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Theological Incorrectness - Why Religious People Believe What They Shouldn't (Hardcover, New)
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Theological Incorrectness - Why Religious People Believe What They Shouldn't (Hardcover, New)
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"Ask two religious people one question, and you'll get three
answers!"
Why do religious people believe what they shouldn't--not what
others think they shouldn't believe, but things that don't accord
with their own avowed religious beliefs? This engaging book
explores this puzzling feature of human behavior.
D. Jason Slone terms this phenomenon "theological incorrectness."
He demonstrates that it exists because the mind is built it such a
way that it's natural for us to think divergent thoughts
simultaneously. Human minds are great at coming up with innovative
ideas that help them make sense of the world, he says, but those
ideas do not always jibe with official religious beliefs. From this
fact we derive the important lesson that what we learn from our
environment--religious ideas, for example--does not necessarily
cause us to behave in ways consistent with that knowledge.
Slone presents the latest discoveries from the cognitive science
of religion and shows how they help us to understand exactly why it
is that religious people do and think things that they shouldn't.
He then applies these insights to three case studies. First he
looks at why Theravada Buddhists profess that Buddha was just a man
but actually worship him as a god. Then he explores why the early
Puritan Calvinists, who believed in predestination, acted instead
as if humans had free will by, for example, conducting witch-hunts
and seeking converts. Finally, he explains why both Christians and
Buddhists believe in luck even though the doctrines of Divine
Providence and karma suggest there's no such thing.
In seeking answers to profound questions about why people behave
the way they do, this fascinating booksheds new light on the
workings of the human mind and on the complex relationship between
cognition and culture.
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