I started to see myself as a rationalist when I was about 13.
Growing up in a very religious culture, I never bothered to question the beliefs that had been instilled in me. But one day, somehow, I began contemplating death, “How do I know what happens after I die?” or “Will I go to Heaven or Hell?” were questions that bewildered me profoundly. It was then that I realized that everything I had believed about death and the so-called afterlife was pure nonsense. It took me a while to accept that “absence of evidence is evidence of absence” though.
Consequently, I became atheist. Better still, I learnt a very important lesson—that you should always question your beliefs. This skepticism has been my weapon of choice against falsehood ever since.
I started to see myself as a rationalist when I was about 13.
Growing up in a very religious culture, I never bothered to question the beliefs that had been instilled in me. But one day, somehow, I began contemplating death, “How do I know what happens after I die?” or “Will I go to Heaven or Hell?” were questions that bewildered me profoundly. It was then that I realized that everything I had believed about death and the so-called afterlife was pure nonsense. It took me a while to accept that “absence of evidence is evidence of absence” though.
Consequently, I became atheist. Better still, I learnt a very important lesson—that you should always question your beliefs. This skepticism has been my weapon of choice against falsehood ever since.