Warning: The magic method OCDI\OneClickDemoImport::__wakeup() must have public visibility in /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-content/themes/book-club/importer/inc/OneClickDemoImport.php on line 121 Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-content/themes/book-club/importer/inc/OneClickDemoImport.php:121) in /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1831 Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-content/themes/book-club/importer/inc/OneClickDemoImport.php:121) in /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1831 Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-content/themes/book-club/importer/inc/OneClickDemoImport.php:121) in /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1831 Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-content/themes/book-club/importer/inc/OneClickDemoImport.php:121) in /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1831 Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-content/themes/book-club/importer/inc/OneClickDemoImport.php:121) in /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1831 Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-content/themes/book-club/importer/inc/OneClickDemoImport.php:121) in /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1831 Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-content/themes/book-club/importer/inc/OneClickDemoImport.php:121) in /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1831 Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-content/themes/book-club/importer/inc/OneClickDemoImport.php:121) in /customers/a/8/2/robertmellis.net/httpd.www/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1831 {"id":1048,"date":"2023-12-11T19:28:36","date_gmt":"2023-12-11T19:28:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.robertmellis.net\/?page_id=1048"},"modified":"2023-12-11T19:28:36","modified_gmt":"2023-12-11T19:28:36","slug":"archetypes-in-religion-and-beyond-introduction","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.robertmellis.net\/archetypes-in-religion-and-beyond-introduction\/","title":{"rendered":"Archetypes in Religion and Beyond – Introduction"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
Why write about archetypes today? I want to write about them because they are very practically relevant. The archetype is a crucial concept that can allow us to resolve a quite unnecessarily polarised discourse about religion \u2013 as well as about any other sphere in which humans have ideals.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Archetypes can have a central place in helping us understand why religion can remain inspiring<\/em>, and why this inspiration is needed, even though it has no necessary relationship with religious beliefs as widely understood. As well as being practically valuable, I think archetypes can be rigorously theorised, without any of the speculative metaphysics that has sometimes become attached to them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n In writing about archetypes, of course, I am also motivated by my own experience of finding them inspiring, not because I \u2018believed\u2019 in them, but because I engaged with their meaning. Probably my earliest experience of that comes from fiction \u2013 for instance the works of J.R.R. Tolkien, which I read at an early age. Tolkien\u2019s work for me still provides a central example of the separability of archetypal meaning from belief. One can find Middle Earth overwhelmingly meaningful, in all its detail and all its interplay of heroic, attractive, wise and dark forces, but still not use it directly as a basis of judgement in one\u2019s own practical life. I don\u2019t expect to meet Gandalf in my local pub, but nevertheless his perspective is added to the internal voices available to me. As Tolkien also pointed out, this is not at all because his kinds of stories are \u2018untrue\u2019. Rather, I would argue, the perspective of belief is not relevant to them, and we need to hold them in a balanced, agnostic position that is meaningful without being assumed either \u2018true\u2019 or \u2018untrue\u2019.<\/p>\n\n\n\n That this perspective should also be applied to religious symbols is something that has also gradually become more apparent in my personal experience, even though I\u2019d also admit that the actual overwhelming weight of the conventional association of religion with absolute belief has to constantly acknowledged. One breakthrough moment for me in this respect came at the funeral of my father \u2013 a Christian minister \u2013 where I anticipated a habitual alienation from the service, but then realised that I could put archetypal meaning to work in my active interpretation of every aspect of the ritual. That experience was remarkably liberating, and has done a lot to help form the perspective expressed in this book. Absolute belief, as I shall argue, is closely associated with projection and conflict, but this is not an inevitable effect of religious or any other archetypal symbols. We can be deeply inspired by their meaning without that conflict, and let go of it without taking sides.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The concept of archetype is indelibly associated with the work of Carl Jung: a rich resource to which anyone who writes about archetypes should acknowledge their debt. Jung has provided us with the core idea of functional similarities across cultures that can be recognised through the role of symbols. He saw these symbols as fulfilling universal psychological functions for each individual experiencing them. He also saw that these functions could be displaced, or projected<\/em>, as a kind of delusion in which the psychological function is believed to be fulfilled by an external object: for instance, that mere devotion to a feminine image can meet our need for feminine qualities. Without the interference created by projections, however, we are much better able to allow those psychological functions to operate helpfully in relation to each other (to integrate them).<\/p>\n\n\n\n I am already paraphrasing Jung here, trying to draw out the general practical significance of what he wrote rather than using his own preferred language. However, the above offers a summary of the Jungian concept of archetype that shapes this book. There are issues about all the key terms here \u2013 the symbol, the function, the projection and the integration \u2013 that will be explored, but these are nevertheless the central ideas that I believe still have huge potential to resolve our confusions about religion.<\/p>\n\n\n\n However, the practical relevance of these core ideas has unfortunately been obscured for many people. It\u2019s been obscured by unnecessary intellectual baggage on the one hand, and on the other by a failure to synthesise our understanding of archetypes with lots of other interests \u2013 meaning, the body, metaphor, bias, critical thinking and mindfulness amongst them. Archetypes are a feature of human experience, and a conceptual tool for everyone. They should not be associated only with the discourse of a small tribe of Jungians. Jungians should be credited with keeping the flame alive, but they have also sometimes obscured it in the process.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Archetypes are no more Jung\u2019s sole property than gravity is Newton\u2019s, or (as I\u2019ve argued elsewhere) the Middle Way is the Buddha\u2019s. To make a discussion of archetypes into a mere scholarly discussion of Jung or his successors would potentially distract from an understanding of their relevance and importance in relation to wider human experience and practice. Instead, this book offers a wider theory of archetypes, justified in relation to a range of evidence and argument in the context of human experience in general, not solely in relation to the authority of the master. To idealise Jung\u2019s authority, indeed, would in my judgement be contrary to the central insights of his archetypal theory.<\/p>\n\n\n\n For that same reason I have dispensed with baggage that many Jungians still seem to regard as necessarily attached to the concept of archetypes, but that, starting with their practical function, I find unhelpful and distracting. This baggage is associated particularly with the concept of the \u2018collective unconscious\u2019 in Jung, and also with the Platonic interpretations that Jung tended to attach to the archetypes. I will give some, though not too much, space in this book to explaining these judgements. However, my main focus is a positive one: that of explaining the positive value of archetypal theory without this baggage, and applying it to aid our understanding of religion and of symbolic culture beyond religion. We do not need to know what archetypes \u201creally are\u201d, whether they \u201cexist\u201d, or how they originated, to use them helpfully as a concept. Instead we just need to stipulate clearly what we mean by them, and then show the helpfulness of the concept by applying it to interpreting a range of human experiences.<\/p>\n\n\n\n My definition of an archetype may at first sound technical, but please be assured that the terminology I am using has a practical purpose, and will become familiar. An archetype can be defined as a diachronic schematic function<\/em>. The term \u2018function\u2019 may sound reductive to some ears, but it is not here: it is just a common name for a huge spectrum of identifiable tendencies for parts of a system to organise so as to achieve an apparent goal for that system. One can see a \u2018function\u2019 at work in the coagulation of oil droplets that seem to seek each other out in water at the most simple extreme, to the immense and mysterious complexity that is the human relationship with God at the other. In human experience we tend to see functions as purposes or motives, whilst in observed inanimate things the scientifically inclined are more likely to assume that they are determined events that merely appear motivated. It does not matter for our purposes whether or not functions in any context are causally determined (we could never know in any case). In practice, we can let go of that, and just note the systemic relationship of \u2018function\u2019 that we observe. By acting in a particular way, parts of the system benefit the whole.<\/p>\n\n\n\n An archetype, however, is a very specific kind of function. It is a human function that benefits us in our whole complexity, in both our psychological and cultural context. It is schematic<\/em> because it consists in a set of basic associations that make symbols meaningful to us. It is diachronic<\/em> (from the Greek for \u2018through time\u2019) because it is specifically the type of schema that helps us to retain the awareness required to maintain a function over time<\/em>. We are forgetful creatures, and archetypes have the function of reminding us of what we find most meaningful in the long-term<\/em>. Cultural expressions of archetypes are interdependent with their psychological functions so as to create these reminders.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Such a definition of archetypes may sound superficially like reductionism or \u201cmurdering to dissect\u201d to those who have an immediate and intuitive relationship with them. It is not. Just because we recognise a function does not mean that we claim to know exactly what it ultimately is<\/em>, which is what reductionists claim to know. An account of what archetypes do<\/em> can be helpfully precise without posing any threat to our appreciation of the profundity of archetypal experience, because it does not involve any assertion that archetypes are just<\/em> anything. Archetypes have the function of being inspiring<\/em>, meaning that they provide us with ongoing motivation for developing beyond our limitations at any given point, but along with that function comes the profound experience of being awed and challenged. So we can see archetypes as both<\/em> profound experiences for individuals, and<\/em> at the same time phenomena whose structure and functioning can be clearly theorised, observed in individual experience, and potentially also tested scientifically to some extent (see 1.i).<\/p>\n\n\n\n This account of archetypes as diachronic schematic functions, which will be explored more fully in the course of this book, is consistent, I believe, with how the notion of an archetype helpfully functions<\/em> in Jung\u2019s work. It does not fully accord with how Jung defined them, which combined both Platonic and biological features in uneasy relationship. Rather than maintaining the purity of Jungian doctrine, then, I am much more interested in synthesising Jung\u2019s insights with those I have found in other areas.<\/p>\n\n\n\n In particular, that includes the embodied meaning theories of George Lakoff and Mark Johnson, which can offer great illumination of archetypes in relation to the schematic development of meaning for human beings in their embodied interaction with their environment. In their account, our experience of meaning as association through embodied schemas is then extended by metaphor, so I will be discussing archetypes in relation both to schemas (1.c) and metaphors (1.d).<\/p>\n\n\n\n