G
gavanhe
Guest
Came across this quote whilst reading the review of a book in quadrant magazine called “50 Voices of Disbelief: Why We Are Atheists” - 50 essays by atheists attacking religion.
Quote - Philosopher Adèle Mercier makes the point that “believing that you believe something is not the same as believing it”. You may (mistakenly) believe that you believe in God, without believing in God. Believing something is a first-order belief; believing that you believe it is a second-order belief. Mercier argues that “Virtually all religious beliefs are second-order beliefs, mistaken for first-order beliefs.” - end quote.
Not being schooled in philosophy, how does one make sense of this quote. How do you define first and second order belief. Either one believes or one does not!
Gerry
Quote - Philosopher Adèle Mercier makes the point that “believing that you believe something is not the same as believing it”. You may (mistakenly) believe that you believe in God, without believing in God. Believing something is a first-order belief; believing that you believe it is a second-order belief. Mercier argues that “Virtually all religious beliefs are second-order beliefs, mistaken for first-order beliefs.” - end quote.
Not being schooled in philosophy, how does one make sense of this quote. How do you define first and second order belief. Either one believes or one does not!
Gerry