1st Edition

Love, Drugs, Art, Religion The Pains and Consolations of Existence

By Brian R. Clack Copyright 2014
    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this original and far-reaching contribution to the philosophy of religion, Brian R. Clack examines the manner in which religious belief emerges from the turbulence and anxiety of human existence. Taking his cue from Freud's suggestion that human life is so hard to bear that it requires nothing short of cultural and psychological palliative care, Clack explores each of the 'palliative measures' Freud catalogues - intoxicants, religion, art and love - and evaluates their role in the mitigation of suffering and the provision of the assistance required for an endurable life. This examination provides the context for an investigation into the meaning and function of religious belief when considered as a palliative. Clack initially subjects religion to ferocious critique, defending the psychoanalytic judgment that religious beliefs operate as wish-fulfilling illusions, but then elaborates a revised understanding of religion, one in which comforting illusions are banished and in which religious belief faces up to reality and reconciles us both to the pains and disappointments of existence and to our nullity and inevitable annihilation. in this genuinely interdisciplinary work, Clack breaks new ground by using detailed explorations of the phenomena of drug-use, romantic love and the enjoyment of art in order to throw light on the meaning and nature of religion. This book will be vital reading for anyone concerned with the fundamental questions of religious belief, the psychoanalytic approach to culture, or simply the unavoidable existential problems lying at the very heart of human life.

    Chapter 1 ‘Life, as we find it, is too hard for us …’; Chapter 2 The First Palliative: Intoxicants; Chapter 3 The Second Palliative: Religion; Chapter 4 The Third Palliative: Art; Chapter 5 The Fourth Palliative: Love; Chapter 6 Religion beyond Illusion;

    Biography

    Brian R. Clack is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of San Diego. He is the author of Wittgenstein, Frazer and Religion (Macmillan, 1999), An Introduction to Wittgenstein's Philosophy of Religion (Edinburgh University Press, 1999), and co-author (with Beverley Clack) of The Philosophy of Religion: A Critical Introduction (Second edition, Polity, 2008).

    ’A sensitive and wide-ranging exploration of the human condition. Clack’s sustained philosophical reflection on human transience is rich in reference and informed by powerful literary and psychoanalytic insights.’ John Cottingham, Heythrop College, University of London, and University of Reading, UK '... it is a fun, informative book that is worth reading for anyone still interested in Freudian psychoanalysis, broadly construed. As a work of exegesis it succeeds magnificently ... Recommended.' CHOICE