by Gabriella Watson
A religious experience is a non-empirical occurrence, which may be
perceived as a supernatural event, for which there can be no scientific
explanation. It is a subjective incident, as it is personal to the individual
with a sense of a presence beyond themselves. However, the view that people who
claim to have religious experiences are deluded is a rational outlook because,
although Swinburne’s principles of testimony and credulity attempt to support
the validity of divine occurrences by explaining that individuals have no
reason to falsify the truth about their experiences, Flew’s falsification
principle challenges Swinburne’s argument as it asserts that, without evidence,
any claim to a religious encounter is meaningless. In addition, despite the
fact that William James used the impacts of religious experiences to prove that
declarations of divine occurrences are justifiable, Freud’s explanation contradicts
James’ beliefs after he states that religious experiences are nothing more than
disguised fulfilments of wishes, deeming the impacts as insignificant and
lending credibility to the view that spiritual events are merely misconceptions.
Firstly, Swinburne does
not support the view that people who claim to have religious experiences
are simply deluded, after he explains that there is no reason why accounts of witnessing divine occurrences should
be treated any differently to ordinary perceptual claims. Swinburne argues inductively that it is reasonable to believe that God is
loving and personal and would seek to reveal himself to humanity through
religious events. He claimed that “an omnipotent and perfectly good creator
will seek to interact with his creatures and, in particular with human persons
capable of knowing him”. Swinburne uses the principles
of testimony and credulity to strengthen this belief. The principle of credulity asserts that we must accept
what appears to be the case unless we have clear evidence to the contrary. It
is an a posteriori argument in that it is reasonable to believe that the
experiences of others are probably as they report them to be, in the absence of
special conditions, for example, the usage of drugs. This is supported by the
principle of testimony as it explains
that an account of an individual’s claim to a religious experience is plausible
as they would have no reason to fabricate the truth, unless there was
positive evidence to discounter their claim. He explains that “other things being equal, we usually think
that what others tell us that they perceive, probably happened”, furthering his
belief that religious experiences and not delusions and are in fact justifiable
as there is no logical reason to discredit them.
On the other hand, the challenge from philosopher Anthony Flew
refutes Swinburne's probability argument as he claims that any statement
without clear evidence is flawed, strengthening the view that people who claim
to have religious experiences are deluded. Flew used his falsification
principle which highlights the weaknesses of Swinburne’s argument as it teaches
that if a theory or statement is not empirically verifiable then that
particular theory or statement is meaningless. Flew states that “until and unless some such grounds are produced we
have literally no reason at all for believing”. Therefore, after
applying the falsification principle to
religious experiences, Flew concluded that without evidence the claims of a
religious occurrence become futile and unreliable. He used John Wisdom’s parable of the gardener
to strengthen his argument. This analogy describes two explorers who
return to discover a garden in which flowers and weeds had grown. Even though
there are some areas which are overgrown, there are certain areas that appear
to be tended to. One argues that there is a gardener on account of the flowers,
the other argues that they could be no gardener on account of the weeds. Flew’s
point was that for a religious believer, they would always offer a
qualification as to why no evidence could be found to count against their own
beliefs and, as religious experiences are essentially events where there are no
clear and agreed upon criteria which can be used to count against them, they
must be disregarded as delusional events.
However, pragmatist, William James, primarily focused on the effects
which a religious experience can have on an individual and subsequently prove
that the claims of religious occurrences are not misconceptions but instead
rational and valid accounts. James examined numerous testimonies from
individuals claiming to have witnessed a religious experience and concluded
that many of the accounts appear to share a “common core”. This “core” was that
the majority of spiritual occurrences can have two observable effects on the
individuals both in the immediate and long term. Firstly, the immediate impact
may be quite dramatic and involve visions and voices and which may last a few
minutes or hours. Secondly, the moral helpfulness of the experience can usually
involve a recognition that the current lifestyle of the individual is wrong or
lacking in something. This will then normally lead to profound and significant
changes to their moral perspective. James used the work of St Teresa of Avila,
who had a religious vision, to strengthen the observations that he found and
further his belief that religious experiences are valid. Her vision involved
the image of an angel, holding a long spear which seemed to pierce her heart
several times and, once withdrawn, left her “completely afire with a great love
of God”. James concluded that St Teresa’s experience not only had a dramatic impact
on her life but also involved a noetic quality, which provides the occurrence with
“illuminations, revelations, full of significance and importance”. James argued
that this quality lends credibility to the validity of religious
experiences as they hold “a sense of authority for after-time” demonstrating
that religious experiences are not delusions but rather prestigious events
which should hold great value. James further argued that he had witnessed
similar characteristics from Teresa’s vision in other testimonies, subsequently
proving that the resemblances in the accounts of religious experiences lend authenticity
to the validity of the accounts, disproving the claim that they are delusional.
However, Sigmund Freud used a psychological explanation to prove
that the accounts of those who claim to have had a religious experience are
misapprehensions, directly contradicting James’ argument. Freud explained that
spiritual occurrences are a form of wish-fulfilment, where individuals believe
and experience what they want to be true about reality, contradicting James’
belief that events, inspired by the divine, are significant and important. In “The
Interpretation of Dreams”, Freud states that dreams are disguised fulfilments
of wishes and deep desires suppressed by the unconscious. He applies the same
thinking to religious experiences. He explains that religious experiences are
“illusions, fulfilments of the oldest, strongest and most urgent wishes of
mankind”. They are caused by the desire for security and meaning, consequentially
proving that the effects that they have on an individual are futile as they are
simply a demonstration of attempting to satisfy human needs, and therefore refuting
James’s assertion that the effects from divine occurrences are significant and purposeful.
Freud furthers his argument to prove that claims of religious experiences are
delusions as he explains that religion itself is a form of “obsessional
neurosis”. He drew a comparison between religious experiences and his famous Oedipus complex, in that God acts as a
replacement father figure who acts as a source of security and protection.
Consequentially, individuals who claim to witness religious experiences are
mistaken as they are subconsciously yearning for comfort and safety in their
lives.
In conclusion, individuals who claim to have religious experiences are
misapprehended because even though Swinburne used his principles of credulity
and testimony to explain that their accounts are reliable as they would have no
reason to fabricate the truth in the absence of special conditions, Flew
claimed that, without evidence, any declaration about a divine occurrence is
meaningless as it is difficult to verify. In addition, even though James argued
that the impacts of such an event can have significant and profound effects on
the experiencer, lending credibility to the validity of the account, Freud
argued that spiritual occurrences are merely desires for security and comfort
from a male figure, as expressed in the Oedipus complex, diminishing the
impacts of the events and strengthening the viewpoint that religious
experiences are merely misapprehensions.
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