(July 16, 2016 at 2:40 am)robvalue Wrote: I've been studying lately the effect theistic thinking has on thinking in general.
Does bending the rules of credulity and evidence to permit one huge set of beliefs make you more likely to do the same thing in other cases?
The answer, according to my observations, is yes. I've seen many clear examples here on this board, even on subjects not related to religion. I think studies about this have been done on children and have come to this conclusion; I'm not sure if any have been done on adults.
It seems a very logical conclusion. The more you blur the edges, the more stuff is going to get caught up in it. It could of course be a lack of critical think skills in the first place. But then that begs the question of whether indoctrination has stifled the critical thinking. Since it cannot run parallel to nurturing proper thinking in a child, I see this as highly likely.
I disagree, based solely on personal experience, mind you. I think in comparmentalization it's not that critical thinking skills are absent, but that they aren't applied to the fetish of choice. They maintain a bubble around their faith.