Why do people cry during films if there isn't some element to where you actually believe that the film is happening? — thewonder
Like I said, you can only ever suspend your disbelief to a certain extent, but it does get suspended. — thewonder
Do you mean something like that Christians don't really believe in God, but, rather, that they believe in the desire for there to be a God? — thewonder
Interesting. So you would see ideology as a rewiring of the brain, then? — thewonder
might it be that believers so much want their belief that it becomes to them as real? — PoeticUniverse
No, they believe because they so much want it that they suspend other thinking, unknowingly, as a kind of being in denial. — PoeticUniverse
it's not full or actual belief. It's some kind of semi, quasi, pretend belief. — Artemis
When we hear or watch any narrative, our brains go wholly into perceiving mode, turning off the systems for acting or planning to act, and with them go our systems for assessing reality.
[...]
Only when we stop perceiving to think about what we have seen or heard, only then do we assess its truth-value. If we are really "into" the fiction – "transported", in the psychologists' term – we are, as Immanuel Kant pointed out long ago, "disinterested". We respond aesthetically, without purpose. We don't judge the truth of what we're perceiving, even though if we stop being transported and think about it, we know quite well it's a fiction. — Wikipedia
The state they were in was genuine, not in any sense delusional, but not maintainable under all conditions. — Pattern-chaser
That still doesn't explain why while in that state you wouldn't feel and react the exact same way you would irl if faced with the same creatures/situation/damage/whatever, if your belief is real/true/full/actual belief in the exact same way in both fictional and nonfictional encounters. — Artemis
you cannot believe p and ~p at the same time. — Artemis
Your approach seems naive, when — Pattern-chaser
No? The arena here is the human mind; normal rules don't apply. :wink: Did you think doublethink was fictional? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
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