There is an internal logic to the big lie though. Obviously if any of these crazy ideas flies against the big one, the believer will goto great lengths to find a rationale to reject such "heresy", even if it means denying the facts. This works in their favour when say, they reject Satanism or the idea that Mohammed is god's prophet, but not so good when it comes to a denial that the sun is the centre of the Solar System.Obvious Leo wrote:Are you blokes flirting again? Why not just tie the knot and be done with it?
Yes. There's ample evidence for this. People who don't believe in god are far less likely to believe in ghosts, astrology, UFOs, conspiracy theories etc. There's an ancient truism which goes that the bigger the lie the easier it is to get people to swallow it so if you start them out as kids with a whopper like god it should be all downhill from there. You can get them to believe anything and thus have them eating out of your hand. If you don't believe me ask the pope.Hobbes' Choice wrote:But for most atheists it is necessary to fundamentally question the nature of belief itself;
The paradox is though, if they are also open to crazy ideas - why do they score less for creativity?