An
excellent find LisaRose.
What
we do is culturally bound; dependant on which culture we find ourselves in.
Neuroscientists
detect the brain reacting electrochemically to cultural situations and here we
are shown the brain saying “my view of myself and the world is being challenged
so I’ve got to put my foot down!” Indeed it describes the existential crisis in
a JW’s mind when “belief” is questioned.
Without
too much speculation on this point, surely it has to do with our identity, which
is how privately we see ourselves and how this self constructed notion relates to
the society we live in, i.e. who we think we are and how we think we should relate to others.
In
the case of JWs, it is not surprising they bridle at the slightest challenge to
their belief because their happiness depends on belief in what the JW org has granted
them. It has fostered a heroic identity for all members based on a tenuous but aristocratic belief of associating with those effectively chosen by God to do
his work. Once this absurdity is swallowed the bearer of the belief is drawn to
fellow believers because only they reinforce the JW identity.
Significantly
the JW world is held at odds with the normal world of humankind believing these
to be under “Satanic influence” and soon to be exterminated... This us-and-them stance is yet another defining and heightening of the JW membership values.
To
challenge the validity of this fragile identity as a privileged believer is naturally alarming since it undermines both their sense of self and also their most cherished hopes. Too much to lose!
Neuroscience
tells us then that the brain closes the shutters and tightens its grip on
existing belief if one’s worldview and identity are challenged, so it’s a good
heads-up on how we talk to believers.