Monday 31 July 2017

FAITH: FOLLOWERS ARE MORE EMOTIONAL AND LESS ANALYTICAL - STUDY RESULTS

ACTION RESEARCH FORUM; FAITH ORIENTED CULTS IGNORE RATIONALITY, WHILE NATURE EVOLUTION IS BASED ON LAWS OF NATURE, WHICH ARE OFTEN NOT GOVERNED BY LAWS OF FAITH. DUE TO PREVAILED PRIMITIVENESS OF FEUDALISM, WHICH CONTROLS HUMAN REACTION SIM EXTENT CONFRONTING ARGUMENT'S DIS LIKENESS. THE 3RD WORLD FAITH HEGEMONY ARE MORE VIOLENT TO DISAGREEMENTS.  



Source: https://arynews.tv/en/religious-people-less-analytical-study/
LIFESTYLE

Religious people are more emotional, less analytical – study claims

religious study


Religious people views are driven by ‘emotional resonance’ that makes them cling to their views, even if they are wrong, a new study has claimed.
The study was published in the Journal of Religion and Health, and consisted of 209 Christians, 152 non-religious, nine Jewish, five Buddhist, four Hindu, one Muslim, and 24 ‘other’ religions.
The groups all completed tests for dogmatism, empathetic and moral concerns, and a test of their analytical reasoning.
Overall the study, published in the Daily Mail, found that religious participants showed dogmatism and empathetic concern, while non-religious persons had better analytical reasoning skills
Jared Friedman, one of the paper’s co-authors explained:
It suggests that religious individuals may cling to certain beliefs, especially those which seem at odds with analytic reasoning, because those beliefs resonate with their moral sentiments
Analysis vs Empathy – the two track mind
According to research from scientists at Case Western Reserve University, Ohio, the brain works on two tracks – empathetic and analytical.
People generally switch between the two, depending on the situation at hand.
The research found that in the minds of religious people the empathetic side dominates, and the same applies for the analytic track in the minds of atheists.
Co-author of the paper, associate professor Anthony Jack wrote: “Emotional resonance helps religious people to feel more certain – the more moral correctness they see in something, the more it affirms their thinking.”
In contrast, moral concerns make nonreligious people feel less certain.
It’s also possible that this dichotomy between religious and non-religious brains, also exists between other strongly held beliefs such as veganism, climate change, or political opinions.
Jack also related the emotional and empathetic track to people’s responses to fake news and current events in the US administration.
With all this talk about fake news, the Trump administration, by emotionally resonating with people, appeals to members of its base while ignoring facts.
The more dogmatic a participant was, the less analytical they were, even if that dogma was militant atheism. They were also less likely to understand things from the perspective of another.
The study did find that there were similarities between the two extremes on the spectrum of religious and non-religious.



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