Are you good at compartmentalizing?
What I’m getting at is, if you want to believe something, in spite of evidence to the contrary, are you able to force yourself to believe it by “compartmentalizing” it (in your own mind)? In other words, find a way to make it true, justify it, for easier personal acceptance?
Granted, what you do or don’t compartmentalize is a
rather nebulous question. So, let’s hone
in on something very specific here, and that we’re all very familiar with. Here’s what I think is the perfect example: religion.
We have a lot of professed atheists here, as well as some
theists. I see atheists as not very
good at compartmentalizing religion. So-called
“circumstantial evidence” is not enough to sway them. They just can’t “justify inconsistencies” by
compartmentalizing them, to attain personal religious belief. (IMO.)
Q: Religiously speaking, on a scale of 0-10, where 0 means
you are not able to compartmentalize religious belief, and 10, where you compartmentalize
everything religious, no questions asked, where do you land on the religious compartmentalization
scale? Then, explain yourself.
(by PrimalSoup)
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