Possibly this has to do with the sort of ‘theists’ one is exposed to? I would not have said “overly literal” or “just espousing a perspective” myself, but I am aware my perception of the wider ‘theist’ community is somewhat skewed by attempting to get a degree in psychology at a university where more than half the faculty believe in possessing demons.
(On a not-unrelated note: faith healers are evil.)
You’re right, believing in possessing demons and faith healing seem really extreme examples of theism to me so it certainly depends on the sort of theism you’re exposed to. The sort of theism I’ve been dominantly exposed to throughout my life is a sort of network of memes and moral ideas that operate to define a culturally consistent sense of what a ‘good person’ is and what defines a good life. ‘Belief in God’ mostly means you have a positive accepting relation to this culture, and people very rarely think of God as an existing entity, but if pressed he has more of a deist quality.
I grew up (and still relate closely to) people who do literally believe in miraculous healing and don’t particularly associate it with ‘extreme’ so much as ‘actual’ or ‘vaguely coherent’. When I think of extremes I think of people believing others are Not Good Persons and not having an acceptable relationship with the culture based on professions of belief. Fortunately the theists I expose myself to don’t tend to be the bad kind.
Possibly this has to do with the sort of ‘theists’ one is exposed to? I would not have said “overly literal” or “just espousing a perspective” myself, but I am aware my perception of the wider ‘theist’ community is somewhat skewed by attempting to get a degree in psychology at a university where more than half the faculty believe in possessing demons.
(On a not-unrelated note: faith healers are evil.)
You’re right, believing in possessing demons and faith healing seem really extreme examples of theism to me so it certainly depends on the sort of theism you’re exposed to. The sort of theism I’ve been dominantly exposed to throughout my life is a sort of network of memes and moral ideas that operate to define a culturally consistent sense of what a ‘good person’ is and what defines a good life. ‘Belief in God’ mostly means you have a positive accepting relation to this culture, and people very rarely think of God as an existing entity, but if pressed he has more of a deist quality.
Man, that sounds pretty great. I don’t know if I’d go so far as to identify myself as ‘atheist’ if I’d grown up with that culture—hang on-
I grew up (and still relate closely to) people who do literally believe in miraculous healing and don’t particularly associate it with ‘extreme’ so much as ‘actual’ or ‘vaguely coherent’. When I think of extremes I think of people believing others are Not Good Persons and not having an acceptable relationship with the culture based on professions of belief. Fortunately the theists I expose myself to don’t tend to be the bad kind.