According to this they do, and I suppose this is a country that has gone to war with a nuclear power four times in the last 50 years, so anything is possible.
But surely no educated folk are this silly?
*Not actually true, really, but I provide this for the amusement of most dopers who are probably neither aware of the cod wars nor the seizing of “Icelandic” banks by the UK government using anti terrorist legislation last September
It’s analog, not digital. In other words, it’s not as simple as yes / no, as the surveys make out. Imagine a similar statement about Americans believing in extraterrestrials. “I believe I’m the love-child of an alien and Madonna” would score the same ‘yes’ as “I think it’s possible that extraterrestrial life exists, somewhere, though I have yet to see evidence of such a thing.”
Plenty of modern, first-world peoples have beliefs that look crazy when taken out of context. Leaving aside religious beliefs, what about ghosts, luck, wishing on birthday candles, astrology, etc.
The beliefs themselves are rational, not “silly.” They may well proceed from incorrect assumptions or observations, but they are logical within the worldview that they operate in. That’s not to say I believe in elves or support those who do, but you’ll never understand the phenomenon if you dismiss it as silly.
Given that roughly 100% of the world’s elvic populations reside in or around the North Pole, it’s entirely possible that they have extended their traditional territorial boundaries southward
I disagree that belief in elves is “religious / spiritual” in Iceland, unless you’re just using that as a synonym for “supernatural.” Elves are creatures of legend, not myth.
Perhaps **WormTheRed ** can ilustrate us about that?, is the Icelandic belief in elves a spiritual/religious thing or a simple “supernatural” belief like horoscopes or triskadeskaphobia?
Hmm… good question. I think I’d rather put them on the same shelf as horoscopes and magic, rather than with saints, gods and devils.
It’s old folklore which has remained - just like the Swedish “Näcken” and Santa Claus. But I dare you to say they don’t exist when you’re up in the hinterlands and everything looks magical.
Are you kidding. 90% of Americans believe in the invistible guy in the sky, miracles, psychic surgery, bigfoot, UFOs, etc etc etc.
Educated people can be just as ignorant as anyone else, especially when you start talking about things like traditions, psycholgically pleasing beliefs, religion, paranormal, fate, freewill, etc.
My grandmother believes that a virgin gave birth to the son of an omnipotent being that created the universe, that this son was raised from the dead and then just shot straight into heaven like the Space Shuttle, and that every Sunday, magicians take shitty bread and turn it into this virgin-born dude’s skin and muscle. Then she eats it.
Whose idea is crazier? I leave it to the reader to decide.