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FREUD ON RELIGION

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FREUD ON RELIGION

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    1. FREUD ON RELIGION

    2. SIGMUND FREUD Born 1856 in Moravia Died 1939 in London Lived in Vienna between the ages of 4 & 82 Trained as a medic; became interested in psychology of neurotics. His pet hates were America and religion.

    3. METHODS OF INSIGHT INTO THE HUMAN UNCONSCIOUS Freud used four techniques as windows on the unconscious mind: [1] Hypnosis [2] Analysis of dreams [3] Free-association [4] Freudian slips

    4. INTERPRETATION OF DREAMS “The interpretation of dreams is the royal road to a knowledge of the unconscious activities of the mind.” “ A dream is a (disguised) fulfilment of a (suppressed or repressed) wish.” Plus the ‘residues of the day’. Dreams are a kind of code for Freud. If you can crack it, you find the problem and can set about curing it.

    5. MAJOR DISCOVERIES He claimed two major discoveries: The Unconscious The Oedipus Complex He believed that he had come to a deep understanding of the human mind and of the workings of human sexuality via these insights.

    6. Structure of the mind The EGO: the conscious self: the obvious everyday personality. The ID: the unconscious self: repressed desires and memories. The SUPEREGO: the standard of morality of society forced onto a person from the outside, by which a person lives.

    7. Freud and sexuality Rumour has it that Freud was pretty obsessed by the idea that sex was behind, well, just about everything.

    8. SEX EXPLAINS EVERYTHING! According to Freud, childhood traumas are often sexual in nature. Infantile sexuality is real; children are sexual beings. Sexuality is basic to personality. It refers to affection, love and sensuality in the widest sense. ‘Libido’ is his term for ‘sexual’ drives.

    9. at this point we should have a suitable image downloaded from the internet Not what you were expecting huh! OK, so we are all interested in sex! But icebergs are really cool!

    10. The oedipus complex Male children are first attached to their mothers and later see their fathers as rivals for her love. This results in repressed feelings of fear and jealousy plus guilt. They surface in puberty. A man’s goals in life are: [1] Detachment from his mother. [2] Reconciliation to his father [3] Find someone to love who is not identical to his mother.

    11. Freud on religion - 1 Probably wrote more on religion than any other topic. Major works, Totem & taboo, (1913);The Future of an Illusion (1927). Religion is ‘wish fulfilment’; ‘the universal obsessional neurosis’.

    12. FREUD ON RELIGION - 2 At its roots, religious rituals are like neurotic obsessional acts. We have acquired ‘taboos’ – prohibitions. In the ritual slaying and eating of the totem animal lies the Oedipal wish to kill and devour the father. Religion is thus mankind’s Oedipus Complex.

    13. FREUD ON RELIGION - 3 Religion has a historical development: Firstly animism, secondly polytheism, thirdly theism. Magic is replaced by religion which in turn will be replaced by science. Nowadays his theories about the cultural and historical development of religion have been largely discredited.

    14. AN ALTERNATIVE SUMMARY OF FREUD ON RELIGION Religion is an illusion based on human wishes. It is created by the mind to help us overcome: [1] inner psychological conflict [2] stress, which stems from the structure of society [3] fear of dangers of the natural world.

    15. Religion as an aid to overcoming inner psychological conflict Religion is a form of neurotic illness It stems from the unconscious mind It results from incompletely repressed traumatic memories The trauma is invariably sexual in nature Therefore religion is an illusion resulting from sexual difficulties.

    16. Can Freud’s theory be supported? Two elements are essential to the success of Freud’s account of religion: {1} That the Oedipus Complex is a universal sexual trauma {2} That the buried trauma can reappear in the form of religion.

    17. Critical evaluation “almost all the evidence that Freud presents has been discredited in one way or another” – Michael Palmer (‘Freud and Jung on Religion’) [1] no evidence for the primal horde [2] no evidence for the Oedipus Complex [3] Freud’s dependence on a narrow selection of evidence is a weakness in the theory [4] Freud’s conclusion that religion should be overthrown is an unfulfilled wish of his.

    18. A conclusion Perhaps Freud’s account is an example of his own wish-fulfilment. Perhaps he concocted this rather fanciful account of religion as a way of wishing away the reality of God and coping with the bad experiences he had with religion in his own childhood.

    19. AN ALTERNATIVE PSYCHOLOGICAL VIEW OF RELIGION: Jung -1 “While Freud, characteristically, established causal links stretching back into childhood which imply a mechanistic account of human behaviour, Jung was concerned to place man in a historical context which gave his life meaning and dignity and ultimately implied a place in a purposeful universe.” David A. G. Cook

    20. AN ALTERNATIVE PSYCHOLOGICAL VIEW OF RELIGION: Jung -2 “ Unlike Freud, Jung was in favour of religion, thought that religious experiences were in some sense real, and held that religion was needed by society.” Michael Argyle, Psychology and Religion, Routledge, 2000. P104 “Those who reject religion are … more likely to experience neurosis as a result of the remaining psychological tension…Jung can conclude that religion is a valuable entity.” Jordan, Lockyer, Tate, Philosophy of Religion for A-level, STP, 1999, p117

    21. AN ALTERNATIVE PSYCHOLOGICAL VIEW OF RELIGION: Jung -3 The details of Jung’s psychological theories are rather complex and involve a little study. Key ideas are those of archetypes, individuation, individual unconscious, collective unconscious, neurosis, libido, harmonisation, persona & shadow. A good treatment of these in found in the Jordan et al volume and you can study this with the study guide Mr. Brown has written to go with it.

    22. AN ALTERNATIVE PSYCHOLOGICAL VIEW OF RELIGION: Jung -4

    23. AN ALTERNATIVE PSYCHOLOGICAL VIEW OF RELIGION: Jung -5

    24. Who is right? John Hick’s conclusion about Freud is worth quoting: “it seems that the verdict must be ‘not proven’; … the Freudian theory of religion may be true but it has not been shown to be so.” As Jordan et al suggest, this conclusion might apply equally effectively to Jung!

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