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Man ought
to feel more at home in the modern world. At least he should feel
surer about himself and surer about the world around him than his
ancestors did. For we understand ourselves and the processes of
the universe today much better than ever before, and we have vastly
extended our ability to adapt the forces of the universe to our
own purposes. It may well be that we sometimes overstate the facts
when we talk about our increasing control of nature. But certainly
it is true that in dozens of areas we can now defeat, direct, control,
or harness natural forces that our ancestors could only view in
helpless awe or terror.
Yet we are
not at ease in this Zion of our own making, not at all confident
about ourselves and our place in the world. If anything, we are
more troubled about these matters than were our ancestors. Day by
day we seem to become less certain of our ability to make firm distinctions
between what is right and what is wrong, less sure of the meaning
and purpose of human life and of society, less assured about the
place of humanity in the scheme of things
We do understand
the processes of nature better, but we are less sure that we understand
the sum total of their significance
This uncertainty
afflicts most of us today, including many who adhere to a religious
faith. We are often reminded that a larger proportion of our population
belongs to some church body now than ever before in American history.
And yet, it is certainly true that though millions of people today
rely as happily on a church-centered faith as did anyone in the
Middle Ages, church members are not exempt from the peculiar uncertainties
and anxieties of our time.
[It is] implicit
in this discussion that the solution of the problems which have
their roots in these concerns must come, in part at least, from
religious leaders who are prepared to fulfill the function they
have fulfilled in the past; that is, who will develop a synthesis
of our new knowledge, especially of our new scientific knowledge,
in relation to the persistent problems and troubles of mankind.
But such a solution is by no means inevitable, for it cannot be
taken for granted that the necessary relationships and cross interpretations
of science, philosophy, and theology will actually take place.
Mans Search for Values
We seem now more than ever before to be trying to discover the source
of all principles of what ought to be and all forces that promote
the good
in human affairs
[But] our
means of dealing with the problems of ethics, with values, with
responsibilityin short, with what ought to beseem all
to have the same unhappy lack of reach, to fall short of anything
beyond individual or social preference. Applying the most admirable
modern refinements of the scientific method to these problems, we
achieve descriptive but not normative conclusions. We know more
and more about what makes people think and act as they do and about
how society operates, but we are less and less sure about the way
we ought to behave and what makes a good society
It is for
these reasons that modern man, though he knows much more about the
universe in which he lives and can mold it much more fully to his
purposes, still does not feel at home in it and restlessly alternates
between dependence upon individual conscience, which he fears may
be merely personal and irresponsible, and conformity to society,
which he fears may be no more than the product of historical accidents
The Need for Guiding Principles
There can be no satisfactory or fundamental solution to the problem
of ethics, no assurance about the real nature of good and evil,
no confidence of ultimate success in the search for answers concerning
the significance of mans career on this planet and the nature
of his responsibilities to himself or to his society without a sense
of the direction of the universe apart from mans desires and
choices.
What our
age then needs to establish is a sense of direction, not dogmatically
but with sufficient confidence to make firm commitments and even
sacrifices, some sense that the path laid out is in accord with
the constitution and processes of the universe. It is easier to
specify the conditions which must be met in a search for answers
than to state the answers or even to point out the line of inquiry
to be pursued. The conditions themselves are simple. What we need
are some conceptions of the universe which hold out hope of a relationship
between the human and the non-human, some conception which makes
man feel at home in his worldnot necessarily at ease in it
or with himself but clearly and confidently aware of his successes
and failures, or, to use older words, of his virtues and vices.
The kind
of answer required in the search we are describing must contain
the word ought. The question is, what direction or directions
ought the individual and society take? To satisfy this need, the
answer must be more than a description of individual desires or
wants or of social purposes and commitments. It is this requirement
which makes the contemporary term values unsatisfactory,
for it does not necessarily transcend human wishes and often merely
denotes qualities which for some reasonconditioning, social
pressure, or historical accidenthave come to be valued
It is here that modern man finds himself so much at a loss. The
admirably effective and productive methods by which he is able to
lay hold of some aspects of the nature of things, the methods of
the natural sciences, fail him; not because they are inadequate
for their primary purpose, but because they do not reveal the basis
of ethical choice. They do enable him to predict the sequences in
the processes of things. They do provide him with the means of injecting
himself into these processes so that he can direct them to satisfy
his own desires and wants. But they do not tell him what direction
he or a society ought to take
Religion, Natural Law, and the Universe
In times past religion provided a conception of mans relation
to the universe which gave his life meaning or taught him how to
order his life in order to make it meaningful. In one way or another,
religion has always attempted to establish a relationship between
human purposes and aspirations and the scheme of the universe. By
devices which in their primitive form seem naive, religion has asserted
the possibility of establishing a harmonious connection between
human intentions and behavior and the universal course of things.
If all that
exists is under the firm and universal direction of a being who
can be called Father or King, there is hope
that mans enterprises may be related to, judged, and given
at least long-range assurance of success so long as they are compatible
with the nonhuman nature and processes of the world. But the growing
emphasis on the authority and reliability of the physical and social
sciences has made it increasingly difficult for many modern people
to accept or to use these terms with any conviction.
In the eighteenth
century the concept of natural law, the law of nature and
of natures god, served the same purpose as religion
once did. The conception grew out of or implied the idea that the
constitution and course of all things could appropriately be regarded
as under laws which were not of mans devising but were written
in the nature of things. Such a conception consequently provided
a reference point for the appraisal of human organizations, laws,
and courses of action. But despite our vastly increased knowledge
of the regularity of natural processes, even this concept is no
longer convincing to many modern men.
The eighteenth
century farm boy and the city dwellers alike were constantly reminded
of the forces of naturethe succession of the seasons, the
processes of generation and growth, the frightful effects of disease.
Since it was obvious that all of this was beyond human contrivance,
the conception that it was the result of the operation of natural
law was persuasive. But we now know that much that was once believed
to be immutable in nature can be altered or controlled or directed
by man. Modem technology daily performs more astonishing miracles
and daily makes us less dependent upon and more distant from the
processes of nature. Todays children know milk only as a nourishing
liquid that is delivered in cartons, and the hurried modern businessman
spans the continent in a few hours, in an elaborately contrived
machine, and is conveyed from plane to city in another shiny piece
of artifice and deposited in an air-conditioned hotel room. It is
hardly surprising that natural law is for many people today an archaic
concept.
Today we
live not by nature but by technology. But there are tremendous,
if not insurmountable, difficulties in establishing a new sense
of mans relatedness to the universe, as it is pictured by
modern science. One difficulty is simply the overwhelming sense
of its immensity. The astronomers universe with its galaxies
millions of light years away, each larger than our own but still
an infinitesimal part of an expanding system, is hardly calculated
to make the inhabitant of a small planet in a minor solar system
feel at home in his world. Such a universe is almost beyond our
comprehension. Yet the fundamental difficulty does not, I believe,
depend on size alone
The real
difficulty in feeling at home in the universe, in developing a sense
of relationship to it and deriving therefrom convictions concerning
what is in itself valuable is conceptual. The world of the modem
physicist is conceptually utterly foreign to most of his contemporaries.
Most of us, certainly, cannot conceive of a fourth dimension, or
of particles with negative spin, and to all but a few the mathematical
formulas of modern physics are as unintelligible as the markings
on clay tablets made thousands of years ago by a people whose language
has been utterly lost. So alien are these modern concepts that there
are not even workable analogies to convey to us at least an inkling
of what the universe is like and what it intends or at least where
it is tending. We are benumbed by size and defeated by complexity.
The Relationship of Religion and Psychology
Human nature being what it is and its needs being what they are,
it would be astonishing if there were not some groping beginnings
and tentative conceptions of a possible new relation between modern
man and his universe
It is reasonable to suppose that somewhere
in the burgeoning new sciences of our time and in the new techniques
based upon them there are emerging fruitful new conceptions of mans
relationship to the world around him and to processes not of his
own making or willing.
Though we
cannot yet discern their outlines, we can properly assume that the
new conceptions must have some of the characteristics of the older
ones. The concepts by which we once lived clearly established values
and standards that existed quite apart from mans desires and
choices. They pointed the direction for mans thoughts, feelings,
and conduct and indicated the path which he could hope would bring
him into harmony with the nature of things. In short, they provided
a basis for ethics which was beyond individual and social interests,
a foundation deeper than individual and social desires for discriminating
between virtue and vice
If we ask
where in modern mans thinking about himself and his world
such criteria may in a measure be satisfied, we are driven to the
conclusion, I think, that it is most likely to be found in the area
explored by psychology and psychiatry
There seems everywhere
to be an increasing tendency to believe that many of the physical
difficulties with which our medical men deal are ultimately best
understood in terms of the psychological stresses of modern life,
and that they can be treated most effectively by techniques which
see mind and body as interrelated parts of the whole person. [or
Prozac, ed.]
The comparison
between the religions and psychological approaches can be carried
further. The demonic in human life, which used to be associated
with the presence of evil, supernatural beings such as devils and
witches, is now located in the realm in which psychology and psychiatry
operate. We seem increasingly to suppose that there is an area beyond
our immediate perception in the depths of the subconscious which
in its functions has supplanted demonic hosts
Psychology
and psychiatry are also being called upon to establish a new foundation
and new conceptions of virtue and vice.
The close
relationship between this new approach to the fundamental questions
of life and the answers once supplied by religion is evidenced by
the increasing interest which it arouses in churches and churchmen
The education
and spiritual development of man was entirely in the hands of the
Church in the early part of European civilization, and the clergy
was, therefore, in a central position. In the centuries following
the Reformation, personality development became increasingly a matter
of education. Humanistic ideas of development superseded the older
religious ideas. With the decline of religion and humanism at the
turn of the century, the psychiatrist has moved into a unique position.
He is now the recognized, scientifically trained expert on personality
development and is expected to fulfill all functions previously
divided among clergymen, educators, parents, and other agencies.
If we now
attempt to reestablish a relationship between psychiatry and religion,
it must be recognized that long-range planning is necessary. At
this moment of history, many patients cannot accept what religion
has to offer. These individuals consider the psychiatrist to be
the only firm reliance in the ocean of emotional currents. Therefore,
the present role of the psychiatrist seems to be to make it possible
for the patient to interact with his social and cultural environment.
What psychiatry
presents to modern man is in effect something quite apart from mans
conscious desires and choices. It proposes an insight into the direction
of things which exist outside of conscious impulses and wishesan
insight which seems to hold out the prospect of becoming a guide
to good and evil in human feelings, thoughts, and conduct. In this
sense, the processes of psychiatry do resemble the processes of
religion. They promise to reveal to distressed and confused people
what their feelings or their conduct mean in the light of the nature
of things, or rather the substratum of things, in the human mind
and in human association. And like religion, psychiatry frequently
insists upon the critical importance of helping the individual himself
to uncover and understand the hidden sources of behavior and feeling.
There are
indeed many similarities between religion and psychiatry. But there
are also differences and difficulties, for despite the bridges which
are being thrown across the chasm between psychiatry and religion,
there are still serious obstacles to communication between the two.
Some psychiatrists say that man cannot get on without religion,
but such statements seem to many religious leaders to make the unacceptable
assumption that any religion will serve the purpose as well as another
It would
be bold to the point of foolhardiness to predict the course which
the relationships of psychiatry and religion will take
Much
depends everything, perhapson whether there will emerge
a creative intellectual leadership which is capable of opening generally
acceptable ways of dealing with the problem. There are reasons to
expect that under such leadership fundamental concepts on both sides
might be brought into a productive working relationship. For one
thing, the growth of religious tolerance, which in America, at least,
has been essential to peaceful coexistence of various religions
in a united but pluralistic society, has tended to establish and
make acceptable the view that there is some truth in every religious
position and an element of universality in each. Furthermore, the
resolution of the conflicts between science and religion which troubled
the nineteenth century, especially after the rise of Darwinism,
has left as a legacy the opinion that science does not necessarily
threaten religious beliefs
In the final
analysis, the success of efforts to find the terms in which man
may have some sense of being at home in his universe depends upon
the intellectual and spiritual power of any new religious leadership
which may arise. Its intellectual power will be revealed by the
depth of its insight into the implications of modern science, including
psychology and psychiatry. Its spiritual power must rest upon the
development of a view which is not merely contrived to meet the
human need and desire for mans understanding of himself in
relation to the world, but which also reflects the force of inescapable
demands made by the universe on man. The faith, the hope, the ethical
criteria of religion require the recognition that inescapable demands
are imposed upon man and society, rather than being merely generated
by mens problems and desires. In this sense the search for
answers in this time of burgeoning scientific knowledge must be
a religious search, and its products must have something of the
force of revelation.
The search
for such answers will, of course, inevitably go on. No matter how
impressive our scientific knowledge may become, men will be restless
until they can form a satisfactory picture of themselves in the
kind of universe which science has revealed. The search will be
a long, hard task, as long and hard as were those in the days when
religion and philosophy provided a rationale for the evaluation
of individual and social behavior. No task could be more vital to
the welfare of mankind. The most urgent problem of the twentieth
century is whether man today can discover and accept the demands
which his conception of the universe puts upon him the necessity
to find his own place and societys place in the scheme of
things before he destroys himself by the abuse of the powers which
science has given him.
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