James's Faith

KLINGHOFFER, DAVID

James's Faith The pragmatist who understood the value of religion. by David Klinghoffer The series of New Atheist tracts that have shot up the bestseller list seem like distress flares launched...

...Those insights remain fresh, both in their expression—he was a fantastic writer (as is Richardson)—and in their content, which has lost little of its relevance...
...It should provide a framework for diagnosing the ills of a culture, and for prescribing measures for the amelioration of social and political problems...
...That illumination would confirm that God is a reality...
...In opposing this "survival theory," James saw that "the current of thought in academic circles runs against me...
...The only fault in Richardson's William James: In the Maelstrom of American Modernism is that the biographer doesn't draw out the contemporary relevance, the echoes of our times, in his compelling narration of the life of his subject...
...by David Klinghoffer The series of New Atheist tracts that have shot up the bestseller list seem like distress flares launched from the deck of a foundering ship at sea...
...This is different from Pascal's wager...
...Or has it...
...Why would a religious person concede so much ground...
...Pragmatism, he wrote, has "no materialistic bias as ordinary empiricism labors under" and judges theological ideas by the twofold criteria of whether they have "value for concrete life" and whether they mesh with "other truths that also have to be acknowledged...
...James's groundbreaking explanations of how the mind works—as in his Principles of Psychology (1890)—seem less provocative now than they once did...
...James thought that there are, indeed, areas where believing in something can make it so...
...Such a believer "surrenders...
...It led to a view—"widespread at the present," he said in The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902)—that religion was only a relic surviving from the primitive past...
...In his essay "The Will to Believe," he explained that personal experience which would confirm religion's truth "might be forever withheld from us unless we met the [religious] hypothesis halfway...
...One such idea was Darwinism...
...This phenomenally popular, Oprah-endorsed film-and-book combo purports to explain how, by imagining what you want (wealth, health, anything), you can have it...
...He relished that fact...
...He might have been recalling his own affection, at age 28, for a gravely ill young woman named Minnie Temple...
...That his religious psychology was anticipated in the Bible would not surprise William James...
...Action creates reality...
...James the instinctive contrarian lived through Darwinian evolution's earliest acceptance, which he often noted with approval even as he perceived its challenge to religion...
...The religious act could even produce its own confirmation...
...Religion should make any individual believer better than he would be without it...
...Richardson smartly observes that much of William James's best intellectual energy was poured into defying academic and elite assumptions: "James moved toward a major idea by starting out in opposition or resistance to received ideas...
...His mentor at Harvard was the anti-Darwinian zoologist Louis Agassiz, whose views James ultimately rejected...
...We can imagine his response to our New Atheists...
...To believe, and know that you're right to believe, you must first act...
...In dealing with secularists in his own day, he appealed to experience, reason, and pragmatism...
...On the other hand, his less academic contributions to what we may call the field of self-help still captivate...
...Some of his views sound like a less flaky version of Rhonda Byrne's The Secret...
...A month after, he was overtaken by a terrifying vision...
...Then again, perhaps it's the New Atheists who have shut their ears to truth...
...Not that any of them would be likely to admit the possibility...
...James pointed out that certain ideas are embraced by an uncritical public simply because of their "prestige...
...If a biblical worldview does a better job of these than the secular alternative, that makes religion "true...
...He appreciated Scripture as a "guide to life," the practical effects of whose guidance can be gauged...
...In his philosophic work Pragmatism (1907), James observed that Darwin had displaced "the argument from design," with the result that "theism has lost that foothold...
...Reeling at the thought that such a condition could befall himself, James took refuge in Biblical verses...
...Surely the enthusiastic reception bestowed on these books, led by Christopher Hitchens's God Is Not Great and Richard Dawkins's The God Delusion, signals that something has gone wrong in an unprecedented way with our supposedly religious national culture...
...cryptic, mystical theological texts...
...I cannot do so for this plain reason, that a rule of thinking which would absolutely prevent me from acknowledging certain kinds of truth if those kinds of truths were really there, would be an irrational rule...
...It had already been crystallized by the book of Exodus (24:7), which records the declaration of the Jews in receiving the Ten Commandments: "Everything that the Lord has said, we will do and [then] we will understand...
...James was devoted to his wife Alice, but Richardson describes him as a "philanderer," if not an overtly sexual one...
...William James (1842-1910) grew up, like his brother the novelist Henry James, in a household saturated with God-talk...
...It should not, rightly understood, violate science...
...It was her death in 1870 that initiated James's engagement with religion...
...Yet James, that beguiling man, advocated a sense of humor about the fact that, despite our faith, notwithstanding our arguments for belief, we might have it all wrong...
...James was a born teacher, going on to teach psychology and philosophy to Harvard students for 35 years...
...A comforting observation to be drawn from Robert Richardson's fine biography of the philosopher and psychologist William James is that America went through a similar crisis more than a century ago, pitting atheism against theism...
...Citing God's instruction to the Israelite leader Joshua, "Be strong and of a good courage" (Joshua 1:6), James argued that it is more reasonable to act from the hope that religion is true than it is to spurn faith out of the worry that it might be false...
...While fully awake, he suddenly saw in his mind an epileptic patient from an asylum he had visited, "a black-haired youth with greenish skin, entirely idiotic," who "sat there like a sculptured Egyptian cat or Peruvian mummy, moving nothing but his black eyes and looking absolutely inhuman...
...That we emerged intact then may have been thanks partly to insights offered by James...
...He also had a knack for counseling, possessing as he did a tremendous—if erratic—sympathy for others...
...Why the continued attraction to it...
...In other words, those who reject religion, for fear of being duped, have sealed themselves off from ever knowing whether they are wrong: I, therefore, for one, cannot see my way to accepting the agnostic rules for truth-seeking, or willfully agree to keep my willing nature out of the game...
...They would comply now with the commandments in the expectation that later, as a result of casting their vote for God, they would understand why He commands what He does...
...Despite bouts of hypochondriac worries and genuine ill health, he was massively productive...
...The defense of religion became a salient theme in his work...
...According to his philosophy of pragmatism, this is the preferred way to evaluate any truth claim...
...He gave as an example that, if you want to win a woman's heart, it improves your chances to think and act as if she already loves you...
...Their father, Henry James Sr., was permitted by family money to spend his time writing a succession of David Klinghoffer is the author, most recently, of Shattered Tablets: Why We Ignore the Ten Commandments at Our Peril...
...James argued that subjective experience has been undervalued as a source of enlightenment...
...The idea wasn't original with him...
...Shrewdly, he noted that, in keeping a door open for faith, he had more credibility because he was not orthodox—indeed, he was irritated by orthodox Christianity— but rather an outside observer...
...too easily to naturalism" so that "practical religion seems to me to evaporate...
...Yet as a young man, William James was less interested in religious enthusiasm than in Darwinian evolution...
...He indulged in "a mad crush on every other woman he met," which he didn't bother to hide from an increasingly wounded Alice...
...While rejecting conventional theism for himself, he also chastised the overly refined religious believer who worships a deity that never impacts the physical world...
...It's more like a vote for faith, which can generate the reality it endorses...
...He himself felt "like a man who must set his back against an open door quickly if he does not wish to see it closed and locked...

Vol. 13 • October 2007 • No. 4


 
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