Ask HN: Understanding spirituality for an introverted skeptic scientist
I (M/40) have fallen for someone (F/32) who's very into spirituality, Law of Attraction, and related stuff. I'm a technical person, I'm very much aligned with evidence-based beliefs, atheist, and this is all very new to me. We are best friends, we will likely be no more than that (i.e. no relationship on the horizon), and I am 100% happy with that to be the case.
I would like to better understand some of her interests without being drawn into what I currently view as pseudoscience. I realise this might make me a bad person, but she makes me feel like nobody else I've ever met, and she's so well-read on it all that I can't quite make the jump to have her explain some of it to me as a skeptic…I have a feeling I'll be going in unprepared if I don't have at least a cursory understanding first.
Is there reading material you'd recommend for this? Is there any advice you'd give to someone who's somewhat open-minded but doesn't want to screw up a friendship by blundering in with the wrong thing?
Thanks for reading, and thanks for any advice.
24 comments
[ 5.1 ms ] story [ 61.4 ms ] threadIn my experience labels such as spiritual or skeptical obscure more than they illuminate. They are a tool in the ongoing exercise of identity construction, itself an effort to define ourselves that is often strikingly counter factual.
Enjoy her company and observe yourself as much as you observe her. The more important question is: I have fallen for a woman who is not attracted to me and I will settle for friends. What is going on inside me that makes that ok?
I would bet money she has a bookshelf full of them. New age and pseudoscience thrive on the grift of merchandise - there's always at least a book.
So many books. Courses. Trinkets.
That's the essential pull quote for me.
Thank you, I greatly appreciate the clarity in this, very helpful to me. As to the quesiton -- I don't fully understand what's happening, and I suspect my mind is convincing me that there are too many hurdles for it to become anything more than friends…and that friends would be better than not.
You're basically looking to rationalize the irrational. This is an exercise in futility.
Spirituality is science done upside down and backwards.
Spiritual people decide to "believe" and then seek justification and confirmation from other like minded people --- all while ignoring any contradicting info.
Group enough of these folks together into a self reinforcing feedback loop and you have a "cult".
If this could be rationalized, it would be called "science" instead of "spirituality". If "spirituality" could be reasoned with, it would cease to exist. Any such attempt is often viewed as a hostile attack on the individual's self awareness and self esteem and usually ends in rejection.
Most surveys done on this have shown the pesky non-spiritual to be *the* single most hated minority group in the USA. And by extension, it must at least imply that the spiritual majority are an intolerant/hateful bunch. Which certainly would tend to logically explain a lot of our history.
I do not hate non-spritual people. I am surrounded by spiritual people and can't think of any I would say this is true.
Having a faith is not irrational. As I get older I become more aware of all the great people who have gone before you and I and how short our own life will be. I am glad therefore that my view of the world does not only come from the echo chamber of my mind. Faith is one area where we can not control by ourselves. We lean on a power greater than our own understanding, which many brilliant people have done for thousands of years.
I think this is a broadly fair assessment at a base level, but I hadn't considered it as such until you said it.
Pretending you don't see the elephant in the room may work on a superficial level ... but it is somewhat deceptive and dishonest.
Such pretense is not what I would call a solid basis for a deep or lasting relationship.
Although I don't believe in those as well, I find it fascinating that they claim that god is your imagination. That means, whatever you imagine in your mind, it will become a reality in your future. If you imagine that you are wealthy, then you'll be wealthy soon. But you have to feel it as if it is true and it will reflect to your reality in the future. According to them, it is most effective when you imagine before you sleep. You can prove their teachings wrong by testing it. There's nothing for you to lose. Then you can share your experience with your partner. You won't believe until you experience it yourself. That would be a great topic for both of you to talk about.
One more thing, the old hacking magazine phrack published a topic about out-of-the body-experience or astral projection[0]. For me, the article is a very intersting read. And it's kinda scary but interesting since a lot of people claim to have experienced it. Plus, there are interesting books about it. Again, you won't believe until you experience it yourself.
I hope this will help improve your relationship. Good luck.
[0] - http://www.phrack.org/archives/issues/64/16.txt
I think it's more a pragmatic / realist stance, she has her (physical traits) type, and I'm the opposite in every way.
E.g. I will be able to recognize patterns like "aha! (something) -> (something) is just the (something) of the (something)s of the set of (somethings)!" But, while the "form" of the intuition is correct, the actual 'truth' will be like the exact polar opposite. For example like let's say I mistakenly call something a "lower bound" when I really mean "the least upper bound." It's like creating a beautiful painting exactly how you envisioned it, but then after the fact, you realized you swapped all the blue with all the red. The structure is the same, but the meaning is flipped.
In some sense we are the product of our life experience. I've found that when people say something spiritual, it is best to view it like a beautiful painting where you read into the structure of it rather than the colors. Because it conveys the structure of the life that they have lived, condensed from the data of their entirety of experience.
Let's take the law of attraction as an example. Do you believe they are saying something like:
?Or is it more like,
?In general, society doesn't really train us to probe what people mean (instead we recognize out-group people we disagree with as in-group capital exacted at the time of the in-group/out-group showdown), and instead take their word at its least charitable face value, and this is the source of nearly all communication troubles. Not to say that you are doing this - and I commend you for trying to be non-judgmental.
ps:
There's a funny (and fabricated) story about Niels Bohr (turns out it wasn't about him and the origin was about the opposite conclusion..[0] :^) ):
> Above Professor Niels Bohr’s door hangs a horseshoe. The world-famous atomic expert was recently asked if he really believed that it brought him luck. “No,” said Bohr, “of course I don’t believe it—but I’ve sometimes noticed that it works even when you don’t believe in it!”
[0] https://hsm.stackexchange.com/questions/8387/is-the-anecdote...
Are these claims trying to be scientific in the first place? If not, don't evaluate them as such.
Science (as in scientific method) and truth are orthogonal. I'd start with the problem of induction. Those who are allergic to any non-scientific claims usually consider it to be an uninteresting technicality. Those of us who aren't are more likely to consider it a fundamental limitation.
Let your friend make the case. It's okay if you don't think these beliefs can be proven. If you cannot disprove them or prove that it must be somehow stupid/wrong to entertain an unproven claim, you shouldn't imply otherwise.
I'm not sure what your friend's exact beliefs are. AFAIK new age stuff may like the scientific angle, but even if scientific character is implied, yet the claims aren't scientific in their nature, I'd still say it's more charitable to avoid the charge of pseudoscience.