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      What Should I Believe?
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      Book

      What Should I Believe?

      DOI link for What Should I Believe?

      What Should I Believe? book

      Why Our Beliefs about the Nature of Death and the Purpose of Life Dominate Our Lives

      What Should I Believe?

      DOI link for What Should I Believe?

      What Should I Believe? book

      Why Our Beliefs about the Nature of Death and the Purpose of Life Dominate Our Lives
      ByDorothy Rowe
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2008
      eBook Published 2 October 2008
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203181492
      Pages 312
      eBook ISBN 9780203181492
      Subjects Behavioral Sciences, Humanities
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      Rowe, D. (2008). What Should I Believe?: Why Our Beliefs about the Nature of Death and the Purpose of Life Dominate Our Lives (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203181492

      ABSTRACT

      Suddenly, in the twenty-first century, religion has become a political power. It affects us all, whether we’re religious or not. If we’re not in danger of being blown up by a suicide bomber we’ve got leaders to whom God speaks, ordering them to start a war. We’re beset by people who demand that we give ourselves to Jesus while they smugly assure us of their own superiority and inherent goodness. We’re surrounded by those who noisily reject science while making full use of the benefits science brings; by the ‘spiritual’ ones; the ones who believe in magic; and there’s the militant atheists berating us all for our stupidity. We wouldn’t object to what people believed if only they’d keep it to themselves. We want to make up our own minds about what we believe, but it’s difficult to do this. Everyone has to face the dilemma that we all die but no one knows for certain what death actually is. Is it the end of our identity or a doorway to another life? Whichever we choose, our choice is a fantasy that determines the purpose of our life. If death is the end of our identity, we have to make this life satisfactory, whatever ‘satisfactory’ might mean to us. If it is a doorway to another life, what are the standards we have to reach to go to that better life? All religions promise to overcome death, but there’s no set of religious or philosophical beliefs that ensures that our life is always happy and secure. Moreover, for many of us, what we were taught about a religion severely diminished our self-confidence and left us with a constant debilitating feeling of guilt and shame.

      Through all this turmoil comes the calm, clear voice of eminent psychologist Dorothy Rowe. She separates the political from the personal, the power-seeking from the compassionate. She shows how, if we use our beliefs as a defence against our feelings of worthlessness, we feel compelled to force our beliefs on to other people by coercion or aggression. However, it is possible to create a set of beliefs, expressed in the religious or philosophical metaphors most meaningful to us, which allow us to live at peace with ourselves and other people, to feel strong in ourselves without having to remain a child forever dependent on some supernatural power, and to face life with courage and optimism.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter 1|40 pages

      Religion In The Twenty-First Century

      chapter 2|25 pages

      What It Is To Be Human

      chapter 3|70 pages

      ‘Hemmed In A Closed Cirque Of Our Own Creating’

      chapter 4|12 pages

      Very Different Points Of View

      chapter 5|39 pages

      Being Good And The Just World

      chapter 6|27 pages

      Trying To Be Good

      chapter 7|41 pages

      How We Acquire Our Beliefs

      chapter 8|24 pages

      The Consequences Of Our Beliefs

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