4.0 Article

'The whole point of faith is not to know': Jewish ultra-Orthodox students' epistemological beliefs about science and religion

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13617672.2023.2287850

Keywords

Epistemology; religion; science; ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) Jews

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Research on personal epistemology explores the intersection between epistemological beliefs about science and sociocultural factors. This study focuses on the epistemological beliefs of ultra-Orthodox Jewish students during their initial days in academia. The findings show that these students have less sophisticated beliefs compared to their non-Haredi counterparts and rely more on expert authority. Additionally, the study evaluates the strategies used by these students to manage the potential tension between science and religion.
Research on personal epistemology reveals how people's epistemological beliefs about science intersect with their sociocultural background, cultural norms, and gender. Less is known, however, about how religious background and faith shape epistemological beliefs. The present study explores the epistemological beliefs of ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) Jewish students during their first days in academia using a combination of questionnaires and interviews. Comparing the questionnaires completed by students of Haredi and non-Haredi backgrounds showed significant differences in two out of four epistemological dimensions. Haredi students' beliefs were more naive and less sophisticated in that they conceived scientific knowledge as fixed and certain and relied on experts' authority more than did non-Haredi students. In addition, the interviews explored strategies used by Haredi students to resolve or emphasise the potential tension between science and religion: collaboration, conflict, independent, and repression of contradictions. Their analysis reveals how students' approaches are multifaced, develop within the interview context, and intersects with general beliefs about scientific knowledge. Finally, the article discusses how this study elaborates on previous studies about students' epistemological beliefs, and offers educational implications, including promoting teachers' awareness to their students' beliefs and conducting interventions to help students reflect on them.

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