![]() ![]() Experimental subjects observing geometrical shapes moving around a computer screen spontaneously describe such movements in terms of purpose: one shape is “chasing” another, and so on. ![]() We see “faces in the clouds”, we perceive a rock as a bear, and instantly fear that the bump in the night is an intruder or a ghost. Belief in gods and spirits fits well with these automatic biases and intuitions, and belief in an all-knowing, creator God fits even better.īarrett argues that belief in gods plausibly has its roots in our tendency to detect agency and purpose even when it isn’t there, (the Hypersensitive Agent Detector Device or HADD). ![]() Most of what we believe is grounded in mental tools that rapidly and intuitively generate beliefs about our environment. Using experimental results in the relatively new field of cognitive psychology of religion, Justin Barrett argues convincingly that children are not uniformly gullible, but rather are biased towards religious belief. Influential figures like Richard Dawkins can give the impression that belief in God arises from a general childhood gullibility and indoctrination. Barrett, Why Would Anyone Believe in God? (AltaMira Press, 2004) ![]() Articles, Briefing Sheets & Book Reviews. ![]()
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