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Personal Faith and the Supernatural 1
Personal Faith and the Supernatural
Assignment Two
Mariam F. Khan
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Personal Faith and the Supernatural 2
Introduction and Background
Michael Shermer, an American science writer once said, “The reason people turn to
supernatural explanations is that the mind abhors a vacuum of explanation. Because we do not
yet have a fully natural explanation for mind and consciousness, people turn to supernatural
explanations to fill the void.” So what does Mr. Shermer actually mean when he says this? We
have heard the saying everything happens for a reason at least once in our lives. But what is that
supposed to mean? The supernatural world can consist of many different terms and ideas. Some
may believe that supernatural is strictly ghosts and urban legends. But is there something more to
that? Of course there is. The supernatural world can consist of things other than the stereotypical
ghosts and goblins; they consist of religious beliefs that can influence a person’s personal beliefs.
In this research paper, I will be reporting the different clashes of ideas and people that relate to
the supernatural and paranormal phenomena. Using those clashes, I will be able to form my own
opinion regarding the supernatural and how it correlates or does not correlate with personal
beliefs. Furthermore, I will accentuate the difference between religious beliefs and personal
beliefs concerning the supernatural and paranormal world.
Literature Review
Terms:
Believers: Individuals that believe in the supernatural and paranormal world; their
religious and non-religious personal beliefs influence their way of thinking and influence their
perspective on the specific phenomena
Magic: The concept of magic is defined as to having some sort of higher ability and
characteristic that one does not usually see in the normal environment. Exceptional qualities and
characteristics could include in a variety of things such as having the ability to control events in
Personal Faith and the Supernatural 3
nature.
Inhibitory control: The ability to control inappropriate responses and/or behaviors using a
range of mechanisms.
Skeptics: Individuals that do not believe in the supernatural and paranormal phenomena;
they tend to favor logical reasoning such as science to prove the explanation of an event
Superstition: The concept of superstition is a false belief that according to Lindeman is
assumed to be held by “ignorant lay people” (Lindeman 242).
Supernatural: It is a religious concept which states that something belonging to a realm or
system higher than that of nature.
Stroop Colour-Word Test: Test measuring inhibition. The test consisted of three trials:
two trials were used for statistical analysis where participants name colours from non-word
stimuli, the third trial is the incongruent trial where participants named colours from words
written in different colours.
Wisconsin Card Sorting Test: This test consists of four stimulus cards and 128 response
cards that depict various figures, number of figures, and colours. Using the presented cards,
participants have to sort the randomly presented cards from a deck to the stimulus cards to reveal
a rule.
Religions that are listed in this research paper include: Christianity, Islam, Judaism,
Buddhism, and Agnostic/Atheism.
Supernatural vs. Religion
Religion and the supernatural somewhat go hand in hand and correlate with each other.
Christians differentiate supernatural from paranormal phenomena because some supernatural
phenomena such as miracles, God, and angels are accepted as real. One the other hand, some Comment [H1]: Change it to “certain”
Personal Faith and the Supernatural 4
paranormal phenomena is not endorsed by the church such as psychokinesis (Lindeman 242). In
Vail, Arndt, and Abdhollahi’s study, they created three to test out functions of religion and
management of death. The first study consisted of Christians and Athiests, the second consisted
of Muslims and Athiests, and the last study consisted of only Agnostics (Vail 1290). In Francis,
Williams, and Robbins’s article, they created a study among teenagers where they completed a
questionnaire regarding beliefs of the supernatural and Christian beliefs. Baker and Draper
convey that religious beliefs and the paranormal correlate with supernatural phenomena. The
relationship is known to be curvilinear while forming the hypothesis which states that individuals
with “moderate levels of religiosity will be more apt to incorporate paranormal beliefs” (Baker
415).
Conventional and Unconventional Beliefs
Conventional beliefs consist of Christian beliefs whereas unconventional beliefs consist of
paranormal beliefs. Francis, Williams, and Robbins created a table which included the different
types of beliefs associated with the conventional and unconventional. Conventional Christian
beliefs consist of the belief in God and the belief of Jesus Christ rising from the dead.
Unconventional paranormal beliefs consist of the belief in black magic and the belief of the
possibility to contact the spirits of the dead. On the other hand, Baker and Draper have a
completely different view of the relationship between conventional and unconventional beliefs.
They agree that conventional religious beliefs and the unconventional paranormal beliefs both
correspond with supernatural phenomena (Baker 413).
Skeptics vs. Believers
In the case of supernatural and all things paranormal, there are two types of people:
skeptics and believers. These two types of people are highly apparent among adults in the
Comment [H2]: Since phenomena is plural change “is” to “are”
Comment [H3]: There will be a comma after the word church
Comment [H4]: Three what? Specify
Comment [H5]: Change up the wording the sentence does not flow smoothly
Personal Faith and the Supernatural 5
modern day societies. Within the topic of skeptics and believers, Lindeman, Riekki, and Hood
created a study assessing adults that identified themselves as one of those two types to test out
their inhibition. Using the Stroop Colour Word Test and the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, the
authors assessed the participants and concluded that believers made more mistakes than skeptics
on the WCST whereas in the Stroop test, there were equal results. The reasoning of the two tests
was to assess the idea of supernatural beliefs and the correlation it had to inhibitory control.
Towards the end of the test, Lindeman, Riekki, and Hood concluded that supernatural beliefs
were definitely correlated to some sort of inhibitory control.
Purpose of Events
Does everything happen for a reason? Why did that happen? What was the meaning of it?
These are some of the questions that come up when something drastic or different happens to us
in our lives. Svedholm, Lindeman, and Lipsanen asked questions just like this in their article
when exploring the nature of the beliefs with the topic of the purpose of events and their
cognitive foundations. Forming a hypothesis that events are a part of supernatural phenomenon,
they sampled a large population to help them understand and test out their curiosity. They
created a table of correlations between core knowledge confusions, paranormal beliefs, and the
purpose of events. In the core knowledge confusion, they had four different types. The four
different types of knowledge confusion included mental is biological, mental is physical, matter
is animate, and energy is biological and mental (Svedholm). The purpose of events relates
mutually to supernatural and religious beliefs. When believing in a higher power, whether it
would be God, Allah, Yahweh, etc. religious individuals tend to believe that everything will play
out well in the long run, which is also known as destiny. Considering that supernatural events are
taken in account by religious individuals, the purpose of events plays an important role within
Comment [H6]: Questions are very well played out
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their lives.
Personal Belief Beyond the Religious Scope: A Narrative of the Research Paper
During the course of this research, I realized that there is so much more beyond the
religious aspect of personal beliefs regarding the supernatural world. My sources mostly
concluded that personal beliefs correlate with religious beliefs on a very high note. However, I
believe that personal beliefs can mean a variety of things and it does not usually have to go hand
in hand with religion. Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Buddhism, etc. are religions that tie in with
the personal beliefs of an individual. Majority of religious individuals believe in the supernatural
world. They believe that there is another world beyond us and there are people that surround us
that cannot be seen or heard. But what if you are Agnostic? Or an Atheist? Or you believe in
science over a higher power? It is all black and white. Personal beliefs and religious beliefs are
both two separate entities that are defined completely differently than what the other sources
have stated. Religious beliefs are beliefs regarding a higher power in which individuals gain that
knowledge through holy books and scriptures and religious authoritarians. Personal beliefs, on
the other hand, do not. Personal beliefs are beliefs that an individual forms throughout their life.
They start off forming their beliefs by watching and learning from authoritative figures like their
parents, teachers, etc. As they grow older, their friends and peers help them mold their beliefs,
which brings us to the formation of cliques and groups in high school. When individuals cross
that stage in their life, they become somewhat self-actualized and take all that they learned from
the past and form their own beliefs about the world. Personal beliefs can include an individual’s
personal experience. Did that individual encounter some sort of paranormal entity in which they
began to believe in the supernatural? Did they listen to a lot of ghost stories back in their
childhood that formed their opinion about the paranormal events and entities? Religion may play
Comment [H7]: Do not capitalize it
Comment [H8]: For the overall entering the conversation portion, write more about it
Comment [H9]: Change it to “my” to make it more personal
Comment [H10]: Add “the” in the beginning; it is a sentence fragment
Personal Faith and the Supernatural 7
a large role in the supernatural world, however, personal beliefs that one forms throughout their
life may be the one that can give proof of the world beyond our spectrum of thinking and seeing.
So What? Why Should You Care? (Conclusion)
We live in a society that makes money off of anything that relates to the supernatural and
paranormal world. We have documentaries, movies, television series, etc. that show off the
paranormal side and dimensions. Everywhere we turn we will see something related to the
supernatural. Supernatural is a popular television series that revolves around the paranormal
phenomena. The show concerns itself with supernatural beliefs, religious beliefs, as well as
personal beliefs. In a later season of the show, more specifically the fifth season, it revolved
mostly around religious aspects of the supernatural. This included God, the Prophets, believers,
skeptics, and the apocalypse. Media tends to gravitate towards this certain theme of things
because of how popular it is in our society. It is something that every individual has a stance
about whether it correlates with their religious beliefs or their non-religious personal beliefs.
Religious beliefs differ with personal beliefs in a variety of ways and prior to this research, I
believed that both these terms were basically the same thing. The big reason on why religious
beliefs is different from personal beliefs is because of the whole religion aspect of it all. Personal
beliefs can mean different things that usually do not have to do with anything relating to religion
whereas religious beliefs concur with it. All the sources prior to this conclusion can say that the
supernatural and paranormal world has people talking. Whether it is about the clash between
supernatural vs. religion, conventional vs. unconventional beliefs, and the clash between skeptics
and the believers.
Comment [H11]: Looks a bit strange; maybe take out the “of”
Comment [H12]: This is sentence fragment; you started saying something but did not finish the whole thought. Add to it.
Personal Faith and the Supernatural 8
Works Cited
Baker, Joseph O, and Scott Draper. "Diverse Supernatural Portfolios: Certitude, Exclusivity, and
the Curvilinear Relationship between Religiosity and Paranormal Beliefs." Journal for the
Scientific Study of Religion. 49.3 (2010): 413-424. Print.
Francis, Leslie J, Emyr Williams, and Mandy Robbins. "Personality, Conventional Christian
Belief and Unconventional Paranormal Belief: a Study Among Teenagers." British
Journal of Religious Education. 32.1 (2010): 31-39. Print.
Khan, Mariam. “Assignment One Observations”
Lindeman, M, and A.M Svedholm. "What's in a Term? Paranormal, Superstitious, Magical and
Supernatural Beliefs by Any Other Name Would Mean the Same." Review of General
Psychology. 16.3 (2012): 241-255. Print.
Lindeman Marjaana, Tapani Riekki, and Bruce M. Hood. "Is Weaker Inhibition Associated with
Supernatural Beliefs?" Journal of Cognition and Culture. 11 (2011): 231-239. Print.
Sperber, Dan. "Agency, Religion, and Magic." Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 27.6 (2004):
750-751. Print.
Stieger, S, and A Hergovich. "Together We Are Strong: Explicit and Implicit Paranormal Beliefs
Predict Performance in a Knowledge Test of Paranormal Phenomena Better Than
Explicit
Beliefs Alone." Personality and Individual Differences. 54.5 (2013): 562-565. Print.
SVEDHOLM, ANNIKA M, MARJAANA LINDEMAN, and JARI LIPSANEN. "Believing in
the Purpose of Eventswhy Does It Occur, and Is It Supernatural?" Applied Cognitive
Psychology. 24.2 (2010). Print.
Vail, KE , J Arndt, and A Abdollahi. "Exploring the Existential Function of Religion and
Personal Faith and the Supernatural 9
Supernatural Agent Beliefs Among Christians, Muslims, Atheists, and Agnostics."
Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin. 38.10 (2012): 1288-300. Print.
Vitalii, Svintsov. "Faith and Unbelief." Russian Social Science Review. 43.1 (2002): 73-103.
Print.