LEGERdeMAIN
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- Aug 16, 2009
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It's more foolish to believe you know the unknown than to know what cannot be known. That's from a poem by Cummings.
A mental illness is a delusion not shared by those around you.
While a religious belief is a delusion shared by those around you.
Therefore a religious belief is not a mental illness.
+1
Loony bins are for a combination of both. People sharing their delusions everywhere!![]()
Compared to non-believers, the religious participants showed significantly less activity in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), a portion of the brain that helps modify behavior by signaling when attention and control are needed, usually as a result of some anxiety-producing event like making a mistake. The stronger their religious zeal and the more they believed in God, the less their ACC fired in response to their own errors, and the fewer errors they made.
"You could think of this part of the brain like a cortical alarm bell that rings when an individual has just made a mistake or experiences uncertainty," says lead author Inzlicht, who teaches and conducts research at the University of Toronto Scarborough. "We found that religious people or even people who simply believe in the existence of God show significantly less brain activity in relation to their own errors. They're much less anxious and feel less stressed when they have made an error."
Don't take the half assed theory above too seriously. I made it up in like a minute after reading the web article.
1) Evolution doesn't happen that quickly. People have just formed different opinions and lifestyles based on modern society and scientific beliefs.
2) People are still extremely stressed, and it's affecting their lives. We have something called psychiatry now, and lovely medications to go along with it.
Brain Differences Found Between Believers In God And Non-believers
I wish I could feel less stressed when I make a mistake.
I was thinking more along the lines of mirco evolution. The minority genetic trait becoming the majority. It may not be evolution at all. Our brain developing in a different direction due to the different stimulation and nutrients can very well be causing this too.
Notice I never stated things such as 'god doesn't exist'It is not a rational mistake to see everything as coming from divine origins or from chaotic chance
However, it is a rational mistake to speculate about divine possibilities on the basis of human tendencies, lapses in judgement, or [what you perceive to be] ignorance.
I have met lots of people with spiritual beliefs who are not well versed in logic, but I have also met nearly as many people like yourself who cannot see the fallacy caused by their own bias--such people prize intelligence, desire to be viewed as and to view themselves as intelligent, and would not pass up an opportunity to say, "I am intelligent, you are not, you have spiritual beliefs and I do not, therefore spirituality is for the unintelligent".
What is more foolish, to know what is not or cannot be known, or to pretend to know everything?
And In your learned opinion what was my point when noting the commonalities between religious beliefs and the definition of a delusion...?What is more foolish, to know what is not or cannot be known, or to pretend to know everything?
I'm not convinced that it has anything to do with evolution. It has much more to do with information. We have changed what it means to be human in the past 150 years with technology.
A mental illness is a delusion not shared by those around you.
While a religious belief is a delusion shared by those around you.
Therefore a religious belief is not a mental illness.
posted by me(amazing edit, i knoow):
it's simply that the mentally ill has progressively moved from 'out of the social norm' to a biological understanding of a disfunctionement of a specific function of the mind, yet this change somehow didn't apply to religious beliefs which from a purely rational standpoint is unjustified.
Mental hospitals are to protect the suicidal from themselves, and society from the homicidal.
This thread is an exercise in irony: a bunch of ignorant opinions spouted by arrogant people who imagine that they're smarter than others.