Religious beliefs are not linked to intuition or rational thinking, according to new research by the universities of Coventry and Oxford. Previous studies have suggested people who hold strong religious beliefs are more intuitive and less analytical, and when they think more analytically their religious beliefs decrease.
But new research, by academics from Coventry University's Centre for Advances in Behavioural Science and neuroscientists and philosophers at Oxford University, suggests that is not the case, and that people are not 'born believers'. The study -- which included tests on pilgrims taking part in the famous Camino de Santiago and a brain stimulation experiment -- found no link between intuitive/analytical thinking, or cognitive inhibition (an ability to suppress unwanted thoughts and actions), and supernatural beliefs.
Instead, the academics conclude that other factors, such as upbringing and socio-cultural processes, are more likely to play a greater role in religious beliefs.
[Abstract]: Supernatural Belief Is Not Modulated by Intuitive Thinking Style or Cognitive Inhibition
Would you agree with this conclusion or do you believe that there is something else that influences people's religious beliefs ?
(Score: 3, Informative) by PartTimeZombie on Friday November 10 2017, @01:40AM
I don't like the fact that this comment has been modded to -1 Troll, even though it is poorly argued. -1 Disagree might be better.
That's how we explain everything, since the enlightenment. Putting worldly in quote marks doesn't change anything here.
That leaves God (any god) as a "god of the gaps" [wikipedia.org] and the problem there is that as the gaps get smaller, so does the god.
Also, quoting the Bible to make your point about god is circular.