially in the West, deteriorated greatly in the years after the fall of the Roman Empire. Augustine was the last of the great thinkers from the Roman empire. It would take 800 years until Aquinas for a comparable to thinker to emerge in the West.
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That’s a long time.
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I guess I am an odd one as I simply felt silly saying them. Hugs
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