I’m going to admit laziness early, and acknowledge that possibly you or someone else has something specific in mind. What would you [or any outside observer] consider reading to see that?
Edit: This also tempts me to build a time machine and ask my past self with whom I feel very disjointed from why he still holds onto his faith, or to grab myself during the transition and watch it happen again. Not to say I was religion at it’s best, but I could see what convinced me better… alas, such is not the case :P
If you’re a theological type, Neibuhr and Tillich are supposed to be good.
I’m not, so what I’d actually recommend is reading the Bible or whatever scriptures are in your tradition, and going to religious services in whatever your tradition is, and talking to religious people you respect in real life.
The other thing is looking outside your tradition. A lot of people seem to find Buddhism objectively impressive without being raised in it.
My latter half of that same statement was to remedy that laziness by asking for direction, rather than flailing out on my own. I realized without that starting momentum, I’d just be an angsty LessWrong poster. SarahC and andreas both gave me some direction; now I’m going to run with that and see where I end up. If nothing else, I should have more information than I do now.
I’m going to admit laziness early, and acknowledge that possibly you or someone else has something specific in mind. What would you [or any outside observer] consider reading to see that?
Edit: This also tempts me to build a time machine and ask my past self with whom I feel very disjointed from why he still holds onto his faith, or to grab myself during the transition and watch it happen again. Not to say I was religion at it’s best, but I could see what convinced me better… alas, such is not the case :P
If you’re a theological type, Neibuhr and Tillich are supposed to be good.
I’m not, so what I’d actually recommend is reading the Bible or whatever scriptures are in your tradition, and going to religious services in whatever your tradition is, and talking to religious people you respect in real life.
The other thing is looking outside your tradition. A lot of people seem to find Buddhism objectively impressive without being raised in it.
Don’t be lazy—either go do research, or admit that you have little or no rational doubt about your current position.
My latter half of that same statement was to remedy that laziness by asking for direction, rather than flailing out on my own. I realized without that starting momentum, I’d just be an angsty LessWrong poster. SarahC and andreas both gave me some direction; now I’m going to run with that and see where I end up. If nothing else, I should have more information than I do now.
Good luck!