The Psychology
of Atheism

Professor Paul C. Vitz
The title of this paper, "The Psychology of
Atheism," may seem strange. Certainly, my psychological colleagues have found it odd
and even, I might add, a little disturbing. After all, psychology, since its founding
roughly a century ago, has often focused on the opposite topic-namely the psychology of
religious belief. Indeed, in many respects the origins of modern psychology are intimately
bound up with the psychologists who explicitly proposed interpretations of belief in God.
William James and Sigmund Freud, for example, were both
personally and professionally deeply involved in the topic. Recall The Will to Believe
by James, as well as his still famous Varieties of Religious Experience. These
two works are devoted to an attempt at understanding belief as the result of
psychological, that is natural, causes. James might have been sympathetic to religion, but
his own position was one of doubt and skepticism and his writings were part of
psychology's general undermining of religious faith. As for Sigmund Freud, his critiques
of religion, in particular Christianity, are well known and will be discussed in some
detail later. For now, it is enough to remember how deeply involved Freud and his thought
have been with the question of God and religion.
Given the close involvement between the founding of much of
psychology and a critical interpretation of religion, it should not be surprising that
most psychologists view with some alarm any attempt to propose a psychology of atheism. At
the very least such a project puts many psychologists on the defensive and gives them some
taste of their own medicine. Psychologists are always observing and interpreting others
and it is high time that some of them learn from their own personal experience what it is
like to be put under the microscope of psychological theory and experiment. Regardless, I
hope to show that the psychological concepts used quite effectively to interpret religion
are two- edged swords that can also be used to interpret atheism. Sauce for the believer
is equally sauce for the unbeliever.
Before beginning, however, I wish to make two points bearing
on the underlying assumption of my remarks. First, I assume that the major barriers to
belief in God are not rational but-in a general sense- can be called psychological. I do
not wish to offend the many distinguished philosophers-both believers and nonbelievers-in
this audience, but I am quite convinced that for every person strongly swayed by rational
argument there are many, many more affected by nonrational psychological factors.
The human heart-no one can truly fathom it or know all its
deceits, but at least it is the proper task of the psychologist to try. Thus, to begin, I
propose that neurotic psychological barriers to belief in God are of great importance.
What some of these might be I will mention shortly. For believers, therefore, it is
important to keep in mind that psychological motives and pressures that one is often
unaware of, often lie behind unbelief.
One of the earliest theorists of the unconscious, St. Paul,
wrote, "I can will what is right, but I cannot do it . . . I see in my members
another law at war with the law of my mind . . ." (Rom. 7:18, 23). Thus, it seems to
me sound theology as well as sound psychology that psychological factors can be
impediments to belief as well as behavior, and that these may often be unconscious factors
as well. Further, as a corollary it is reasonable to propose that people vary greatly in
the extent to which these factors are present in their lives. Some of us have been blessed
with an upbringing, a temperament, social environment, and other gifts that have made
belief in God a much easier thing than many who have suffered more or have been raised in
a spiritually impoverished environment or had other difficulties with which to cope.
Scripture makes it clear that many children-even into the third or fourth
generation-suffer from the sins of their fathers, including the sins of fathers who may
have been believers. In short, my first point is that some people have much more serious
psychological barriers to belief than others, a point consistent with the scriptures'
clear statement that we are not to judge others, however much we are called to correct
evil.
My second point as qualification is that in spite of serious
difficulties to belief, all of us still have a free choice to accept God or reject Him.
This qualification is not in contradiction to the first. Perhaps a little elaboration will
make this clearer. One person, as a consequence of his particular past, present
environment, etc., may find it much harder than most people to believe in God. But
presumably, at any moment, certainly at many times, he can choose to move toward God or to
move away. One man may start with so many barriers that even after years of slowly
choosing to move toward God he may still not be there. Some may die before they reach
belief. We assume they will be judged-like all of us- on how far they traveled toward God
and how well they loved others-on how well they did with what they had. Likewise, another
man without psychological difficulties at all is still free to reject God, and no doubt
many do. Thus, although the ultimate issue is one of the will and our sinful nature, it is
still possible to investigate those psychological factors that predispose one to unbelief,
that make the road to belief in God especially long and hard.
The Psychology of Atheism: Social and Personal Motives
There seems to be a widespread assumption throughout much of
the Western intellectual community that belief in God is based on all kinds of irrational
immature needs and wishes, but atheism or skepticism is derived from a rational, no-
nonsense appraisal of the way things really are. To begin a critique of this assumption, I
start with my own case history.
As some of you know, after a rather weak, wishy-washy
Christian upbringing, I became an atheist in college in the 1950s and remained so
throughout graduate school and my first years as a young experimental psychologist on the
faculty at New York University. That is, I am an adult convert or, more technically, a
reconvert to Christianity who came back to the faith, much to his surprise, in my late
thirties in the very secular environment of academic psychology in New York City.
I am not going into this to bore you with parts of my life
story, but to note that through reflection on my own experience it is now clear to me that
my reasons for becoming and for remaining an atheist-skeptic from about age 18 to 38 were
superficial, irrational, and largely without intellectual or moral integrity. Furthermore,
I am convinced that my motives were, and still are, commonplace today among intellectuals,
especially social scientists.
The major factors involved in my becoming an atheist-although
I wasn't really aware of them at the time-were as follows.
General socialization. An important
influence on me in my youth was a significant social unease. I was somewhat embarrassed to
be from the Midwest, for it seemed terribly dull, narrow, and provincial. There was
certainly nothing romantic or impressive about being from Cincinnati, Ohio and from a
vague mixed German-English-Swiss background. Terribly middle class. Further, besides
escape from a dull, and according to me unworthy, socially embarrassing past, I wanted to
take part in, in fact to be comfortable in, the new, exciting, even glamorous, secular
world into which I was moving. I am sure that similar motives have strongly influenced the
lives of countless upwardly mobile young people in the last two centuries. Consider
Voltaire, who moved into the glittery, aristocratic, sophisticated world of Paris, and who
always felt embarrassed about his provincial and nonaristocratic origin; or the Jewish
ghettos that so many assimilating Jews have fled, or the latest young arrival in New York,
embarrassed about his fundamentalist parents. This kind of socialization pressure has
pushed many away from belief in God and all that this belief is associated with for them.
I remember a small seminar in graduate school where almost
every member there at some time expressed this kind of embarrassment and response to the
pressures of socialization into "modern life." One student was trying to escape
his Southern Baptist background, another a small town Mormon environment, a third was
trying to get out of a very Jewish Brooklyn ghetto, and the fourth was me.
Specific socialization. Another major reason
for my wanting to become an atheist was that I desired to be accepted by the powerful and
influential scientists in the field of psychology. In particular, I wanted to be accepted
by my professors in graduate school. As a graduate student I was thoroughly socialized by
the specific "culture" of academic research psychology. My professors at
Stanford, however much they might disagree on psychological theory, were, as far as I
could tell, united in only two things-their intense personal career ambition and their
rejection of religion. As the psalmist says, ". . . The man greedy for gain curses
and renounces the Lord. In the pride of his countenance the wicked does not seek him; all
his thoughts are, 'There is no God'" (Psalm 10:3-4).
In this environment, just as I had learned how to dress like
a college student by putting on the right clothes, I also learned to "think"
like a proper psychologist by putting on the right-that is, atheistic-ideas and attitudes.
Personal convenience. Finally, in this list
of superficial, but nevertheless, strong irrational pressures to become an atheist, I must
list simple personal convenience. The fact is that it is quite inconvenient to be a
serious believer in today's powerful secular and neo-pagan world. I would have had to give
up many pleasures and a good deal of time.
Without going into details it is not hard to imagine the
sexual pleasures that would have to be rejected if I became a serious believer. And then I
also knew it would cost me time and some money. There would be church services, church
groups, time for prayer and scripture reading, time spent helping others. I was already
too busy. Obviously, becoming religious would be a real inconvenience.
Now perhaps you think that such reasons are restricted to
especially callow young men-like me in my twenties. However, such reasoning is not so
restricted. Here I will take up the case of Mortimer Adler, a well known American
philosopher, writer, and intellectual who has spent much of his life thinking about God
and religious topics. One of his most recent books is titled How to Think About God: A
Guide for the 20th Century Pagan (1980). In this work, Adler presses the argument for
the existence of God very strongly and by the latter chapters he is very close to
accepting the living God. Yet he pulls back and remains among "the vast company of
the religiously uncommitted" (Graddy, 1982). But Adler leaves the impression that
this decision is more one of will than of intellect. As one of his reviewers notes
(Graddy, 1982), Adler confirms this impression in his autobiography, Philosopher at
Large (1976). There, while investigating his reasons for twice stopping short of a
full religious commitment, he writes that the answer "lies in the state of one's
will, not in the state of one's mind." Adler goes on to comment that to become
seriously religious "would require a radical change in my way of life . . ." and
"The simple truth of the matter is that I did not wish to live up to being a
genuinely religious person" (Graddy, p. 24).
There you have it! A remarkably honest and conscious
admission that being "a genuinely religious person" would be too much trouble,
too inconvenient. I can't but assume that such are the shallow reasons behind many an
unbeliever's position.
In summary, because of my social needs to assimilate, because
of my professional needs to be accepted as part of academic psychology, and because of my
personal needs for a convenient lifestyle-for all these needs atheism was simply the best
policy. Looking back on these motives, I can honestly say that a return to atheism has all
the appeal of a return to adolescence.[2]
The Psychology of Atheism: Psychoanalytic Motives
As is generally known, the central Freudian criticism of
belief in God is that such a belief is untrustworthy because of its psychological origin.
That is, God is a projection of our own intense, unconscious desires; He is a wish
fulfillment derived from childish needs for protection and security. Since these wishes
are largely unconscious, any denial of such an interpretation is to be given little
credence. It should be noted that in developing this kind of critique, Freud has raised
the ad hominem argument to one of wide influence. It is in The Future of an
Illusion (1927, 1961) that Freud makes his position clearest:
[R]eligious ideas have arisen from the same needs as have all
the other achievements of civilization: from the necessity of defending oneself against
the crushing superior force of nature. (p. 21)
Therefore, religious beliefs are:
illusions, fulfillments of the oldest, strongest
and most urgent wishes of mankind . . . As we
already know, the terrifying impression of
helplessness in childhood aroused the need for
protection-for protection through love-which
was provided by the father . . . Thus the benevolent rule of a divine Providence allays
our fear of the danger of life. (p. 30)
Let us look at this argument carefully, for in spite of the
enthusiastic acceptance of it by so many uncritical atheists and skeptics, it is really a
very weak position.
In the first paragraph Freud fails to note that his arguments
against religious belief are, in his own words, equally valid against all the
achievements of civilization, including psychoanalysis itself. That is, if the psychic
origin of an intellectual achievement invalidates its truth value, then physics, biology,
much less psychoanalysis itself, are vulnerable to the same charge.
In the second paragraph Freud makes another strange claim,
namely that the oldest and most urgent wishes of mankind are for the loving protecting
guidance of a powerful loving Father, for divine Providence. However, if these wishes were
as strong and ancient as he claims, one would expect pre-Christian religion to have
strongly emphasized God as a benevolent father. In general, this was far from the case for
the pagan religion of the Mediterranean world-and, for example, is still not the case for
such popular religions as Buddhism and for much of Hinduism. Indeed, Judaism and most
especially Christianity are in many respects distinctive in the emphasis on God as a
loving Father.
However, let us put these two intellectual gaffes aside and
turn to another understanding of his projection theory. It can be shown that this theory
is not really an integral part of psychoanalysis- and, thus cannot claim fundamental
support from psychoanalytic theory. It is essentially an autonomous argument. Actually,
Freud's critical attitude toward and rejection of religion is rooted in his personal
predilections and is a kind of meta psychoanalysis-or background framework which is not
well connected to his more specifically clinical concepts. (This separation or autonomy
with respect to most psychoanalytic theory very likely accounts for its influence outside
of psychoanalysis.) There are two pieces of evidence for this interpretation of the
projection theory.
The first is that this theory had been clearly articulated
many years earlier by Ludwig Feuerbach in his book The Essence of Christianity
(1841, 1957). Feuerbach's interpretation was well-known in European intellectual circles,
and Freud, as a youth, read Feuerbach avidly (see Gedo & Pollock, 1976, pp. 47, 350).
Here are some representative quotes from Feuerbach which make this clear:
What man misses- whether this be an articulate and therefore
conscious, or an unconscious, need-that is his God. (1841, 1957, p. 33)
Man projects his nature into the world outside himself before
he finds it in himself. (p. 11)
To live in projected dream-images is the essence of religion.
Religion sacrifices reality to the projected dream. . . (p. 49)
Many other quotes could be provided in which Feuerbach
describes religion in "Freudian" terms such as wish-fulfillment, etc. What Freud
did with this argument was to revive it in a more eloquent form, and publish it at a later
time when the audience desiring to hear such a theory was much larger. And, of course,
somehow the findings and theory of psychoanalysis were implied as giving the theory strong
support. The Feuerbachian character of Freud's Illusion position is also
demonstrated by such notions as "the crushing superior force of nature" and the
"terrifying impression of helplessness in childhood," which are not
psychoanalytic in terminology or in meaning.
The other piece of evidence for the nonpsychoanalytic basis
of the projection theory comes directly from Freud, who explicitly says so himself. In a
letter of 1927 to his friend Oskar Pfister (an early psychoanalyst, and believing
Protestant pastor), Freud wrote:
Let us be quite clear on the point that the views expressed
in my book (The Future of an Illusion) form no part of analytic theory. They are
my personal views. (Freud/Pfister, 1963, p. 117).
There is one other somewhat different interpretation of
belief in God which Freud also developed, but although this has a very modest
psychoanalytic character, it is really an adaptation of Feuerbachian projection theory.
This is Freud's relatively neglected interpretation of the ego ideal. The super-ego,
including the ego ideal is the "heir of the Oedipus complex," representing a
projection of an idealized father-and presumably of God the Father (see Freud, 1923, 1962,
pp. 26-28; p. 38).
The difficulty here is that the ego ideal did not really
receive great attention or development within Freud's writings. Furthermore, it is easily
interpreted as an adoption of Feuerbach's projection theory. Thus, we can conclude that
psychoanalysis does not in actuality provide significant theoretical concepts for
characterizing belief in God as neurotic. Freud either used Feuerbach's much older
projection or illusion theory or incorporated Feuerbach in his notion of the ego ideal.
Presumably, this is the reason Freud acknowledged to Pfister that his Illusion
book was not a true part of psychoanalysis.
Atheism as Oedipal Wish Fulfillment
Nevertheless, Freud is quite right to worry that a belief can
be an illusion because it derives from powerful wishes- from unconscious, childish needs.
The irony is that he clearly did provide a very powerful, new way to understand the
neurotic basis of atheism. (For a detailed development of this position see Vitz and
Gartner, 1984a, b; Vitz, 1986, in press.)
The Oedipus Complex
The central concept in Freud's work, aside from the
unconscious, is the now well-known Oedipus Complex. In the case of male personality
development, the essential features of this complex are the following: Roughly in the age
period of three to six the boy develops a strong sexual desire for the mother. At the same
time the boy develops an intense hatred and fear of the father, and a desire to supplant
him, a "craving for power." This hatred is based on the boy's knowledge that the
father, with his greater size and strength, stands in the way of his desire. The child's
fear of the father may explicitly be a fear of castration by the father, but more
typically, it has a less specific character. The son does not really kill the father, of
course, but patricide is assumed to be a common preoccupation of his fantasies and dreams.
The "resolution" of the complex is supposed to occur through the boy's
recognition that he cannot replace the father, and through fear of castration, which
eventually leads the boy to identify with the father, to identify with the aggressor, and
to repress the original frightening components of the complex.
It is important to keep in mind that, according to Freud, the
Oedipus complex is never truly resolved, and is capable of activation at later
periods-almost always, for example, at puberty. Thus the powerful ingredients of murderous
hate and of incestuous sexual desire within a family context are never in fact removed.
Instead, they are covered over and repressed. Freud expresses the neurotic potential of
this situation:
The Oedipus-complex is the actual nucleus of neuroses . . .
What remains of the complex in the unconscious represents the disposition to the later
development of neuroses in the adult (Freud, 1919, Standard Edition, 17, p. 193;
also 1905, S.E. 7, p. 226ff.; 1909, S.E., 11, p. 47).
In short, all human neuroses derive from this complex.
Obviously, in most cases, this potential is not expressed in any seriously neurotic
manner. Instead it shows up in attitudes toward authority, in dreams, slips of the tongue,
transient irrationalities, etc.
Now, in postulating a universal Oedipus complex as the origin
of all our neuroses, Freud inadvertently developed a straightforward rationale for
understanding the wish-fulfilling origin of rejecting God. After all, the Oedipus complex
is unconscious, it is established in childhood and, above all, its dominant motive is
hatred of the father and the desire for him not to exist, especially as represented by the
desire to overthrow or kill the father. Freud regularly described God as a psychological
equivalent to the father, and so a natural expression of Oedipal motivation would be
powerful, unconscious desires for the nonexistence of God. Therefore, in the Freudian
framework, atheism is an illusion caused by the Oedipal desire to kill the father and
replace him with oneself. To act as if God does not exist is an obvious, not so subtle
disguise for a wish to kill Him, much the same way as in a dream, the image of a parent
going away or disappearing can represent such a wish: "God is dead" is simply an
undisguised Oedipal wish-fulfillment.
It is certainly not hard to understand the Oedipal character
of so much contemporary atheism and skepticism. Hugh Heffner, even James Bond, with their
rejection of God plus their countless girls, are so obviously living out Freud's Oedipal
and primal rebellion (e.g., Totem and Taboo). So are countless other skeptics who
live out variations of the same scenario of exploitative sexual permissiveness combined
with narcissistic self-worship.
And, of course, the Oedipal dream is not only to kill the
father and possess the mother or other women in the group but also to displace him. Modern
atheism has attempted to accomplish this. Now man, not God, is the consciously specified
ultimate source of goodness and power in the universe. Humanistic philosophies glorify him
and his "potential" much the same way religion glorifies the Creator. We have
devolved from one God to many gods to everyone a god. In essence, man-through his
narcissism and Oedipal wishes-has tried to succeed where Satan failed, by seating himself
on the throne of God. Thanks to Freud it is now easier to understand the deeply neurotic,
thoroughly untrustworthy psychology of this unbelief.
One interesting example of the Oedipal motivation proposed
here is that of Voltaire, a leading skeptic about all things religious who denied the
Christian and Jewish notion of a personal God-of God as a Father. Voltaire was a theist or
deist who believed in a cosmic, depersonalized God of unknown character.
The psychologically important thing about Voltaire is that he
strongly rejected his father-so much that he rejected his father's name and took the name
"Voltaire." It is not exactly certain where the new name came from but one
widely held interpretation is that it was constructed from the letters of his mother's
last name. When Voltaire was in his early twenties (in 1718), he published a play entitled
"Oedipus" (Edipe), the first one of his plays to be publicly performed. The play
itself recounts the classic legend with heavy allusions to religious and political
rebellion. Throughout his life, Voltaire (like Freud) toyed with the idea that he was not
his father's son. He apparently felt the desire to be from a higher, more aristocratic
family than his actual middle-class background. (A major expression of this concern with
having a more worthy father is the play Candide.) In short, Voltaire's hostility
to his own father, his religious rejection of God the Father, and his political rejection
of the king-an acknowledged father figure-are all reflections of the same basic needs.
Psychologically speaking, Voltaire's rebellion against his father and against God are
easily interpretable as Oedipal wish fulfillment, as comforting illusions, and therefore,
following Freud, as beliefs and attitudes unworthy of a mature mind.
Diderot, the great Encyclopaedist and an avowed
atheist-indeed he is one of the founding brothers of modern atheism-also had both Oedipal
preoccupation and insight. Freud approvingly quotes Diderot's anticipatory observation:
If the little savage were left to himself, preserving all his
foolishness and adding to the small sense of a child in the cradle the violent passions of
a man of thirty, he would strangle his father and lie with his mother (from Le neveau
de Rameau; quoted by Freud in Lecture XXI of his Introductory Lectures (1916- 1917), S.E.,
16, pp. 331-338).
The Psychology of Atheism: The Theory of Defective
Father
I am well aware of the fact that there is good reason to give
only limited acceptance to Freud's Oedipal theory. In any case, it is my view that
although the Oedipus complex is valid for some, the theory is far from being a universal
representation of unconscious motivation. Since there is need for deeper understanding of
atheism and since I don't know of any theoretical framework-except the Oedipal one-I am
forced to sketch out a model of my own, or really to develop an undeveloped thesis of
Freud. In his essay on Leonardo da Vinci, Freud made the following remark:
Psychoanalysis, which has taught us the intimate connection
between the father complex and belief in God, has shown us that the personal God is
logically nothing but an exalted father, and daily demonstrates to us how
youthful persons lose their religious belief as soon as the authority of the father breaks
down (Leonardo da Vinci, 1910, 1947 p. 98).
This statement makes no assumptions about unconscious sexual
desires for the mother, or even about presumed universal competitive hatred focused on the
father. Instead he makes the simple easily understandable claim that once a child or youth
is disappointed in and loses his or her respect for their earthly father, then belief in
their heavenly Father becomes impossible. There are, of course, many ways that a father
can lose his authority and seriously disappoint a child. Some of these ways-for which
clinical evidence is given below-are:
- He can be present but obviously weak, cowardly, and unworthy
of respect- even if otherwise pleasant or "nice."
- He can be present but physically, sexually, or psychologically
abusive.
- He can be absent through death or by abandoning or leaving the
family.
Taken all together these proposed determinants of atheism
will be called the "defective father" hypothesis. To support the validity of
this approach, I will conclude by providing case history material from the lives of
prominent atheists, for it was in reading the biographies of atheists that this hypothesis
first struck me.
We begin with Sigmund Freud's relationship to his father.
That Freud's father, Jacob, was a deep disappointment-or worse-is generally agreed to by
his biographers. (For the supporting biographical material on Freud see, for example,
Krull, 1979, and Vitz, 1983, 1986.) Specifically, his father was a weak man unable to
financially provide for his family. Instead money for support seems to have been provided
by his wife's family and others. Furthermore, Freud's father was passive in response to
anti-Semitism. Freud recounts an episode told to him by his father in which Jacob allowed
an anti-Semite to call him a dirty Jew and to knock his hat off. Young Sigmund, on hearing
the story, was mortified at his father's failure to respond, at his weakness. Sigmund
Freud was a complex and in many respects ambiguous man, but all agree that he was a
courageous fighter and that he greatly admired courage in others. Sigmund, as a young man,
several times stood up physically against anti-Semitism- and, of course, he was one of the
greatest of intellectual fighters.
Jacob's actions as a defective father, however, probably go
still deeper. Specifically, in two of his letters as an adult, Freud writes that his
father was a sexual pervert and that Jacob's own children suffered from this. There are
also other possible moral disasters that I have not bothered to note.
The connection of Jacob to God and religion was also present
for his son. Jacob was involved in a kind of reform Judaism when Freud was a child, the
two of them spent hours reading the Bible together, and later Jacob became increasingly
involved in reading the Talmud and in discussing Jewish scripture. In short, this weak,
rather passive "nice guy," this schlemiel, was clearly connected to Judaism and
God, and also to a serious lack of courage and quite possibly to sexual perversion and
other weaknesses very painful to young Sigmund.
Very briefly, other famous atheists seem to have had a
similar relationship to their fathers. Karl Marx made it clear that he didn't respect his
father. An important part in this was that his father converted to Christianity-not out of
any religious conviction-but out of a desire to make life easier. He assimilated for
convenience. In doing this Marx's father broke an old family tradition. He was the first
in his family who did not become a rabbi; indeed, Karl Marx came from a long line of
rabbis on both sides of his family.
Ludwig Feuerbach's father did something that very easily
could have deeply hurt his son. When Feuerbach was about 13, his father left his family
and openly took up living with another woman in a different town. This was in Germany in
the early 1800s and such a public rejection would have been a scandal and deeply rejecting
to young Ludwig-and, of course, to his mother and the other children.
Let us jump 100 years or so and look at the life of one of
America's best known atheists-Madalyn Murray O'Hair. Here I will quote from her son's
recent book on what life was like in his family when he was a child. (Murray, 1982) The
book opens when he is 8-years-old: "We rarely did anything together as a family.
Hatred between my grandfather and mother barred such wholesome scenes." (p. 7) He
writes that he really didn't know why his mother hated her father so much-but hate him she
did, for the opening chapter records a very ugly fight in which she attempts to kill her
father with a 10-inch butcher knife. Madalyn failed but screamed, "I'll see you dead.
I'll get you yet. I'll walk on your grave!" (p. 8)
Whatever the cause of O'Hair's intense hatred of her father,
it is clear from this book that it was deep and that it went back into her childhood-and
at least psychological (e.g. p. 11) and possibly physical abuse is a plausible cause.
Besides abuse, rejection, or cowardice, one way in which a
father can be seriously defective is simply by not being there. Many children, of course,
interpret death of their father as a kind of betrayal or an act of desertion. In this
respect it is remarkable that the pattern of a dead father is so common in the lives of
many prominent atheists.
Baron d'Holbach (born Paul Henri Thiry), the French
rationalist and probably the first public atheist, is apparently an orphan by the age of
13 and living with his uncle. (From whom he took the new name Holbach.) Bertrand Russell's
father died when young Bertrand was 4-years-old; Nietzsche was the same age as Russell
when he lost his father; Sartre's father died before Sartre was born and Camus was a year
old when he lost his father. (The above biographical information was taken from standard
reference sources.) Obviously, much more evidence needs to be obtained on the
"defective father" hypothesis. But the information already available is
substantial; it is unlikely to be an accident.
The psychology of how a dead or nonexistent father could lay
an emotional base for atheism might not seem clear at first glance. But, after all, if
one's own father is absent or so weak as to die, or so untrustworthy as to desert, then it
is not hard to place the same attribute on your heavenly Father.
Finally, there is also the early personal experience of
suffering, of death, of evil, sometimes combined with anger at God for allowing it to
happen. Any early anger at God for the loss of a father and the subsequent suffering is
still another and different psychology of unbelief, but one closely related to that of the
defective father.
Some of this psychology is captured in Russell Baker's recent
autobiography. (Baker, 1982) Russell Baker is the well-known journalist and humorous
writer for the New York Times. His father was taken to the hospital and died
there suddenly when young Russell was five. Baker wept and sorrowed and spoke to the
family housekeeper, Bessie:
. . . For the first time I thought seriously about God.
Between sobs I told Bessie that if God could do things like this to people, then God was
hateful and I had no more use for Him.
Bessie told me about the peace of Heaven and the joy of being
among the angels and the happiness of my father who was already there. The argument failed
to quiet my rage.
"God loves us all just like His own children,"
Bessie said.
"If God loves me, why did He make my father die?"
Bessie said that I would understand someday, but she was only
partly right. That afternoon, though I couldn't have phrased it this way then, I decided
that God was a lot less interested in people than anybody in Morrisonville was willing to
admit. That day I decided that God was not entirely to be trusted.
After that I never cried again with any real conviction, nor
expected much of anyone's God except indifference, nor loved deeply without fear that it
would cost me dearly in pain. At the age of five I had become a skeptic . . . (Growing
Up, p. 61).
Let me conclude by noting that however prevalent the
superficial motives for being an atheist, there still remain in many instances the deep
and disturbing psychological sources as well. However easy it may be to state the
hypothesis of the "defective father," we must not forget the difficulty, the
pain, and complexity that lie behind each individual case. And for those whose atheism has
been conditioned by a father who rejected, who denied, who hated, who manipulated, or who
physically or sexually abused them, there must be understanding and compassion. Certainly
for a child to be forced to hate his own father-or even to despair because of his father's
weaknesses is a great tragedy. After all, the child only wants to love his father. For any
unbeliever whose atheism is grounded in such experience, the believer, blessed by God's
love, should pray most especially that ultimately they will both meet in heaven. Meet and
embrace and experience great joy. If so, perhaps the former atheist will experience even
more joy than the believer. For, in addition to the happiness of the believer, the atheist
will have that extra increment that comes from his surprise at finding himself surrounded
by joy in, of all places, his Father's house.
REFERENCES
Adler, M. (1976). Philosopher at large. New York:
Macmillan.
Adler, M. (1980). How to think about God: A guide to the
twentieth century pagan. New York: Macmillan.
Baker, R. (1982). Growing up. New York: Congdon
& Weed.
Feuerbach, L. (1891/1957). The essence of Christianity.
Ed. and abridged by E. G. Waring & F. W. Strothman. New York: Ungar.
Freud, S. (1910/1947). Leonardo da Vinci, New York:
Random.
Freud, S. (1927/1961). The future of an illusion.
New York: Norton.
Freud S. (1923/1962). The ego and the id. New York:
Norton.
Freud S. & Pfister, 0. (1963). Psychoanalysis and
faith: The letters of Sigmund Freud and Oskar Pfister. New York: Basic.
Gedo, J. E. & Pollock, G. H. (Eds.). (1967). Freud:
The fusion of science and humanism. New York: International University.
Graddy, W.E. (1982, June). The uncrossed bridge. New
Oxford Review, 23-24.
Krull, M. (1979). Freud und sein Vater. Munich:
Beck. Murray, W.J. (1982). My life without God. Nashville, TN: Nelson.
Vitz, P.C. (1983). Sigmund Freud's attraction to
Christianity: Biographical evidence. Psychoanalysis and Contemporary Thought, 6,
73-183.
Vitz, P.C. (1986). Sigmund Freud's Christian unconscious.
New York: Guilford, in press.
Vitz, P.C. & Gartner, J. (1984a). Christianity and
psychoanalysis, part 1: Jesus as the anti-Oedipus. Journal of Psychology and Theology,
12, 4-14.
Vitz, P.C., & Gartner, J. (1984b). Christianity and
psychoanalysis, part 2: Jesus the transformer of the super-ego. Journal of Psychology
and Theology, 12, 82-89.
FOOTNOTES
1: Address: New York University, Department of Psychology, 6
Washington Place, New York 10003.
2: I understand there is a sequel to the story of Adler. I've
recently been told that about 2 years ago Adler became a Christian, and Anglican.