You are explaining divergent in a way that's not going to make sense to them without a comparison. But that's a good point.
If I may .....it seems you are saying something interesting that I notice as well. It may seem snooty to try to come across showing education matters, but as you get older you start to recognize (easily) who has an education and who does not. So you're giving me something to think about here. Maybe it isn't the "raised in a home with a fanatical Christian background" but more different "thinking" abilities. This is something we study as well in psychometrics.
So for example many students struggle in learning and testing because they only are looking for the correct answer. They don't know how to think in different ways.
Case in point to
pharphis
Convergent thinking comes from the premise that there is only ONE right answer.
What year was Abraham Lincoln Shot?
What is the capital of New York?
There is only ONE right answer.
Divergent thinking is thinking that requires more creativity and intelligence.
As alecCowaN has pointed out, "How many different ways can you think of to get to the
soccerfootball match in Cardiff"
This is quite interesting to me to consider because it is precisely the problem. The former believer who is now newly Atheist, who can only think in a convergent way will think "Oh no! That old is answer is wrong! I have to tell everyone they have the wrong answer.
This is the right answer."
A divergent thinker will realize there are many different possibilities to what is "right" and "wrong."
Fantastic! AlecCowaN! Bloody brilliant!
http://www.learningandteaching.info/learning/converge.htm