Why do human beings need to believe?
When certainty fades, when illness, loss, or suffering disrupts life, belief often emerges as a refuge. To believe in something—an idea, a force, a meaning—becomes a way to endure uncertainty and fear.
The Need to Believe is a psychological and ethical essay that explores this deeply human impulse that arises between faith and fear. Through a critical yet compassionate lens, the author examines how beliefs shape our decisions, influence our responses to uncertainty, and guide our search for meaning, relief, and hope in moments of vulnerability.
This book does not offer dogma or absolute answers. Nor does it seek to discredit faith or spirituality. Instead, it opens a space for informed reflection on the role belief plays in everyday life, in health, in suffering, and in the powerful narratives that promise certainty in fragile times.
Drawing from psychology, ethics, and the observation of human behavior, the work invites readers to distinguish between belief as an inner experience and belief as a marketable product, between a genuine search for meaning and the exploitation of fear, and between faith that accompanies and faith that controls.
The Need to Believe is written for readers who seek deeper understanding, who wish to reflect on faith, uncertainty, and the unknown without simplifications or imposed answers. A book for those who value honest questions over ready-made certainties and who recognize reflection as an essential form of care.
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