I read an interesting article at sciencedaily.com on beliefs about god and santa.
Why Do We Believe in Santa?
ScienceDaily (Dec. 24, 2008) — Having kids believe there's a jolly man in a red suit who visits on Christmas Eve isn't detrimental, although some parents can feel they're outright lying to their children, according to a new analysis by Serge Larivée.
"When they learn the truth, children accept the rules of the game and even go along with their parents in having younger children believe in Santa," says Larivée, a psycho-education professor at the Université de Montréal. "It becomes a rite of passage in that they know they are no longer babies."
Larivée, along with colleague Carole Sénéchal from the Univerity of Ottawa, examined a study from 1896 involving 1,500 children aged 7 to 13, which was repeated in 1979. More than 46 percent of children in 1896 and 44 percent in 1979 gradually found out on their own that Santa didn't exist.
The studies also analyzed the reaction of the children once they discovered the jolly old elf wasn't real. More than 22 percent in the 1896 study admitted to being disappointed compared with 39 percent in the 1979 study. But only 2 percent and 6 percent, respectively, felt betrayed.
"The constant outcome of the two studies was that children generally discovered through their own observations and experiences that Santa doesn't exist," Larivée noted. "And their parents confirmed their discovery.
"Children ask their parents, for example, how Santa gets in the house if there's no chimney," he says. "And even if the parents say they leave the door unlocked, the child will figure out that Santa can't be everywhere at the same time and that reindeer can't be that fast."
Close to 25 percent of children in the 1896 study learned the truth about Santa from their parents, compared with 40 per cent in 1979. Those who didn't find out from their parents learned the truth from other children.
Larivée says belief in Santa diminishes as children approach the age of reason. "But cognitive maturity and level of thought that would allow a 7-year-old to differentiate between the imaginary and reality are insufficient to let go of the myth," he adds, pointing out that half of children of that age in a 1980 study still believed.
In 1896, 54 percent of parents said they perpetuated the myth of Santa since it made their children happy; compared with 73 percent in 1979 and 80 percent in 2000.
Larivée and Sénéchal now want to explore a deeper question: If children attribute the same supernatural powers to Santa as they do to God, why do they stop believing in Santa, but continue their belief in God?
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"If children attribute the same supernatural powers to Santa as they do to God, why do they stop believing in Santa, but continue their belief in God?"
I wanted to throw my hat into the ring and try to answer this. I think at the most basic level as one gets older less and less people believe in santa, while despite peoples' age, people continue to believe in god. In many families it is very common for parents, or other family members, to press upon their children/grandchildren their beliefs and want to pass them on. Also, santa - even to those who tell their children santa is real - know he isn't, but do believe in god. This would account for the lack of guilt in parents teaching their kids about god, but not santa.
I had an argument about this last year with my ex-wife. My son (age 9) loudly proclaimed to my step-son (age 6) that there was no such thing as Santa. The basis of his statement was that his mom (a devout born again christian) had told him so, and that Christmas was not about Santa etc. etc.
ReplyDeleteWhen I asked her about it she said that Christmas was all about the birth of Jesus, not fairy tales like Santa. To which I replied "Let me get this straight. You believe a young girl was impregnated by an angel and remained a virgin after giving birth to the son of a deity that has been seen as many times as santa- ZERO ?"
When weighing out the evidence contained in the two stories, I think it is far more likely that a fat guy dressed in red circumvents the globe in one night passing out presents to kids.