Sunday, May 04, 2008

Bible Beaters On Psychology

I love it when some loon decides to "take on" a subject they so obviously know nothing about. Such is the case when Selwyn Duke decides to try trashing psychology in The Hard Truth about a Soft Science: Why Psychology Does More Harm Than Good.

Frankly, I have no idea who Selwyn Duke is, but he (and I presume that Selwyn is a masculine name, forgive me if I am mistaken), but it's pretty clear that they are of the "you don't need a psychologist, you just need The Bible" school of dogma.

“It would be an undoubted advantage if we were to leave God out altogether and admit the purely human origins of all the precepts and regulations of civilization.”

In making this statement, Freud weighed in on one of life’s most important questions: What is the nature of right and wrong? Is it real, something existing apart from man, a reflection of Absolute Truth, of God’s will? Or is it, in accordance with the atheist model, merely a product of mortal minds and thus synonymous with consensus opinion? Freud made it clear he believed the latter.


Oh great - the opening gambit is the classic "it springs forth from atheism, it must be bad" line. Like the Fool's Mate in chess, it appears initially devastating, but it is also fairly easy to put aside. In this case, we have to recognize that Freud was recognizing that in order to achieve any kind of scientific credibility, psychology would have to put aside any reliance on explanations that depend on the unknowable and unprovable assertions that religious faith depends upon.

“Nearly three-fourths of Americans say their whole approach to life is based on religion. But only 32 percent of psychiatrists, 33 percent of clinical psychologists and 46 percent of clinical social workers feel the same.”


Yet even this understates the matter. Like so many nowadays, these people’s ideas about faith aren’t the traditional variety. They may pay homage to an ambiguous conception of spirituality and profess a belief in God, but just ask them about morality. More often than not they will tell you that right and wrong is a matter of perspective.


Ah, so because the percentage of "religious" psychologists out there doesn't reflect the "average American", there's no way they could possibly understand the "average", right? Wrong - dead wrong. Science demands that you explain things in terms of the understandable, not in terms of "God did it" - this is why "Intelligent Design" will never be taken seriously as science - it leaves itself the exit to the untestable when it gets into difficulties.

The problem with this is that reality doesn’t yield to preferences, and you cannot improve something’s function if you misunderstand its nature. If psychology’s predominant school of thought is correct and there is no God, no Truth and we have no souls, then, sure, we are simply a few pounds of chemicals and water; hence, organic robots. And this would have some staggering implications.


Ah, now we start to get to the meat of the argument. Psychology doesn't make any claims about the existence of God, some divine "Truth" or souls (at least not today). I've already stated why it doesn't make such claims. Calling us "organic robots" is also a gross oversimplification, and it suggests something that is quite false - namely the implication that we lack any kind of "free will" that stems from the autonomy of the soul. I don't think any psychologist would argue that we are "bio-mechanical automatons" - there's too much variety in our behaviour and expression to assume that we are 'automatons' of any sort.

The issue of "free will" is simply accepted as a norm. In the absence of any compelling explanation, one accepts the ability of a person to think for themselves. However, the underlying mechanism of how our mind functions as a bio-chemical process is definitely important - not in psychology per se, but rather in biology and medicine. However, the author isn't interested in actually understanding any such thing, instead draws some amusing, but horribly flawed, consequences.

For one, morality is then mere opinion, and we can’t expect opinion to govern the operation of the human “machine” any more than it influences the rotation of the Earth. But what if we are spirit as well as flesh?


Welcome to the first mistake the the religious make when they start criticizing the atheism of modern science. The claim goes that if one is an atheist, then where does one's moral code originate from? Of course, it is inadequate for them to accept that moral codes exist within the context of the society an individual lives in - in spite of the obvious differences in moral codes between (for example) China's villages, tribal Afghanistan and Calgary, Alberta.

Even if, as the author claims, we are possibly "spirit and flesh", that clearly makes very little difference to the contextual nature of human moral codes. The variety of those codes, and the shared objective of achieving some kind of "truth" through them suggests strongly that those moral codes are in fact inventions of human society and the interactions that take place in the context of society.

Yet the problem with psychology is not just that those within the field may be peddling a relativistic creed, but that it has provided a specious scientific basis for relativism’s wider embrace.


Ah - specious argument number two. The classic line that if you do not subscribe to a system of beliefs rooted in millennias-old scripture of some sort, you are a "relativist", and thus fundamentally without moral structure. Of course, nothing could be further from the truth. I may reject the formal practice of "Christianity" as a person, but because of the social context in which I live, there is no doubt that some of my personal moral code is rooted in whatever form of Christianity those most influential in my life followed.

The concept of moral relativism scares the hell out of the devoutly religious because it involves taking each situation on its own merits and evaluating it based upon thought and consideration rather than simply adopting someone else's written code (or worse, someone else's interpretation of a moral code that reflects a society thousands of years in the past). Relativism requires the individual to be actively engaged in their world and willing to consider things they had never thought of before.

For this reason, I might call psychology the science of why we not accountable. Think about it: Everything formerly labeled a sin is now diagnosed as a disease or condition of the brain


Now, here's where he really goes off the rails, and shows us how little he actually understands. Psychology - or perhaps more correctly, Psychotherapy, is in fact all about taking ownership of how one feels and acts. Learning to cope with situations that are often complex and multi-faceted is a long process that beyond all others requires the client to not only be completely honest with themselves, but to then learn to find constructive ways to conduct themselves.

Even in cases where known biochemical problems exist, and there are medications that can be used to treat the symptoms, the patient (or client) still has to learn how to manage those aspects that the medication only mediates.

After all, if we are merely organic robots, at the mercy of our genes (hardware), chemistry and upbringing (software), we have no free will. It then follows that we cannot choose among, well, call them what you will, God’s morals or man’s values, as we are directed by things beyond our control. This reduces us to animals.


Ah yes, argument by "reductio ad absurdium". Of course, the problem with this argument is is that it is based on the slippery slope hypothesis - namely that if "x" is true, then by inference some extreme conclusion must also be true. I don't think anyone - atheist or otherwise - argues that human beings are solely acting on things beyond our control. To argue that we logically reduce to such a simple-minded model of existence is disingenuous, for it ignores our ability to moderate our own responses to stimuli consciously. I may be angered by something, but that doesn't mean I am obliged to act upon that anger, does it? Does this prove in any material sense that I have some divinely-provided soul? No. of course it doesn't.

Thus, insofar as psychology succeeds in convincing us that there is no accountability because there is no free will – no ability to choose sin because there is no sin, only disease – it dehumanizes us.


I've already shown that the claim that psychology tries to remove from us individual accountability is false. The claim that "sin == disease" is similarly a false equivalence. Just as members of different faith communities have very different ideas as to what constitutes "sin", psychology makes no such claims. Further, the author is making the incorrect interpretation that the DSM describes "diseases". The DSM is best seen as a descriptive lexicon. Although it does describe very serious conditions such as schizophrenia that do require medical intervention to control, it also describes a lot of other conditions which are merely descriptive. (For example, it describes tobacco addiction, but someone addicted to tobacco is hardly "mentally ill")

Perhaps this dehumanization is why psychiatry has quite a history of using humans as guinea pigs. There was Benjamin Rush (the father of American psychiatry) and his bloodletting; Nazi experiments; electric shock and lobotomies; our MK ULTRA mind-control program; and Canadian psychiatrist Heinz Lehmann, who illegally used Thorazine on subjects in the 1950s.


While there is some validity to the criticism that psychiatry has made some pretty awful missteps, we should similarly remind ourselves that medicine in general has made similar (and worse) missteps throughout history, and that modern psychology in general is only a little over 100 years old today - making it very much the "baby" of the medical professions.

Frankly, religion has made equally egregious misinterpretations over the years when confronted with new ideas that fall outside of "current dogma", so I am much less than convinced that one can use the biblical notion of "flesh and divine spirit" as a particularly useful guide either. (In fact, there are many aspects of my own reality that in centuries past would have resulted in me being burned at the stake or locked up for most of my life as being "marked by the devil" - for no greater a sin than being born left-handed, for example)

Aside from the obvious lack of compassion inherent in yesterday’s uses of the field, I also have to wonder about today’s. We’re often told that taking people to task for moral lapses, whether the issue is drinking, drug use, perverse behavior or something else, is uncompassionate.


The distinction is in understanding the nature and structure of the various behaviours. Where the religious will often engage prayer to "overcome" some challenge or another, it is hardly definitive that such strategies will work. For example, one must understand that where someone is physically addicted to a substance, that treatment must provide them not only with relief from the cravings that drive the addiction, but also with coping strategies that help them avoid the circumstances under which the addiction manifests itself. Other situations often condemned by religious morals are now understood to be sufficiently core to the person's identity that it is unlikely that any intervention will be effective. While the moral codes of religion may have their place, in such situations one has to re-evaluate whether or not the moral strictures involved are in fact meaningful.

And what happens when the matter of religion is raised? If you’re like many, including someone I know of, you may be told you’re taking your faith too seriously, that such devotion is akin to a mental illness. This isn’t surprising, I suppose. What future could a person have with an “illusion,” even the very attractive one that Freud seemed to believe was the opiate of the masses?


Hmmm...given what I've read of some of the more famous Saints, one could argue that their "divine revelations" would be better described as either hallucinations or other psychological phenomena. (Hey - if you want to believe that St. Francis was divinely inspired, that's fine with me) Most psychologists I know do not dismiss religion as an important coping tool for people; but then again, that doesn't mean that they believe it is "real" either.

Oh yes, it Marx who characterized religion as "the opiate of the masses", not Freud.

Again, the author's dismissiveness of psychology in general appears to stem from his ignorance of the subject as a whole, and his rigid belief that all stems from some divine truth - the nature of which he asserts, but cannot prove - any more than current day psychology (or psychiatry) can actually describe in any detail the causal origins of so many conditions that are part of the human condition.

Simply because something stems from an atheistic tradition (atheism in this case meaning literally "without god" as opposed to an active denial of god), doesn't invalidate it or make it harmful. In fact, many of the issues that people wind up seeing a psychologist about stem not from the issue itself, but in fact from the conflict with arbitrary moral strictures that stem from someone else's religious views.

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