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Murray,
Gilbert Humanist Essays [abstract 150 words]
Religious
people, philosophers and, in their unguarded moments, even atheists
make the tremendous assumption that there is a beneficent
purpose in the world and that the force which moves nature is akin
to ourselves.
Murray
believes that psychologists have correctly shown that human beings
are subject to ideas of which they are normally unconscious. Among
them is the belief that somehow there is a Friend behind phenomenathat
when we strive for good there is some external force working in
the same direction.
He
describes this as the remnant of very old ineradicable instinct.
As herd animals, we are only comfortable when there are others of
our kind around [That is why solitary confinement is so punishing.]
and we have an eternal yearning for a leader. Reaching for that
Friend behind phenomena may be the groping of
a lonely-souled gregarious animal to find its herd or its herd-leader
in the great spaces between the stars.
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