September 09, 2007
Defender of the Faith?
Mark Edmundson in the New York Times Magazine:
Late in life — he was in his 80s, in fact — Sigmund Freud got religion. No, Freud didn’t begin showing up at temple every Saturday, wrapping himself in a prayer shawl and reading from the Torah. To the end of his life, he maintained his stance as an uncompromising atheist, the stance he is best known for down to the present. In “The Future of an Illusion,” he described belief in God as a collective neurosis: he called it “longing for a father.” But in his last completed book, “Moses and Monotheism,” something new emerges. There Freud, without abandoning his atheism, begins to see the Jewish faith that he was born into as a source of cultural progress in the past and of personal inspiration in the present. Close to his own death, Freud starts to recognize the poetry and promise in religion.
More here.
Posted by Abbas Raza at 09:56 PM | Permalink






Comments
Thanks, Abbas! This is most interesting and meaningful. I hope people will read it rather than dismiss it because it looks to be about Freud, of whom some readers seek no knowledge.
Posted by: Elatia Harris | Sep 9, 2007 11:06:53 PM
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