Islam IS by far the most evil religion in the world today, because of its extremists. They are without question the most extreme and dangerous. — DingoJones
to reinforce my atheistic beliefs — Purple Pond
"I gave up believing in that which is impossible, illogical, and for which there is no evidence when I was a child." — Artemis
How sad. Even as a child, when your imagination and creative-learning ability was at its peak? What a shame. — Pattern-chaser
You could tell a kid that there is a dimension that Harry Potter magic exists but not our dimension. Then you could make it plain that it is completely up to the kid whether to believe this or not. It would have no bearing on the practical matters of life. Kind of like the multiverse. — Noah Te Stroete
Have you never heard someone, describing a good story, say "you have to suspend your disbelief"? That's what you do when you're experiencing a story: you suspend disbelief. For the moment, you believe. — Pattern-chaser
How sad. Even as a child, when your imagination and creative-learning ability was at its peak? What a shame. :fear: — Pattern-chaser
Have you never heard someone, describing a good story, say "you have to suspend your disbelief"? That's what you do when you're experiencing a story: you suspend disbelief. For the moment, you believe. — Pattern-chaser
You don't believe it. What you do is not be a realism fetishist, because that's not pertinent to fiction. You enjoy the fantasy for what it is rather. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin already pointed this out, but I'll reiterate: creativity and imagination have nothing to do with actually believing. I still very much enjoy Tolkien, but was unaware that I therefore believe in Ents and the Dark Lord! — Artemis
None of this changes the fact that not believing things that are impossible, illogical, etc. doesn't amount to not having an imagination — Terrapin Station
In the case of fiction, we believe it for a shorter time, equally well defined: until we are finished with looking at it, or enjoying it. But we do believe it. — Pattern-chaser
Maybe you literally believe fictions when you're engaging with them, but I sure do not. It seems to me that literally believing them would be unusual (but no problem with being unusual there). — Terrapin Station
the profound truth of monotheism was something very different from the religions it displaced — Wayfarer
Because the aim here is to enjoy the story, our belief is passive. — Pattern-chaser
What would you say is the difference between a passive belief and an active belief. — Terrapin Station
If you passively believe that Alice entered Wonderland, what does that involve exactly? — Terrapin Station
God is God . — Pattern-chaser
In this context, rather than as a bold and universal (objective? :gasp: ) statement, I would say that passive belief remains in the background, largely ignored — Pattern-chaser
What does that refer to, though? You're saying a belief you're not aware of? — Terrapin Station
If you don't know how to 'suspend disbelief' and enjoy a good story, this is not the place to find out about it. — Pattern-chaser
But you're stressing that you actually believe fictions — Terrapin Station
No, not "stressing". That's what "passive belief" is intended to communicate. Something that happens in the background. Something that makes no significant contribution to the experience, which is the story, in this case. — Pattern-chaser
Stressing in that you're still saying that it's belief. — Terrapin Station
Of course it's belief. It's acceptance of the story, and the world wherein it takes place, for the duration of that story. This is NOT worth disputing to this degree. It's a side-point of a side-point. Let's leave it here. — Pattern-chaser
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