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The Futility of
Religious Apologetics-Sigmund Freud
Sigmund Freud
(1856-1939) was a Austrian doctor who was the father of modern
psychoanalysis. He developed a number of theories regarding the role our
unconscious plays in influencing and even determining our actions, mostly
through the process of sublimation, where drives and desires are transformed
towards other goals and purposes.
Sigmund Freud's Response to
Apologetics
At times,
religious people do make an attempt, or perhaps pretense, of offering
rational verification of wishful thinking in the form of "proofs" of their
gods. Freud recognized this, and thus spent some time examining them.
Unsurprisingly, the defenses against skepticism which he regarded as most
common at his time remain very common even today: my religion must be true
because it is so old; my religion must be true because of the success of
various proofs; my religion is holy, and any attempt to question it is
sinful. None of these impressed Freud any more than they impress skeptics
today.
Freud was
particularly disdainful of attempts to defend religion precisely by relying
on its irrationality. The medieval form of this was "Credo quia absurdam" -
I believe because it is absurd. The more modern form is the "as if" argument
- the idea that a belief is made acceptable when you live your life "as if"
it were true and are thereby made happy.
The first
is meaningless at best - as Freud pointed out, if one absurdity, why not
another? If you value absurdity, you cannot rationally choose or prefer any
one absurdity over any other. A similar argument can be raised against the
second form, since they are not really arguments but evasions from the
principle of rationally defending one's assertions.
Freud was
particularly dismayed at attempts to defend religious faith by arguing that
if they could not be absolutely proven wrong, then people are perfectly
justified in believing them anyway. Many seem to think that conviction in
the absence of knowledge is fine, but Freud recognized this as a "lame
excuse," arguing:
"Ignorance
is ignorance; no right to believe anything can be derived from it. In other
matters no sensible person will behave so irresponsibly or rest content with
such feeble grounds for his opinions and for the line he takes. It is only
in the highest and most sacred things that he allows himself to do so."
Another
common claim made on behalf of religion is a pragmatic one: namely, that
religion is a positive force in human affairs. Today we hear the clarion
call from religious leaders for more religion in people's lives in an effort
to cure all manner of social ills. Indeed, we often hear that most of these
ills would not even exist if it were not for the gradual decline of
religion's influence in society over the past few decades.
Freud would
find no such arguments credible. Although he noted that both religion and
civilization did make important contributions in taming the wild instincts
of humanity, he did not find that religion was a particularly strong force
for order or morality. On the contrary, he did not find any evidence that
religion made people any happier or more moral than nonreligious or less
religious peers.
He wrote
that "It is doubtful whether men were in general happier at a time when
religious doctrines held unrestricted sway; more moral they were certainly
not. [...] In every age immorality has found no less support in religion
than morality has."
The
implication for Freud was only too obvious: since religion has had thousands
of years to show what it can achieve but has not managed to make much
improvement in human beings, then reason and irreligion should be given a
chance
Freud
regarded science and religion to be mortal enemies, and he never made an
effort to hide these feelings. On the contrary, he proclaimed it widely and
loudly. Since religion had proven that it was a failure, he hoped the
science might be given a chance to show its superiority.
The heart
of Freud's argument was contrary to the claims of so many who attempt to
build bridges between science and religion, namely that their fundamental
premises are wholly incompatible. He was perhaps overly optimistic, since
science is itself a human institution and hence susceptible to all human
weaknesses.
*All Material taken from About.com
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