I thought of putting this in the intolerance thread, but that thread is so full of intolerance I thought maybe a separate thread would be a better idea.
I have one question to those of you who are both religious and critical thinkers:
How do you deal with the cognitive dissonance that arises when you are rightly accused of a logical fallacy?
Please understand I am NOT asking this just so I can pounce at anything and everything I disagree with in your replies.
I am genuinely curious. This is not meant as bait. I believe that some well formed answers might help me understand and respect how you think, even if I don't always accept *what* you think.
It happens to me every now and then, of course (hopefully less and less often), that I present some opinion, and someone points out that I am guilty of some form of logical mistake. Sometimes it is really embarrassing, too. It's not pleasant to be caught in a common trap when you think you're building a perfectly logical argument.
Many times it hits me like a slap to the face, but here's the thing: Being a critical thinker, and not bound by dogma, I am completely free to change my mind, and alter my position, or at the very least refine my argument so that the logic errors are resolved. Some times I succeed by changing my approach, some times I have to let certain ideas go. A few times I have had to completely rebuild my understanding of reality.
A great deal of the more common religious arguments are easily dismissed from a logical point of view, and it is clear that many religious people absolutely do not mind this. They either don't understand the logic, or they don't care, perhaps. Either way, I have seen many times that a certain type of people, religious or not, will continue using arguments that do not make any kind of logical sense, even after having been thoroughly explained the flaws in their arguments. Obviously this kind of thinker does not impress me much.
Which brings me to the other kind of religious people - those who DO care about their arguments making sense from a logical point of view.
If you use an argument, and it is dismissed using tools of logic that you yourself approve of, how do you approach that? What I'm trying to get at is that obviously you want your basic religious foundations to remain solid, but if someone points out an inescapable flaw in that foundation, how do you go about reinforcing it? Do you abandon some parts of your thinking, or do you somehow learn to live with your double-think, like I tend to mockingly justify drinking alcohol or smoking, for instance, or riding my motorcycle too fast, all the while knowing the dangers to myself and sometimes others?
Some times I will argue against points I agree with, simply because the other guy has a very different political view than me, for instance. But when I get home and think things over, I am some times forced to admit (first to myself) that my position is flawed. In the long run, this might make me a better person, or at least a more sound thinker.
Do some of you struggle with these kinds of issues, or do you feel at some deeper level that your religion somehow liberates you from the mental friction of firmly believing something after you have understood why it isn't a logically defendable position?
Tormod.