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The Age of Atheists: How We Have Sought to Live Since the Death of God

Page 72

by Watson, Peter


  Futurists and, 117, 210

  machinery and, 117

  theothanatology and, 383

  See also specific person’s views

  French Revolution, 23, 165, 213

  Freud, Sigmund, 277–85

  and afterlife, 283

  American reception to ideas of, 438

  and anxiety, 86, 87

  and art, 88, 283, 284, 292

  and authority, 86

  Barth and, 313

  Bergson compared with, 76, 77

  and children, 86, 118, 282, 284, 356

  and Christianity, 285

  and civilization, 282–83, 284–85

  and community, 294

  and consciousness, 292

  critics of, 83, 89

  and culture, 279, 281

  Dali’s works and, 198

  and death, 279, 280

  death of, 83

  depth psychology of, 371

  and desire, 544

  dreams and, 123

  and education, 284

  and empiricism, 278, 290

  Freud, Sigmund (continued)

  and errors, 280–81

  and evolution, 87

  and existence, 283

  and experience, 278, 280

  and Expressionism, 122

  and family, 86–87, 239, 255, 284

  and feeling, 271–72

  Four Palliatives of, 283–85

  Frankl and, 369, 370

  Fromm and, 358

  and God, 277–82, 283, 285

  and guilt, 85

  and happiness, 283, 284, 285, 434, 537

  and helplessness, 86

  and human nature, 130

  illness of, 279, 282

  illusions and, 280–81, 283, 292

  Imago journal and, 84–85

  influence of, 83, 89, 97, 99, 352, 437, 544

  and instinct, 85, 87, 118, 189, 282–83, 284, 292

  and interpretation, 294

  and intoxication, 283, 284

  Jung and, 285–86, 288, 290

  and knowledge/knowing, 88

  and language, 465

  Lasch and, 437

  Lawrence’s views about, 269

  Liebman’s views about, 353

  and life, 282–83

  and literature, 292

  and love, 87, 283, 284

  Mallarmé compared with, 147

  May and, 352

  metapsychology of, 278–82

  and morality, 292

  and nature, 279–80

  and neurosis, 281, 288, 290, 438

  Nietzsche compared with, 39

  “oceanic feeling” concept of, 271–72, 282, 485

  Oedipus complex concept of, 87, 88, 285, 290, 357

  palliatives/drugs and, 442

  and parent-child relationship, 86–87, 239, 282

  pastoral counseling and, 361

  and perfection, 284–85

  personal and professional background of, 278–79, 288

  pleasure principle and, 282–83, 370

  popularity of, 241, 330

  postmodernism and, 498

  and psychoanalysis/psychotherapy, 65, 83–89, 279–82, 438, 544

  and “psychological turn” in America, 362

  and reality, 285

  and reason, 189

  and religion, 85, 86–87, 88, 277–83, 285, 290, 291, 292

  Ricoeur’s views about, 292

  Rogers compared with, 363

  and science, 281, 540–41

  and secularism, 87

  and security, 87, 434

  self-creation and, 39

  sex and, 85, 284, 288, 290, 292, 356

  and sin, 85

  and society, 85, 281, 285

  and soul, 279–80

  spiritualists and, 280

  Spock’s work and, 356–58

  Strindberg and, 97, 99

  and suffering, 279, 284

  synthesis of, 159

  and technology, 284

  and therapy, 439

  and transcendence, 88

  and truth, 280, 281

  and unconscious, 65, 76, 84, 85, 88, 110, 285, 290

  US visit of, 84

  and values, 284

  World War I and, 190

  See also specific topic

  Freud, Sigmund—works by:

  Civilization and Its Discontents, 279, 282–83, 285

  on da Vinci, 86

  Das Unglück in der Kultur (Unhappiness in Civilization), 282

  The Future of an Illusion, 279–80, 281, 282

  “Future Prospects of Psychoanalytic Therapy,” 86

  The Interpretation of Dreams, 59, 84

  Moses and Monotheism, 279, 285

  “Obsessive Actions and Religious Practices,” 85, 279

  Totem and Taboo, 85, 87, 88, 279, 286

  Woolf publication of, 257, 263

  Friedan, Betty, 368

  friendship, 82, 195, 226, 263, 296, 308, 390, 427, 520, 524, 538

  Frisch, Max, 2–3

  Fromm, Erich, 290, 358–59

  fulfillment, 362, 380–81, 431, 443, 444, 461, 534. See also specific person’s views

  fundamentalism, religious, 14, 473, 512, 514, 536

  Furedi, Frank, 443–47

  Fussell, Paul, 195–97, 254

  future, 61, 62, 63, 64, 66, 104, 108–9, 209, 225, 251, 451, 452. See also Futurists

  Futurist Manifesto of Lust (Saint-Point), 47

  Futurist Manifesto (Marinetti, 1909), 117, 189

  Futurists, 117–18, 124, 189, 206, 210, 214

  Gadamer, Hans-Georg, 503–5

  Gaia theory, 486–87

  Garrison, Jim, 380, 381, 383, 409

  Gay, Peter, 88, 278

  Gellner, Ernest, 444

  genetics, 488, 535, 545

  George, Stefan, 147, 150–60, 162, 189, 191–92, 227, 540, 542, 543

  George, Stefan—works by:

  Der Stern des Bundes, 189

  Hymns, 152

  Pilgrimages, 152

  The Poet as Leader in the Age of German Classicism, 160

  The Seventh Ring, 156

  The Star of the Covenant, 152, 159

  The Tapestry of Life, 154–55

  The Year of the Soul, 152, 153

  German Expressionism, 35, 49–50, 398

  German Faith Movement, 322–23

  Germany:

  army in, 314

  education in, 314, 324

  evangelical churches in, 313, 322

  holidays in, 314, 325

  national church in, 311

  nationalism in, 322, 324

  Nietzsche’s fame and, 33, 34

  theological renaissance in, 311–13

  as welfare state, 333

  World War I and, 192

  World War II and, 332

  youth in, 43, 51, 321

  See also Nazis; specific person’s views

  Geroulanos, Stefanos, 337–38

  Gide, André, 38, 71, 73, 127–31, 160, 265, 340, 346, 347, 536, 538

  Gifford Lectures, 27, 57, 57–58n, 59, 305

  Ginsberg, Allen, 394, 403, 404, 417

  globalization, 28, 536, 546

  God:

  absence of, 375

  anthropology and, 337

  apocalyptic fulfillment and, 381

  as archetype, 288–89, 290, 380

  attributes of, 277, 295

  change in ideas about, 535–36

  characteristics of, 518

  cosmologists and, 490–92

  counterculture and, 418,
419–20

  decline in belief in, 23–24

  definition of, 420, 536n, 555–56

  drugs and, 419–20, 441

  evolution and, 471, 472

  existence of, 276–77, 535

  existentialism and, 336, 337

  fear of, 516

  as “Ground of Being,” 385, 420

  as hidden, 375

  Hitler as messenger of, 375

  Holocaust impact on belief in, 372

  how to live without, 547–49

  as human creation, 385–86

  humans as partners with, 355

  as imagination, 248

  as irrelevant, 382

  Jewish views about, 373, 375, 376, 377, 378–80, 519

  knowability of, 313

  limits of, 355, 518–19

  Marxism and, 201

  minimalism and, 393

  money as replacing, 238–43

  morality and, 548

  as mother, 376

  as mystery, 376

  Nazis and, 322

  New Age and, 500

  “oneness” with, 419

  otherness of, 58n, 312, 382, 535, 555

  pastoral counseling and, 361, 362

  philosophers’ views about, 295

  poetry and, 146, 244

  post-Holocaust believers in, 372–73

  privatization of relationship with, 513–14

  God (continued)

  rational search for, 58n

  redefinition of, 376, 380–81

  sobornost and creativity and, 206–9

  as suffering, 376

  theothanatological views about, 381–86

  truth and, 525

  unity and, 538

  as unnamable, 555–56

  Vienna Circle and, 274

  withdrawal of, 375

  workers as, 213

  See also “God is back”; God is dead; specific person’s views

  “God is back,” 15, 28, 29

  God is dead:

  atheists’ belief in, 28

  and death as one of many, 535

  Expressionism and, 49, 119

  fear of, 27

  Impressionism and, 111–12

  Jewish views about, 375

  minimalism and, 387

  Nazis and, 314

  and “new spirit” in art, 122

  Nietzsche’s announcement of, 3, 4, 7–8, 24, 148, 210, 253, 377, 454, 532–33, 544, 554

  popularity of, 26, 29

  and publication of Nietzsche’s works, 23

  theothanatology and, 382, 383–84, 386

  thermodynamics and, 148

  World War I and, 188

  See also specific person’s views

  Gödel, Kurt, 273, 337, 492

  Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 34, 188, 206, 214, 227, 291

  Golden Dawn, Hermetic Students of the, 170, 171, 172, 174

  Gombrowicz, Witold, 449, 451

  good/Good:

  definition of, 81

  ethics and, 80–83, 516

  happiness and, 432, 433, 435

  Jewish views about, 373

  life, 26, 473, 505, 506, 518

  Marxism and, 211

  theothanatology and, 382

  See also specific person’s views

  Goodheart, Eugene, 538, 543

  Goodman, Paul, 394, 425

  Gorky, Maxim, 205, 206, 210–11

  Gould, Stephen Jay, 540

  Graham, Gordon, 11, 264, 539, 540

  Graham, Martha, 400, 401

  Gräser, Gusto, 40–41, 42–43

  “gratuitous act” concept, Gide’s, 130–31

  Gray, John, 538, 543, 547, 553

  Grayling, A. C., 505

  Great Britain:

  collapse of Christianity in, 28

  Nietzsche in, 51

  as welfare state, 333

  World War I and, 192

  World War II and, 332

  See also specific person’s views

  Great Depression, 332, 336, 346

  Great Refusal, 411

  Great Terror, Stalin’s, 381–82, 388, 392

  Great War. See World War I

  “greatness,” 197

  Green, Martin, 39–40, 45, 46, 48

  Gruber, Jonathan, 15–16

  guilt, 85, 91, 96–97, 255, 370

  Gundelfinger, Friedrich “Gundolf,” 155, 156–58, 191–92

  Günther, H.F.K., 317, 319–20, 323

  Habermas, Jürgen, 2–3, 5, 133, 288, 515, 524–29, 544, 546, 555

  hallucinogenics, 416–20, 441

  Hamburger, Michael, 50, 228, 449, 460, 461

  happiness:

  anxiety and, 436–40

  and benefits of religion, 16

  and children, 436, 443

  and church attendance, 15, 21

  consciousness and, 434

  counterculture and, 437

  definitions of, 436

  democratization and, 20

  diminished expectations and, 434–35

  drugs and, 440–42

  explorations about, 20

  and failure of humanism, 6

  flow and, 534

  good and, 432, 433, 435

  and happy in unhappiness, 435

  health and, 432–33

  increase in, 20–21

  limits to, 54–56

  as looking back, 435

  as luxury, 431

  materialism and, 20, 434

  measurement of, 431–32, 433

  methods for attaining, 433

  modernization and, 20

  and move away from materialism, 19

  Pew survey about, 15

  philosophy and, 435

  pragmatism and, 62

  recollection of, 546

  and rich and poor, 432–33

  security and, 431, 434

  self and, 434, 435, 444

  therapeutic approach and, 437–39, 443–47

  types of, 518

  well-being and, 431, 432, 434

  See also specific person’s views

  “happy warrior” concept, Wordsworth’s, 80

  Harnack, Adolf von, 312

  Harris, Sam, 7, 475, 477, 512

  Harvard Divinity School:

  Emerson’s address to, 54

  psychedelic experiments on students at, 418

  Harvard Humanists, 418–19

  Harvard University:

  Leary’s release from, 419

  Lowell Lectures at, 55

  Hauer, Jakob Wilhelm, 322–24

  Hauptmann, Gerhart, 227, 543

  Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 56, 241

  Hayek, Friedrich von, 332–33

  health, 15, 308, 432–33, 438

  Heaney, Seamus, 224, 448–49, 456–60, 463–64, 537, 542, 549, 550

  heaven, 11, 103, 104, 168, 494, 553

  Hegel, Georg, 23, 83, 92, 103, 212, 228, 441, 504

  Heidegger, Martin, 222–28

  and art and science, 455

  and being/Being, 224, 225, 226

  and “care” of the world, 224, 225, 227, 487

  and change, 225

  Csikszentmihalyi and, 534

  and death, 223, 225

  decisiveness and, 223, 224

  and essence, 223

  everydayness and, 225, 227

  and existence, 225

  and future, 225

  Gadamer as assistant to, 504

  and God is dead, 226

  and history, 224–25

  and human nature, 223

  and individuality,
225

  influence of, 336, 339

  and intensity, 223

  and knowledge/knowing, 224–25

  and life, 224, 226, 265, 337

  and marginal practices, 226

  and meaning, 226

  and nature, 228

  and poetry, 224, 226

  and reality, 223

  reflection and, 224

  resistance and, 336, 338, 402–3

  Sartre compared with, 346

  and science, 224, 226, 455, 540, 542

  and self, 225

  Spiegelberg and, 414

  and transcendence, 226

  and truth, 468

  and unconscious, 224

  and value/values, 226

  and wholeness, 225

  and will, 225

  Heidegger, Martin—works by:

  Being and Time, 223, 225, 228, 338

  Gelassenheit (Composure), 223

  Hölderlin and the Essence of Poetry, 223

  The Origin of the Work of Art, 223

  The Question of Technology, 223

  What Is Metaphysics? 223

  Heisenberg, Werner, 58n, 336

  hell, 168, 306, 317, 319, 473

  Hemingway, Ernest, 195, 240, 241–42, 244

  Herbert, Zbigniew, 449, 552

  Herder, Johann, 288, 317

  hermeneutics, 292, 293–94, 539

  Hermetic Students of the Golden Dawn. See Golden Dawn, Hermetic Students of the

  heroes:

  as art theme, 114, 116

  Chekhov’s views about, 106, 108, 109

  in Eisenstein’s films, 214

  of everyday life, 114

  Hauer’s views about, 323

  Joyce’s views about, 267–68

  Nazism and, 320, 322

  Nietzsche and, 188

  poets as, 449

  Rosenberg’s views about, 320

  suffering and, 268

  heroes (continued)

  World War I and, 189, 190

  Yeats and, 170–74, 175, 176

  herrenmoral ideal, Nietzsche’s, 37

  Hesse, Hermann, 35, 40, 41, 42, 48, 157

  Hibberd, Declan, 267–68

  Himmler, Heinrich, 315, 316, 318, 321, 322, 325

  hipsters, 393

  history:

  counterculture’s views about, 429

  cyclical, 169

  end-point of, 494–95

  minimalist art and, 392

  Nazis and, 317

  postmodernism and, 499

  See also past; specific person’s views

  Hitchens, Christopher, 7, 543

  Hitler, Adolf, 159, 233, 258, 310–11, 313–14, 316–18, 321–22, 325, 329, 374–76. See also Nazis

  Hofmannsthal, Hugo von, 152, 190, 227

  holidays, 218, 314, 325, 537–38

  Holmes, Oliver Wendell Jr., 53–55, 56, 62, 536

  Holmes, Oliver Wendell Sr., 54, 55–56

  Holocaust, 331, 338, 369, 372–73, 374, 375, 376, 377, 378–80, 381, 388, 406, 519

  homeopathy, 177

  homosexuality, 334, 554

 

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