3point14
Pi
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2005
- Messages
- 23,091
Is it irrational for a small child who has been told by his/her parents that the tooth fairy exists and experienced the 'magic' of her visits to believe in such a being? is the child basing their belief on 'zero evidence'?
Yes, actually, the child is basing it's belief on something their parents told them. Children have a predisposition to believe what their parents tell them, it's an in built survival mechanism, so for them, it's how they get their information. They're children, that's the point.
I don't think it's relevant, to be honest, what we're talking about are thinking adults with full reasoning capacity, not children. Any adult who believed in the tooth fairy would be worthy of ridicule.
I think you're going a bit too far with this statement. Irrational beliefs do exist.
I don't deny it. They're irrational, that's the point. I don't know why you say this.
'Zero evidence' is incorrect. For example, while you likely don't consider either personal experience or testimonials about other people's personal experience to be evidence with respect to god, many other people do. Hence, they are not basing their belief on 'zero evidence' but on the evidence of their own and other people's experiences and weigh that evidence differently than you would.
And that's irrational behaviour and the worst form of wishful thinking. They don't have any evidence at all, they're basing a whole belief structure or inventing a very fantastic entity on the input from a nervous system and brain that's notoriously bad at giving us correct information, they are not (and neither would I be, in their place) reliable witnesses and if they were rational they would take this into account. They don't, they don't actually think about it, they decide what they would most like it to be and pick that. Not rational, not thinking, just (bringing us neatly round) an adult desperately trying to remain a child so they can keep believing in the tooth fairy in the hope they might find money under their pillow.