Unless you’re going to cloister your children until the state forces you to release them into the world, they’re going to encounter plenty of irrationality without your needing to deliberately lie to them. I would try leading by example, rather than hoping for an epiphany that may never come.
What about ghosts, the supernatural and everything else of that kind they’ll encounter in movies, television, cartoons, etc? The only difference with Santa is that most people grow out of it, whereas many adults continue to believe in ghosts, but that’s because Santa is childhood-specific myth. If the same adults who think Santa is absurd were supposed to believe in Santa I’m sure they’d have no problems rationalizing it.
Unless you’re going to cloister your children until the state forces you to release them into the world, they’re going to encounter plenty of irrationality without your needing to deliberately lie to them. I would try leading by example, rather than hoping for an epiphany that may never come.
What do children learn that counts for the same test as Santa Claus?
The lie of Santa Claus may be a learning experience, but it isn’t actually a test per se—every child finds out the truth one way or another.
What about ghosts, the supernatural and everything else of that kind they’ll encounter in movies, television, cartoons, etc? The only difference with Santa is that most people grow out of it, whereas many adults continue to believe in ghosts, but that’s because Santa is childhood-specific myth. If the same adults who think Santa is absurd were supposed to believe in Santa I’m sure they’d have no problems rationalizing it.