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Is it wrong to participate in superstitious rituals without taking them seriously?

If I make some perfunctory observance or participation in some superstitious ritual, and do not believe the superstitious ritual is of any literal importance, am I still promoting irrationality? If I regularly read the horoscope in the newspaper, but do not believe astrology has any real impact on my life, does reading the horoscope promote irrationality? Likewise, in Hawaii, almost all retail establishments possess what are called "good-luck cats." A good-luck cat is a relatively inexpensive Asian figurine depicting a cat with one paw raised. Having this figurine is supposed to bring good luck to your business. You can commonly see such good-luck cat figurines in doctor's offices in Honolulu, and for your retail establishment not to have such a figurine would easily strike people as strange. If I spent just a little money on such a good-luck cat to decorate my business, and I didn't literally believe the figurine itself affected my fortunes, would the purchase be a concession to irrational thinking? Would such a gesture be "social proof" that would help other people rationalize more obviously pathological forms of irrationality, such as wasting hundreds of dollars on fortune tellers and psychic hot lines?

legendre007, 08.04.2014, 16:16
Idea status: completed

Comments

Ragnar Weskar, 23.04.2014, 19:26
I don't know what line of business your in. Why don't you focus on improving your product or service so it is more attractive and desired by customers? What does your customer's personal beliefs have to do with earning a profit?
legendre007, 29.04.2014, 05:46
Mr. Ragnar Weskar, of course I know that whether my business succeeds or fails is a consequence of my choices, and not on account of my having a good-luck charm. That is not the issue. The question I am asking is whether it is bad for me to purchase a low-priced good luck charm when I have the full conscious knowledge that the charm won't affect my long-term well-being. There are various reasons why I might still purchase the good-luck charm. It might be to set more superstitious relatives at ease. It might be just that I found it funny -- for the same reason I might read my horoscope today. ^_^

--legendre007 (the guy who submitted this question to the question queue)

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