I bought a small item at the local market the other day. The
total with tax was $6.66. “You’d better buy something else, too,” the clerk
said. I assumed she was joking. I smiled as I handed her $10. “I’m serious,”
she said. “No, that’s OK,” I answered. She sighed as she gave me back change. I
could see the exchange really did bother her however.
Numerological hopes and fears are commonplace. Many people
play lucky numbers in lotteries and on roulette wheels. (With high frequency
those lucky numbers are birthdays.) The number 4 is unlucky in parts of East
Asia. Fear of the number 13 is so common in the West that there is a specific
word for it (triskaidekaphobia). Many Western buildings lack a 13th
floor – or, more accurately, the 13th floor is labeled the 14th.
The number is often missing from addresses. As it happens, the street number of
my own house is 15. My street is numbered in the usual US fashion with odd
numbers on one side and even ones on the opposite side. My adjacent neighbors to
left and right are 11 and 17. The assumption, apparently, is that evil gremlins
can read “13” on a mail box but that they can’t count.
I don’t normally think about my street number, but it came
to mind as I turned into the driveway when returning from the market. It
prompted me to pull from my shelf for a reread Superstition by Felix E. Planer. I have the 1988 revised edition. A peek on Amazon reveals that it is out of print; used copies are
offered for sale there for $52 and $100. I paid something close to $6.66 back
in ’88 or ’89, which is $13.59 in 2019 dollars. It is worth a read: not $52
worth IMHO, but it is worth borrowing from the library anyway. Be aware that
some of the terminology in the book, though perfectly correct when written, is
regarded as un-PC in some circles today; the reader might find this refreshing.
Planer was born in Berlin in 1914 but moved to London where
he earned his doctorate; during the war he conducted scientific and engineering
research for the British Admiralty. He was a lifelong skeptic, but was aware he
was fighting an uphill battle, not least with himself. People are hardwired to
see patterns even where they don’t exist and to worry about them – and not just
people. B.F. Skinner’s classic Superstition
in the Pigeon demonstrated that pigeons fed on a random schedule develop
meaningless rituals; they repeat an action that preceded getting fed the last
time, and the more often they repeat it the more likely (just by the odds) they
will be fed again soon afterward. So, the ritual behavior is reinforced. This
is very similar to a baseball player who eats a Twinkie before a game because
he scored a run the last time he did; he might know intellectually that the
Twinkie wasn’t the reason, but if he doesn’t eat one he might well be slightly
distracted by the thought, which could hurt his batting. That’s how
superstition works. It is how obsessive-compulsive disorder works, which is
just superstition on overdrive. Fear underlies it, and fear is the problem with
it.
Planer’s definition of superstition (in humans: he leaves
the pigeons out of it) is therefore two-part: 1) “a belief in influences and
events that are incapable of being justified on rational grounds,” and 2) the
additional constituent of fear. Planer discusses the global evolution of beliefs
in magical objects, rituals, spirits, and the paranormal from Sumerian to
modern times. Unlike pigeons, humans are able to think rationally and to
overcome superstitions, if not our tendency toward them. Ritual behavior really
does temporarily ease superstitious fears, which is why it gets reinforced, but
he argues that it is better for longer term happiness and personal freedom to
get past them.
I agree for myself, but I’m not sure this is entirely true
for everyone. Psychologist Gregg Henriques has written of the three fundamental
world views. There is “supernatural dualism, which is the view of most
traditional religions.” This posits a spiritual world distinct from the readily
tangible material one. Second is “parapsychological mysticism, which refers to
a belief about a conscious reality that surpasses conventional scientific
understanding.” If this sounds New Age-y, it is. Third is the naturalistic
world view, which regards the physical world as all there is. Planer regards
the first two as superstition. He may be right (and I think he is) but that
doesn’t mean people who belong to the first two categories aren’t happier than
naturalistic realists. There is some evidence that a larger percentage of them
are: naturally there are depressive and giddy folk in all categories, but the
percentages differ. As that may be, each of us believes what he or she must.
There are still downsides to many superstitions regardless. Even a mystic might
want to give up eating that Twinkie before the big game.
Howlin' Wolf
- I Ain't Superstitious
Yeah, I think people are pretty superstitious still. I even get that way at times, but I try to rein it in intellectually. I think religions are pretty steeped in it as well--probably one of the bigger proponents in modern times.
ReplyDeleteI've been watching some of the UFO shows on the History Channel, which strikes me funny in some ways. People probably wouldn't watch something about "real" history, but UFOs, okay. At any rate there are the regular UFO experts :) on there like Tsoukalos, who explains everything away as aliens. There's another guy on there too that is just as bad. Of course they don't ever have any backup evidence, like, uh, science. But it's aliens that's for damn sure. At any rate over the weekend they were talking about this formation up in Canada called The Badlands Guardians and other such land art, and even talked about the face on Mars. I'll admit it's all somewhat thought provoking, but I wish there was more scientific evidence from the other side of the story from a skeptic or scientist to debunk many of their so-called speculations. Now that would be even more interesting.
It takes a deliberate effort to get past those impulses much of the time. Planer shares your view on religion.
DeleteAs for UFOs, I remember back in high school when members of my English class were expressing disdain for the gullibility of earlier generations in matters such as accusations of witchcraft. The teacher Mr. Drew countered by saying that every generation has its own mythology and superstitions, and that he easily could provoke an emotional reaction from us by questioning one of ours. He took a deep breath and said simply, “UFOs.” My initial assumption was that he had made a bad gamble and that the class, with the possible exception of one or two eccentric true-believers, would respond with the same disdain they had toward witch hunters. I was wrong. Instead, a cacophony of voices arose shouting evidence of aliens-among-us. Mr. Drew had been right.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/new-survey-shows-nearly-half-of-americans-believe-in_b_59824c11e4b03d0624b0abe4
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