Are all religions just wish fulfilment?
In his latest column looking at Objections to Christianity Norwich local government officer, author and Proclaimers church member, James Knight, asks if religion is nothing more than wish-fulfilment.
This is very much what you might call ‘an objection on psychological grounds’. But it should be noticed straight away that psychology itself is, to its fault, often based on supposed closed systems, whereby a psychologist purports to have a built-in formula for explaining away any evidence that appears to falsify his or her claims. That is, they have an expedient method of ascribing to the great depths of the sub-conscious those things for which they cannot provide sufficient evidence.
One cannot really accuse Christianity of being a ‘wish-fulfilment without considering atheism as an even stronger wish-fulfillment. Freud said that religion was a form of ‘wish-fulfilment’, and many others have assented to his contention. The problem with this contention is that it does not really answer the questions that should ordinarily precede it.
I do not doubt that some people subscribe to a particular religion because they hope it is true. But it says nothing about whether the religion to which they are subscribing is, as a matter of fact, true or not; it is merely a statement about why they have subscribed. It is certainly true that we learn things from experience, but all of the perceptions, inferences and feelings deduced from experience are infringed upon if the philosophy that we take into the experience is either faulty or influenced too much by mere feeling - for mere feeling will never tell us anything objective about external things.
In the second place, it is perfectly obvious that if religious belief can be accused of being a ‘wish-fulfilment’, then so too can atheism. Men and women who have no interest in religion or who do not want to give up things in their irreligious lifestyle have every reason to wish that religion is all nonsense. One of the reasons why macro-evolutionary theory is so appealing is that it gives a man much of the emotional comfort of being free from any God that might be watching over him. Many evolutionists try to expunge God from the picture, claiming that He is not necessary for our existence - and it is certainly easy to see why they would wish it to be true.
Those who do not analyse our ultimate existence quite so much, have a capricious thought process when called upon to think abut God. When they wake up happy on a sunny day, and everything is good in their lives, it is lovely to think of the whole cosmos as a preordained configuration of atoms, a benevolent supernatural force which carries us through life eventually leading all the ‘good people’ into some form of pleasant afterlife. If, on the other hand, you wish to commit a bad action or if you wake up feeling not so good, that you are, in fact, not such a good person - it is the great to see the whole cosmos as a blind purposeless entity with no recall, nothing like the vexatious God that we were taught about in Sunday School.
This is an even bigger form of ‘wish-fulfilment’ than the first kind, for it allows you to smuggle in some further inconsistent logic - it allows you to exhume your god when it is convenient, and suppress him when he is undesired or bothersome. You get the excitement of an afterlife, but none of the cost of working towards it in this life.
Karl Marx shared a similar belief with Freud. According to Marx, religion was created by the ruling classes in order to keep the populace satisfied with their unjust work situations. He claimed that they could avoid dissent by promising the oppressed workers a ‘pie in the sky’ Heavenly reward. He called religion an ‘opiate of the masses’, a method used to desensitise the pain of the workers, so they could endure greater travails and be more productive.
This is another example of flawed logic. Firstly this contention is not supported by any evidence whatsoever, and secondly, just because people might have had good reason to infuse religious belief - it does not make the religion itself any less true because of this. It is perfectly obvious that many people in the past have had good reason to embrace religion and many have had good reason to reject it. We have to become aware of the error in Marx and Freud’s thinking before we start to produce correctives.
We have seen that they have made inferences about supposed states, without much consideration of the antithetical argument; that is, they have presumed straight away that religion is false and posited theories which are already predisposed to that contention. Until spurious logic is eradicated, reason can have little effect in these types of human affair. If you presuppose something without realising that the presupposition is equally applicable to the opposite argument then you are invalidating your own reason.
Reason itself does not always make it known when it is being invalidated, for the forces which invalidate reason, themselves depend on reasoning. We have to use reason to confirm that reason is faulty, so we have to trust reason even when we are trying to locate spurious reasoning. But we cannot, by simply pointing out flaws in atheist thinking, conclude that because they are wrong that Christians are automatically right. A wrong contention does not automatically make the opposite contention correct; we need evidence or verification to know for sure.
This leads me to the question; does my knowing that they have not experienced God mean that I can know for sure that I have experienced Him? Do you see the problem? When we start to ask questions like Freud and Marx did, we end up with difficulties; that is, we are really asking the wrong questions. Everything I know is an inference or deduction from sensations which enter my cognisance (except the exact present moment) - so therefore what I know cannot be dependent on any external factors (other than God), certainly not by an absence of something completely independent from my cognisance.
 Everything we know of ultimate realities beyond our instant experiences depends on inferences from these experiences. Only if our inference provides us with a genuine understanding of reality can we know for sure if God communicates with us through our own cognition. If our inferences emanate from the random chaos produced by (in the long run) a purposeless and unguided cosmos then we cannot ever insightfully separate one thought from another. In other words, if our thinking never has been and never will be a real insight, we can give up thinking about ultimate realities, for the truth or verity of our knowledge cannot be justified beyond anything other than a small meaningless arrangement of atoms within a much larger meaningless arrangement of atoms. But our thoughts can be admitted as a genuine and authentic insight if they are part of a much bigger intelligence - something which transcends the whole totality of nature.
But even if we conclude that this Super Intelligence must exist, and that He was responsible for all the reason in the universe, it does not follow that folk will naturally understand their need for Him. Christians believe that He made Himself known through His Son, and that He gave us free will to choose to accept or reject Him; therefore it naturally follows that with free will, there must some sort of democratic process, whereby sound logic and unsound logic can be deployed interchangeably if the recipient so wishes. The recipient must be able to make bad decision as well as good ones, therefore not all men and women will use the correct logic necessary to search for Him or even acknowledge Him.
It is true that reason can be used to detect sound reason from unsound reason - therefore a man can, at any time, use his reason to attempt a better understanding of whether he is using his reasoning properly or not. In order to do this, he must realise that sound reason arises from truisms, corollaries and conclusions (all of which can be located by utilising one or both of the other two) and therefore all hypotheses should be measured by two of these three things. In other words, you can correctly infer C from both A and B collectively, ditto B from A and C collectively and so on - but no axiomatic certainties can be reached from, say, A from B, or C from B and so on.
Now, where the theory is accordant to the facts, all is well and good. But if this is not testable or provable - either because the relevant facts are unknown, or because the conclusion is dependent upon probability estimates regarding feelings and emotions - one should work through the theories, breaking down each constituent part, and analyse it next to truths known by other inferences from either personal sensation, personal awareness or personal experience - until a primary axiomatic truth can be established.
It is also useful to put aside all personal motives (something which Freud and Marx certainly failed to do regarding their theories). The efficacy of any belief will invariably be questionable if other motives cause one result to be desired over the other. It sometimes requires quite a bit of thought in order to locate some of the less obvious partisans that might be existent within our rationale.
Our knowledge of certain things (including Christianity) is dependent upon on how certain we are about the inference itself. And I think Christianity, like no other religion, or indeed any other belief system, provides us with the greatest certainty regarding inference, for there are so many different ways that people become Christians and so may different ways that people experience God. It is very likely that inferences are sound if that which is experienced is able to override a feeling of disinclination, for we do not very often change our minds without some form of lengthy thought process resulting from external influences.
This ‘wish-fulfilment’ or ‘opiate’ definition of religion is guilty of a logical misjudgment. You must show something is incorrect before you start explaining why it is incorrect; and this is where Marx and Freud have palpably failed. In order to distinguish between sound and unsound logic you must not preclude yourself from the equation. For instance, Marx claimed that all analytical reasoning is conditioned by matter, and that economic influences largely impinged man’s thoughts. How then is Marx himself precluded from such inferences - that is, how do we know that his own hypotheses were not tainted by economic dispositions?
In Freud’s case, if all religious belief came out of the non-rational unconscious, then this might be equally true of Freud’s own atheistic assessment. It is not so difficult to see that both Marx and Freud’s theories about religion were tarnished by a partisan; that is, their reasoning process was tainted by their own desires. They have hoped and presumed that God does not exist and then taken steps to posit their own contentions without any solid foundations. They have built houses on the sand. When it comes to the validity of reason, wishes and desires should remain extricable from all assessment of the facts.
Freud, Marx, and many others like them, observed how susceptible people are to emotional propaganda. This susceptibility has precipitated a modern worldview that people need to be distracted from sentimentality to the extent that reason should predominate every facet of modern interaction. They determined that the best thing for societies is to strengthen the minds of young people against sentimentality, feelings and emotion - that a society governed by pure reason would produce, not hard hearted people, but utilitarian ideals.
My own experiences tell me just the opposite. For every one young person who needs to be awoken from abundant sentimentality, there are, I would say, seven or eight who need to awoken from cold impressionability, deindividuation, pressure to conform to the demands of in-crowds, and lack of nascent self-understanding. The responsibility of the contemporary educator is not to remove things which are already part of a young person’s makeup - it is to help add things that will bring about a reconstitution of his or her reason and emotions. The best defence against deceptive reason and emotions is to help instill better reason which will be faithful to the emotions, and emotions which will be in harmony with his or her reasoning. By starving our youth of their emotional structure or their reasoning capabilities, we harden their hearts and we make them susceptible to all kinds of negative influences.
Once they are on the right track, we can help them with their thought process - that is, we can lead them to a better way of thinking by teaching them not what to think (apart from what is right and wrong) but how to think - for in my opinion, too many people have been taught what to think without being taught how to think. Those who can think properly are those who have learned to develop their beliefs to correspond to the truth, those who cannot, attempt to create their own reality; that is, they try to make the truth correspond with their own beliefs, feelings and perceptions. They will attempt to bend the truth and they will attempt to stretch the laws of logic in their favour. They attempt to do the impossible; they attempt to create a different truth to converge with their own ideas
Freud and Marx tried to occasion their own reality and failed. They cast many doubts over the theories of others, but failed to cast sufficient doubts over their own theories. A small amount of analysis shows that all claims of Christianity being a mere ‘wish-fulfillment’ are, in fact, based upon a tautological argument, from which no sound truths can be established without underpinning external factors.
In order to help people to Christ, we should try hard to get people’s minds off the idea of different truths and different realities, for we live in a world where cultural relativism is very much a part of the shifting cultural zeitgeist. It is one of the biggest impediments in modern day thinking, for it causes pseudo-satisfaction, indifference, false contentment, disingenuousness, apathy and an attempted compromising of what is ultimately real. If we believe that no person can find satisfaction on earth until he or she knows God - it is our responsibility to help people out of the comfort zone towards the truth.
Next week James will continue his thoughts on another objections to Christianity. Meanwhile, we welcome your thoughts and comments, below, upon the ideas expressed here, which are intended to stimulate debate. You can contact the author at james.knight@norfolk.gov.uk
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| | Dave Burgess | 13/09/2007 14:24 | XXII. The Bearers of the Trust of God are made manifest unto the peoples of the earth as the Exponents of a new Cause and the Revealers of a new Message. Inasmuch as these Birds of the celestial Throne are all sent down from the heaven of the Will of God, and as they all arise to proclaim His irresistible Faith, they, therefore, are regarded as one soul and the same person. For they all drink from the one Cup of the love of God, and all partake of the fruit of the same Tree of Oneness.
These Manifestations of God have each a twofold station. One is the station of pure abstraction and essential unity. In this respect, if thou callest them all by one name, and dost ascribe to them the same attributes, thou hast not erred from the truth. Even as He hath revealed: "No distinction do We make between any of His Messengers." For they, one and all, summon the people of the earth to acknowledge the unity of God, and herald unto them the Kawthar of an infinite grace and bounty. They are all invested with the robe of prophethood, and are honored with the mantle of glory. Thus hath Muhammad, the Point of the Qur'án, revealed: "I am all the Prophets." Likewise, He saith: "I am the first Adam, Noah, Moses, and Jesus." Similar statements have been made by Imam Ali. Sayings such as these, which indicate the essential unity of those Exponents of Oneness, have also emanated from the Channels of God's immortal utterance, and the Treasuries of the gems of Divine knowledge, and have been recorded in the Scriptures. These Countenances are the recipients of the Divine Command, and the Day Springs of His Revelation. This Revelation is exalted above the veils of plurality and the exigencies of number. Thus He saith: "Our Cause is but One." Inasmuch as the Cause is one and the same, the Exponents thereof also must needs be one and the same. Likewise, the Imams of the Muhammadan Faith, those lamps of certitude, have said: "Muhammad is our first, Muhammad is our last, Muhammad our all."
It is clear and evident to thee that all the Prophets are the Temples of the Cause of God, Who have appeared clothed in divers attire. If thou wilt observe with discriminating eyes, thou wilt behold Them all abiding in the same tabernacle, soaring in the same heaven, seated upon the same throne, uttering the same speech, and proclaiming the same Faith. Such is the unity of those Essences of Being, those Luminaries of infinite and immeasurable splendor! Wherefore, should one of these Manifestations of Holiness proclaim saying: "I am the return of all the Prophets," He, verily, speaketh the truth. In like manner, in every subsequent Revelation, the return of the former Revelation is a fact, the truth of which is firmly established....
The other station is the station of distinction, and pertaineth to the world of creation, and to the limitations thereof. In this respect, each Manifestation of God hath a distinct individuality, a definitely prescribed mission, a predestined revelation, and specially designated limitations. Each one of them is known by a different name, is characterized by a special attribute, fulfils a definite mission, and is entrusted with a particular Revelation. Even as He saith: "Some of the Apostles We have caused to excel the others. To some God hath spoken, some He hath raised and exalted. And to Jesus, Son of Mary, We gave manifest signs, and We strengthened Him with the Holy Spirit."
It is because of this difference in their station and mission that the words and utterances flowing from these Well Springs of Divine knowledge appear to diverge and differ. Otherwise, in the eyes of them that are initiated into the mysteries of Divine wisdom, all their utterances are, in reality, but the expressions of one Truth. As most of the people have failed to appreciate those stations to which We have referred, they, therefore, feel perplexed and dismayed at the varying utterances pronounced by Manifestations that are essentially one and the same.
It hath ever been evident that all these divergencies of utterance are attributable to differences of station. Thus, viewed from the standpoint of their oneness and sublime detachment, the attributes of Godhead, Divinity, Supreme Singleness, and Inmost Essence, have been, and are applicable to those Essences of Being, inasmuch as they all abide on the throne of Divine Revelation, and are established upon the seat of Divine Concealment. Through their appearance the Revelation of God is made manifest, and by their countenance the Beauty of God is revealed. Thus it is that the accents of God Himself have been heard uttered by these Manifestations of the Divine Being.
Viewed in the light of their second station -- the station of distinction, differentiation, temporal limitations, characteristics and standards -- they manifest absolute servitude, utter destitution, and complete self-effacement. Even as He saith: "I am the servant of God. I am but a man like you."...
Were any of the all-embracing Manifestations of God to declare: "I am God," He, verily, speaketh the truth, and no doubt attacheth thereto. For it hath been repeatedly demonstrated that through their Revelation, their attributes and names, the Revelation of God, His names and His attributes, are made manifest in the world. Thus, He hath revealed: "Those shafts were God's, not Thine." And also He saith: "In truth, they who plighted fealty unto Thee, really plighted that fealty unto God." And were any of them to voice the utterance, "I am the Messenger of God," He, also, speaketh the truth, the indubitable truth. Even as He saith: "Muhammad is not the father of any man among you, but He is the Messenger of God." Viewed in this light, they are all but Messengers of that ideal King, that unchangeable Essence. And were they all to proclaim, "I am the Seal of the Prophets," they, verily, utter but the truth, beyond the faintest shadow of doubt. For they are all but one person, one soul, one spirit, one being, one revelation. They are all the manifestation of the "Beginning" and the "End," the "First" and the "Last," the "Seen" and the "Hidden" -- all of which pertain to Him Who is the Innermost Spirit of Spirits and Eternal Essence of Essences. And were they to say, "We are the Servants of God," this also is a manifest and indisputable fact. For they have been made manifest in the uttermost state of servitude, a servitude the like of which no man can possibly attain. Thus in moments in which these Essences of Being were deep immersed beneath the oceans of ancient and everlasting holiness, or when they soared to the loftiest summits of Divine mysteries, they claimed their utterances to be the Voice of Divinity, the Call of God Himself.
(Baha'u'llah, Gleanings from the Writings of Baha'u'llah, p. 49)
This is positive no wish fulfilment.
love to all Dave
| | | timothy v reeves (Guest) | 14/09/2007 20:07 | Congratulations, James, on some very hard seat-of-pants thinking. In the low-ebb of today’s Christian milieu the escape reflex of many, when faced with such difficult issues, is to retreat into Christian versions of ‘gnosticism’, fideism and dualism. Thanks for helping to buck the trend. I am sure (or at least hope) this isn’t just dualist intellectual window dressing. Things are looking up.
| | | Dave Burgess | 15/09/2007 09:43 | XLIII.
O God, Who art the Author of all Manifestations, the Source of all Sources, the Fountain-Head of all Revelations, and the Well-Spring of all Lights! I testify that by Thy Name the heaven of understanding hath been adorned, and the ocean of utterance hath surged, and the dispensations of Thy providence have been promulgated unto the followers of all religions.
I beseech Thee so to enrich me as to dispense with all save Thee, and be made independent of any one except Thyself. Rain down, then, upon me out of the clouds of Thy bounty that which shall profit me in every world of Thy worlds. Assist me, then, through Thy strengthening grace, so to serve Thy Cause amidst Thy servants that I may show forth what will cause me to be remembered as long as Thine own kingdom endureth and Thy dominion will last.
This is Thy servant, O my Lord, who with his whole being hath turned unto the horizon of Thy bounty, and the ocean of Thy grace, and the heaven of Thy gifts. Do with me then as becometh Thy majesty, and Thy glory, and Thy bounteousness, and Thy grace.
Thou, in truth, art the God of strength and power, Who art meet to answer them that pray Thee. There is no God save Thee, the All-Knowing, the All-Wise.
(Baha'u'llah, Prayers and Meditations by Baha'u'llah, p. 59)
God is one religion is one.
love to all Dave.
| | | timothy v reeves (Guest) | 15/09/2007 21:32 | Fancy another pint James?
| | | | James Knight (Guest) | 17/09/2007 09:54 | To your good health Timothy. I will try not to drift into the province of dualistic complacency.
Yours
James
| | | | Dave Burgess | 17/09/2007 10:21 | Abdu'l-Bahá explains that the Aqdas prohibits "both light and strong drinks", and He states that the reason for prohibiting the use of alcoholic drinks is because "alcohol leadeth the mind astray and causeth the weakening of the body".
(Baha'u'llah, The Kitab-i-Aqdas, p. 227)
love to all.
| | | timothy v reeves (Guest) | 17/09/2007 22:23 | Since you died with Christ to the basic principles of the world, why, as though you still belonged to it, do you submit to its rules: "Do not handle! Do not taste! Do not touch!" These are all destined to perish with use, because they are based on human commands and teachings. Such regulations indeed have an appearance of wisdom, with their self imposed worship, their false humility and their harsh treatment of the body, but they lack any value in restraining sensual indulgence.
Colosians 2:20-23
| | | Dave Burgess | 18/09/2007 10:22 | 14. O SON OF MAN! Thou art My dominion and My dominion perisheth not; wherefore fearest thou thy perishing? Thou art My light and My light shall never be extinguished; why dost thou dread extinction? Thou art My glory and My glory fadeth not; thou art My robe and My robe shall never be outworn. Abide then in thy love for Me, that thou mayest find Me in the realm of glory.
(Baha'u'llah, The Arabic Hidden Words)
love to all Dave
| | | | Charlotte (Guest) | 30/11/2007 16:58 | James this is great work. Two questions, 1) are you a rationalist or an empiricist? 2) is it possible to prove or disprove a wish is occurring when it is?
| | | | James Knight (Guest) | 03/12/2007 10:51 | Charlotte, it is possible to answer both questions together; the answer to the second shows the infelicity of the first. If one is to treat a wish as ‘a matter of fact’ which is distinct from that of purely logical relations between concepts, then we can say with confidence that the answer is no. Perhaps a clearer way of seeing this is to think of replacing ‘the wish is based upon’, with ‘the wish comes from’, or ‘derives from’ or ‘has its origins in’ - thus we can then dismiss any attempt to identify the intention of relationship between knowledge and experience. And here we see why both rationalism and empiricism remain, as singular propositions, unsatisfactory, and why one should not refer to himself or herself as a rationalist or an empiricist. It is true, certainly in the Christian sense, that the truth of some factual statements can only be established inductively from particular experiences, but that truth, far from creating a stratification between the two, actually helps create a better understanding of the real nature of knowledge and reason. This is precisely why I left out ‘proof’ and disproof’ from my article. I cannot say it is impossible that Christianity is wish thinking because there is no criterion by which it can be shown to be impossible. But I think it highly improbable, after all, there are many things in the Bible which no sane man would create purely for the purposes of wishing they were true; thus the tenets of Christianity which are instinctively disagreeable to the imagination cannot be disagreeable if they are distilled from a wish or a combination of wishes.
Yours
James
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