What Beliefs Are Made From
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What Beliefs Are Made From explores the nature and purpose of belief. The book describes several strange beliefs that have been shared by many members of whole communities. The intellectualistic, dispositional, feeling and eliminativist theories of belief are then examined critically. This is followed by a review of factors that can influence people in their beliefs. These include faulty use of evidence, unconscious reasoning biases, inability to withhold judgement, wishful thinking, prior beliefs, shared beliefs, personal experience, testimony, judgements about the source of testimony, personality, in-group psychology, emotions and feelings, language, symbolism, non-verbal communication, repetition, propaganda, mysticism, rumour, conspiracy theories, and illness. The book also covers beliefs of children and belief during dreaming. The regulation of inquiry by belief and disbelief is described.
What Beliefs Are Made From is a useful reference for general readers interested in the philosophy of the mind, and the psychology of belief.
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What Beliefs Are Made From - Jonathan Leicester
Table of Contents
Welcome
Table of Contents
Title Page
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Usage Rules:
Disclaimer:
Limitation of Liability:
General:
FOREWORD
PREFACE
Conflict of Interest
Acknowledgements
The Problem with Belief
Abstract
Some Strange Shared Beliefs
Abstract
Culture-bound Psychoses
Epidemic Hysteria
Myths and Legends
Rumours and Conspiracy Theories
Four Theories of Belief
Abstract
The Intellectualistic Theory of Belief
The Dispositional Theory of Belief
Belief and Judgement
The Feeling Theory of Belief
Eliminativist Theories of Belief
FOOTNOTE
The Evolution of Mind
Abstract
FOOTNOTE
Causes of Belief
Abstract
Using Evidence
Failure to Use Evidence
Faulty Use of Evidence
Inability to withhold Judgement. Vacillating Beliefs
Desire Wishful Thinking
The Believer’s Prior Beliefs
Shared Beliefs of Communities and Groups
Direct Experience and Testimony
Near-death Experiences
The source of Testimony
Intelligence
Ego Defence Mechanisms
Personality
Mood and Emotion
Language
The Power of Repetition Propaganda
The Exposure Effect
Mystical Thinking and Revelation
Natural Credulity
FOOTNOTE
Belief, Consciousness, Attention
Abstract
Consciousness
Attention
Centre and Periphery of Attention
Automatic Attention
Deliberate Attention
Divided Attention, Multitasking
Terminating and Switching Attention
Disorders of Attention
FOOTNOTE
Memory and Belief
Abstract
Working Memory
Implicit, Tacit, or Non-declarative Memory
Introspection and Belief
Abstract
Emotions and Feelings
Abstract
PROPERTIES OF EMOTIONS AND FEELINGS
Some Particular Emotions in Relation to Belief
The Feeling of Disgust
The Emotion of Anger
Pride, Humility, and Meekness
The Feeling of Remorse
Tenderness
The Feeling of Spirituality
The Feeling of Urge
Perception
Abstract
Mental Imagery
Personality
Abstract
In-Groups and Out-Groups
Abstract
Symbolism
Abstract
Speech and Language
Abstract
Names, Descriptive Names, and Descriptions
Naming Ineffable Things
Particulars and Universals
Identifying Universals. Nominalism and Realism
Misunderstanding
The Whorf-Sapir Hypothesis
The Role of Belief During Inquiry
Abstract
Complexity, Children, Dreams
Abstract
Belief About Complex Subjects
Beliefs and Disbeliefs of Young Children
Belief During Dreams
Illnesses that Affect Belief
Abstract
Neurological Disease and Belief
Frontal Lobe Disease and Counterfactual Thinking
Medial Temporal or Limbic Epilepsy
Drug Intoxication In the Zone
Neglect Syndromes
The ‘Split Brain’ or Callosotomy Syndrome
Psychiatric Illness and Belief
Depression
Obsessive Hypochondriasis
Obsessive-compulsive Disorder
Delusions and Schizophrenia
Nature and Purpose of Belief
Abstract
Belief, Knowledge, and Opinion
Belief and Truth
Conscience
Abstract
Dualism and Immaterial Mind
Abstract
Appendix. The Brain: Structure and Function
Anatomy of the Brain
The Neuron
Neural Plasticity
Notes
Chapter 1. The Problem with Belief
Chapter 2. Strange Shared Beliefs
Culture-bound Psychoses
Epidemic Hysteria
Myths and Legends
Rumours and Conspiracy Theories
Chapter 3. Four Theories of Belief
The Intellectualistic Theory of Belief
The Dispositional Theory of Belief
The Feeling Theory of Belief
Eliminativist Theories of Belief
Chapter 4. The Evolution of Mind
Chapter 5. Causes of Belief
Using Evidence
Failure to Use Evidence
Faulty Use of Evidence
Inability to Withhold Judgement. Vacillating Beliefs
Desire. Wishful Thinking
The Believer’s Prior Beliefs
Shared Beliefs of Communities and Groups
Direct Experience and Testimony
The source of Testimony
Intelligence
Ego Defence Mechanisms
Personality
Language
The Power of Repetition. Propaganda
Mystical Thinking and Revelation
Natural Credulity
Chapter 6. Belief, Consciousness, Attention
Chapter 7. Memory and Belief
Chapter 8. Introspection and Belief
Chapter 9. Emotions and Feelings
Chapter 10. Perception
Chapter 11. Personality
Chapter 12. In-groups and Out-groups
Chapter 13. Symbolism
Chapter 14. Speech and Language
Chapter 15. The role of Belief During Inquiry
Chapter 16. Complexity, Children, Dreams
Beliefs about Complex Subjects
Beliefs and Disbeliefs of Young Children
Belief During Dreams
Chapter 17. Illnesses that Affect Belief
Neurological Disease and Belief
Psychiatric Illness and Belief
Chapter 18. Nature and Purpose of Belief
Chapter 19. Conscience
Chapter 20. Dualism and Immaterial Mind
References
REFERENCES
What Beliefs Are Made From
Jonathan Leicester
Retired consultant neurologist, Neurology Department
The Royal Prince Alfred Hospital
Sydney
Australia
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FOREWORD
Dominic Murphy
Most educated people have heard of Planck’s Constant. Fewer have heard of Max Planck’s other eponymous contribution to science, Planck’s Principle, even though it is of arguably greater philosophical import. Planck’s Principle aims to answer a question that has long vexed students of science – under what circumstances does a new theory replace an old one? Planck’s answer; when all the adherents of the old theory are dead or retired.
There’s a serious point here which philosophers too often ignore, but to which Jonathan Leicester is alert – as he puts it, the intellectualist theory of belief fails because it pays too much attention to the evidence for a proposition, and ignores many of the other factors that cause us to hold beliefs. Planck drew our attention to the obvious fact that scientists who have invested their career in a theory, who rely on it in their work and maybe derive great prestige from their association with it, will be very reluctant to give it up even when the evidence convinces others who have less at stake. We all know people who seem to believe things because of emotional attachments, ideology or financial gain, or just because of plain old wishful thinking. These processes cause beliefs but do not justify them, and we make allowances for them in our everyday dealing with other people, although perhaps we are not alert enough to them when they occur in our own thinking.
We also use belief
to cover a wide variety of judgements – a snap judgement that the noise behind you means danger might be called a belief, and so might the considered conclusion you come up with after long hours in the library or the lab, weighing the evidence judiciously. Many philosophers and psychologists have contemplated the variety of causes and manifestations of belief and wondered if perhaps there is no such thing. This ‘eliminativist’ position does not necessarily imply that that humans never think about the world or respond to it or that we cannot have true and false representations, but it wonders whether there can ever be a unified theory of a phenomenon that seems so diverse as the myriad things we call belief.
Dr Leicester thinks there can be a unified theory, by arguing for the view that belief is a distinctive feeling. This allows him to account for the variety by saying that what beliefs have in common is the way they feel, rather than their functions or their causes. It has always been a minority view, because so many of us find it hard to identify the unique feeling that accompanies belief and belief only, but the arguments here are clear and concise and deserve everyone’s attention, as does the great variety of phenomena covered in the book. What Beliefs are Made From is scholarly, fascinating and entertaining.
Dominic Murphy
History and Philosophy of Science
Faculty of Science, The University of Sydney
Australia
Belief is the central problem in the analysis of mind. … Beliefs give knowledge and error; they are the vehicles of truth and falsehood. Psychology, theory of knowledge and metaphysics revolve about belief, and on the view we take of belief our philosophical outlook largely depends.
Bertrand Russell, 1921.
On any longer view, man is only fitfully committed to the rational – to thinking, seeing, learning, knowing. Believing is what he is really proud of.
Martin Amis, 2008.
I know we’re going to lose in Turin today, and I believe we’re going to win.
Tim Parks, 2002.
You never believed in the meaning of this world and you therefore deduced the idea that everything was equivalent and that good and evil could be defined according to one’s wishes.
Albert Camus, 1943.
PREFACE
Jon Leicester
Have you noticed that sensible people sometimes hold a belief that is contrary to evidence you would expect them to know and accept? Sometimes it is about something important. Beliefs are made from many things, a fact that has intrigued me for years and has led me to this exploration of the nature of belief. It is offered for anyone who is interested in belief, hoping they will find it helpful, as I have. It is about how people do believe, not about how they ought to believe. For readers new to the brain sciences there is a short appendix on the brain’s anatomy and physiology, and for those more deeply involved in the topic there is a section of brief notes, often indicating a point of contention, or a guide to references. The book is intended to be serious but accessible.
Jon Leicester
Neurology Department
The Royal Prince Alfred Hospital
Sydney
Australia
Conflict of Interest
The author confirms that he has no conflict of interest to declare for this publication.
Acknowledgements
I am especially grateful to Pierre Beumont, late professor of psychiatry at the University of Sydney, for help and encouragement through the early stages of this project before his illness in 2003. I thank all the other people who have helped me with comments and suggestions on early drafts. The cover photograph of the battleground, First Bull Run, American Civil War, is by Robert Wines. Jon Gittoes made the drawing at the end of Chapter 13.
The Problem with Belief
Jonathan Leicester
Abstract
This brief introductory chapter outlines the reasons for and aims of this inquiry into the nature and purpose of belief. The main problem is that belief is such a poor guide to truth, which raised the question of whether this is its function, as it is commonly supposed to be. The inquiry will lead to the conclusion that the purpose of belief is to be a guide to practical action.
Keywords: Belief, Purpose of belief.
The great English philosopher John Locke gave this definition of belief: ‘belief is the admitting or receiving any proposition as true, upon arguments or proofs that are found to persuade us to receive it as true.’ The problem with belief is that people are not as rational as they might be. In the next chapter we meet strange beliefs that have been shared by whole groups of people, and in later chapters we will meet individuals who have believed that all the planets are inhabited and the outermost planets have the best inhabitants, that people are coming into a locked bedroom at night by passing through the floor, that all healthy infants start life with equal intelligence, and that the man who purports to be your father-in-law is really his exact duplicate robot driven by clockwork in his head. Why is it that while most of us don’t believe in astrology some of us do? To my mind the evidence for evolution is overwhelming, yet many people are Creationists. It has been known for decades that human activities are causing the climate to change, yet there are still many skeptics and some outright deniers. All these beliefs need to be accounted for. There is no doubt that people base some of their beliefs on the teaching of parents and authorities without asking for evidence. If Locke’s definition were relaxed to allow for this then some odd beliefs would be accounted for, but many others would not.
I find that I doubt that the universe and time began with a big bang when a tiny lump of amazing density exploded. Instead, I believe in infinity and eternity, I always have, and I can’t imagine nothing, nowhere, or no-time. I know it would be sensible to believe the experts, yet somehow I doubt them. I have other beliefs that I cannot justify with evidence. One of these is that computers will never be conscious. Why do I believe that? I know it would be sensible to withhold judgement. There is something involuntary about belief. Why do people often form beliefs very quickly without persuasion from arguments or proofs? Why do optimists and pessimists so often form opposite beliefs from the same evidence?
What is belief? What happens in my mind as I believe that the Amazon River is in South America, or that five plus three is eight? What happens differently as I disbelieve that Mt Everest is in the Rockies, or that four plus two is ten? Or does nothing different happen? What is the purpose of belief? Locke’s definition implies that belief is a guide to truth, but it seems a poor guide to truth. Perhaps it has another purpose.
I believe there are answers to these problems and questions, and my purpose is to present them. Perhaps the most fundamental answer, suggested by many observations, is that the purpose of belief is to guide practical action, not to indicate truth. Many of us half-know this implicitly, so we are usually not very surprised to find someone holds a mistaken belief, but we are surprised if we occasionally find a man acting contrary to a belief we know he has held. Once it is accepted that this is its purpose many of the problems with belief fall into place.
My interest in belief was stimulated by noticing the fallibility of ordinary beliefs about secular matters and it is from these beliefs that I will draw evidence and reach conclusions. I have not been especially interested in the matter of religious faith, though many people find this the most intriguing of all our beliefs. For this reason I will examine two issues that have some bearing on religious faith in the final two chapters.
Some Strange Shared Beliefs
Jonathan Leicester
Abstract
This chapter describes and comments on mistaken beliefs that are or have been orthodox or at least common in whole communities. So-called culture-bound psychoses are illustrated by shen-k'uei in Taiwanese culture and malgri among natives of Mornington Island. So-called epidemic hysteria is illustrated by an outbreak of witchcraft in Christian Europe, the epidemic of shell shock among allied soldiers in the First World War, and the epidemic of RSI in Australia from 1980 to 1986. Brief notes on myths, legends, rumours, and conspiracy theories complete the chapter.
Keywords: Belief, Conspiracy theories, Culture-bound psychoses, Epidemic hysteria.
Culture-bound Psychoses
These illnesses are not psychoses, and the beliefs they depend on are not psychotic. The term, though widely used, is a misnomer. There are many of these illnesses around the world, each stereotyped and peculiar to a particular culture. I have chosen two lesser-known examples for illustration, shen-k’uei and malgri.
Shen-k’uei is a syndrome of Taiwanese culture. It usually affects young men, who present acutely miserable and complaining of dizziness, backache, fatigue, insomnia, thinness and fear for their health and fertility. The patient is anxious about masturbation or wet dreams. The underlying beliefs are that the ejaculations have induced kidney deficiency. The kidneys are believed to be the source and store of vital essence, semen, which they distribute around the body as needed to sustain the vigour of the various organs. If too much is lost in ejaculations then ill health follows. These beliefs were widely held, and were promulgated by traditional doctors and faith healers.
Malgri occurred in Australian Aborigines living on Mornington Island. It was described by the medical anthropologist and psychiatrist John Cawte, who thought that personality factors contributed to vulnerability, though most of the islanders had at least some anxiety about contracting the condition. It was an abrupt illness. Victims complained of abdominal pain, headache, and distended abdomen. They sometimes vomited and might writhe and roll on the ground, clutching their bellies and crying out. On examining patients, mission nurses found no abnormality apart from abdominal distention from swallowed air. The underlying beliefs were that the coastline was divided into regions, and each region belonged to a subgroup of the tribe and had its own totem. Malgri could be caught either by going into the sea after eating land food without washing the hands in fresh water, or by going onto the land after eating seafood without washing in salt water. The sickness was caught by the totem of that region entering the body of the transgressor. Malgri would not be caught in a person’s own totem zone, as that totem knew that person. When malgri occurred the people gathered and made a fire near the prostrate sufferer. A tribal doctor massaged his sweat over the victim’s body. A grass or hair belt was unwound to make a long cord from the victim’s foot to the water, for the intruding spirit to leave by. The throng then chanted the malgri song, exhorting the spirit to depart; while they watched for a shooting star, believed to be Malgri’s eye, diving from the sky to indicate the spirit’s departure. The cord was then cut, the sufferer having recovered.
Epidemic Hysteria
Epidemic hysteria is a poor but established name for this condition, which is rather like culture-bound psychosis in our culture. The fertile ground for an epidemic is that a considerable section of the community has a shared belief in the condition, including at least some of the people who have authority, and that some people are getting benefit from it. The whole community does not have to believe: there usually are skeptics who often disbelieve the genuineness both of the entity and of the individual sufferers, but who are overruled by the weight of belief against them. There is often evidence, either then or later, that some of the apparent believers were malingering or manipulating, but some real believing is a sine qua non, without it the epidemic will not occur. Once established, an epidemic usually expands and intensifies. As this happens its consequences become more serious, until pragmatic considerations necessitate that it stop. Whatever its truth or falsity, the skeptics then get the upper hand, the benefits are terminated, and the epidemic subsides. I have chosen three examples for illustration, an outbreak of witchcraft in seventeenth century France, the epidemic of shell shock among soldiers in the First World War, and the epidemic of RSI in Australia from 1980 to 1986.
Fig. (2.1))
The burning of Grandier (From engraving by Gabriel Leguè, 1880).
The social factors that fostered outbreaks of witchcraft in Christian Europe were belief in supernatural causes and preoccupation with a Christianity that in some respects had left the gospels and lost its way. Witchcraft could be used as a weapon against enemies. Accusations of witchcraft often broke out when animosity between villagers was running high. They were especially likely if local leaders encouraged the accusations. Supernatural causes were sometimes invoked for the most natural of events. For example, a rider thrown from his horse had natural injuries, but a magic spell might have caused the horse to buck or bolt. There are excellent accounts of some of these epidemics. Aldous Huxley, in The Devils of Loudun, describes an outbreak in a nunnery in a small town in France. Sex