Mythos and Logos From Graham Richards - Psychology, Religion, and The Nature of The Soul

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Mythos and logos - more familiar in other guises such as art versus science,

spirituality versus worldliness and values versus facts. These all lack quite the generality required, referring to facets of the polarity in question rather than the polarity itself. Mythos refers to those broad frameworks of value and meaning in terms of which we conduct and evaluate our lives and experience the universe as a whole. A mythos is not a body of empirical propositions but a way of being and experiencing. It is what gives life its point. The dominant mythos of a culture is expressed in its arts, literature, values, aspirations and rituals, providing individuals with the resources for interpreting and expressing their emotional lives and relationships with others. It is their articulation of mythos which can provide written texts such as sacred scriptures, poetry, drama and novels with such an enduring appeal, sometimes millennia after their creation. Logos on the other hand refers to our practical and problem-solving understanding of how the world works, our grasps both of physical causeeffect relationships and how to exercise social power over others. Logos is about means not ends. The texts which logos yields are inherently transient in general appeal unless leavened with a yeast of mythos. We care not for the wheat transactions recorded on cuneiform clay tablets, but the Epic of Gilgamesh remains fascinating; the Shakespeare industry prospers as ever, but Tudor works on church administration remain under the dust awaiting a Ph.D. student. And pre-1980 runs of specialist science journals remain unconsulted by students and lecturers alike, while English students can still delightedly rediscover Jane Austen and TV script-writers ransack Charles Dickens yet again. When politics focuses on matters of economics, social cohesion, public health, controlling crime and defence against external threat it is in the service of logos. But when rulers come to believe a mythos is all they require, that, for example, as instruments of Gods will their success is guaranteed and logos-based practical expertise irrelevant, the consequences are usually disastrous. The eternal political problem is balancing mythos-rooted values and logos-known practicality. Mythos alone cannot tell you how to solve practical real-world problems. Logos alone cannot guide you on the morality of the solutions it enables you to identify. To get down to brass tacks: Over the last century and a half Christianity has witnessed the steady disproof of the Bibles empirical logos content as stating literal truths. At the same time Psychology has forever writhed in a cleft stick between its logos-like scientific aspirations and the centrality of mythos to its own subject matter which is in turn the very thing which is producing it. The clich that Psychology in general has replaced (or wants to replace) religion is, we will see, quite misleading. What is truer perhaps is that western societies at large have wanted it to do so. As an aspiring natural science, Psychology is in the service of logos, and, insofar as it succeeds in fulfilling this aspiration, can do no such thing. But there is a vicious twist. The staggering success of the natural sciences for a long time held out such promise that

only an expertise on human nature that sailed under its banner could hope for cultural credibility (see Mary Midgleys 1992 Science as Salvation for an insightful review of the general topic of sciences mythos aspirations, although this is not a term she uses). Psychologists themselves could only flourish if they were able to offer scientific accounts of mental distress, techniques of education and child-rearing, as well as demarcations between the normal and abnormal, the healthy and pathological, in all areas of human behaviour and character. Many strove to promote holism or appreciation of individual uniqueness to counter the analytical and reductionist approaches of their more hard-headedly scientifically orthodox colleagues. But the more these tactics were employed the more they shifted into the territory of mythos, Psychoanalysis perhaps being the paradigm example. It is worth recalling at this point that late nineteenth century science had produced its own science-rooted mythos. It did this by converting the Darwinian and Spencerian evolutionary images into a creation myth of a more conventional kind. The Christian Fall was replaced by an evolutionary Rise, and white ruling-class Europeans were the highest and finest achievement of evolution itself. This evolutionary mythos, when allowed to guide practical affairs, had consequences no less disastrous than those which ensue when a religious mythos occupies the policymaking saddle; eugenics, degenerationism and scientific racism being cast as direct applications of scientific knowledge. Even the usual ethical evaluations of compassion (good) and ruthless competition (bad) were at times stood on their heads by exponents of the evolutionary mythos.

Mythos is not about generating empirically testable propositions. It is about generating


stories, images and symbols which can provide our emotions and life-experiences with meaning, value and structure. Logos is about identifying the causal principles by which the world operates and generating methods for controlling these. This includes, in the case of the social world, the formulation of laws and regulations which ensure that society runs smoothly and consistently with the values which it ultimately derives from

mythos.
When Psychology fails to pay mythos its due it always risks becoming dehumanisingly reductionistic and severing itself from one of its principle sources. Conversely, when Christianity fails to pay logos its due it always risks becoming absurd. I am not arguing here that the mythos/logos distinction is synonymous with that between religion and science. All that is being indicated is that these are the territories, so to speak, which they respectively inhabit. But Psychology exists at the point where they encounter each other and demand integration, for the continent of which they are territories is a single one; the psyche itself. One might say that Psychology is a cultural expression of the psyches efforts at finding and articulating such an integration. It has not, alas, done very well so far. Graham Richards - Psychology, Religion, and the Nature of the Soul, a Historical Entanglement p9f

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