Healthy
activities to replace superstition
People
who believe in superstitions and pseudo-science should be
offered sports and recreation venues, and physical and psychological
assessments that can put them back on the road to a healthy
life, scientists and experts recommend.
Those
engaged in superstitious activities, including members of
Falun Gong, are victims of "science illiteracy," they said
at a symposium on fighting pseudo-science in Beijing last
week.
Although
the Falun Gong cult has been outlawed in China, its pernicious
influences have still not been eradicated, according to
the symposium.
Superstitions
emerging in China include the belief in ghosts, witchcraft,
and supernatural abilities, said Ren Jiyu, president of
the China Atheism Society.
Ren
said at the symposium that superstitious activities are
a disturbing social phenomenon.
A
survey conducted by Chinese Association for Science and
Technology (CAST), the sponsor of the symposium, recently
showed that 35.5 per cent of Chinese people believe in fortune-telling
and divination, a figure nearly 7 per cent higher than the
28.7 per cent in 1996.
Insufficient
venues for exercise is another reason they resort to superstition,
said Li Liyan, a researcher in the State Sports General
Administration.
"Most
stadiums and gymnasiums in China's cities are built for
holding higher-level competitions instead of being used
by the public for physical exercises. If people are in better
condition by doing exercises, they are not likely to have
the time or interest to join superstitious groups," Li said.
He
suggested that government build community fitness centres
that would provide daily recreational and health-care activities.
People
usually feel gloomy when they are ill, said Yuan Zhong,
deputy director of the publishing house affiliated with
Beijing Medical University.
These
people are prone to believe "tender words" coined by fortune-tellers.
Financial
woes, job problems and other troubles probably make people
vulnerable to belief in superstitions, Yuan said.
Therefore,
Yuan suggested, China should open more psychological counselling
agencies.
The
symposium attracted more than 40 scientists and experts
from the natural and social sciences.
In
recent years, superstitious practices have become common
in some areas, especially in the countryside, said Gong
Yuzhi, a science association official.
In Sichuan and Hubei provinces, for example, some fortune-tellers
have cheated many people by winning their confidences by
first showing bogus certificates from social science research
institutes, Gong said.
He said a close eye should be kept on fortune-tellers to
stop them from cheating people.
Xinhua contributed to this story
(China
Daily 2000/04/04)