Been a long time Peter…for me as well in fact. Hope all has been well.
Actually, i think i’d agree with our resident Jewess. Although in my case i take the question a few steps further -
Why are people less Empirical?
In other words, it seems to me that there are people who are essentially less curious about finding things out for themselves and are essentially satisfied with a
narrative.
But this goes well beyond mere matters of religion old chum. I’ll give you an example from my own end of the pool so to speak.
So - gather a group of young minds seeking to change the world (uh oh

)
Let’s say they have a low opinion of religion and deploy the type of arguments you’ve seen time and time again about the non testable nature of God.
Here’s the question:
Will they apply those same rigorous standards to Other Topics that they feel strongly about?
Can they for instance point to…
Patriarchy or at least prove the existence of Patriarchy as understood by 3rd Wave Feminists in the same manner they demand that God (Jewish/Christian/muslim/whatever rendition you so choose) be proven to exist?
Or how about that hot topic button issue of
White Privilege? Again, can they demonstrate the existence of the White Privilege in the manner that they demand that God be proven to exist?
And just for kicks, im sure there must be someone left on this Earth who actually still believes in
Communist Workers Paradise…but funny that…same issues pops up all over again.
I must admit ive chosen rather extreme cases - but i think i’m trying to hammer home a point.
People buy into
narratives, especially if the narrative happens to accord with their particular emotional states.
A much much much much smaller portion of the population is fastidious (paranoid?) enough to ask the question:
But this narrative i support, does it really make sense?
Because the truth of the matter is this:
Rationalism can be a form of superstition too. Just because you can make a coherent and logical statement of a set of beliefs doesn’t mean it must therefore correlate with reality.
There’s really only one way to make sure something somewhat correlates with reality.
But it is easier to accept a
narrative. Because - as David Hume stated “Reason is the Slave to the Passions.”
And more importantly, if this narrative can be delivered in manner where its
1.) Bit-sized
2.) Simplified
3.) Easily Understood
then yeah…
they’ll accept hearing something as the truth. Because it now becomes a topic of general conversation and
they can feel like they are properly informed.
You know…without doing any of the hard work that might actually entail.
Whereas, every expert i’ve ever met in my life - Wall Street bankers, doctors, lawyers, academics - in other words people who spent their whole lives becoming really good at something - are more than willing to admit to the non-clearcut/opaque nature of the more complicated issues found in their respective fields.
And are curious/paranoid enough to ask - “Did what i just hear… is that really true?”