1. Global strategies
  2. Creating illusion

Creating illusion

  • Providing illusion

Claim

Freud referred to religion as "the universal obsessional neurosis of humanity." Neurotics, as he defined them, maintain their grip on reality; they preserve a concept of the differences between their own internal worlds and the constraints of the environment. For Freud, religion was an illusion, a term he defined not -_ as it is ordinarily used to mean - as something that is not real, but rather by its relationship to people's wishes. An illusion, for Freud, was something people created to satisfy their wishes. It might or might not conform to external reality. In contrast, a delusion was always out of step with reality. Religion, he argued, is an illusion that stems from peoples' wishes to replace the protective father of their childhood with a supernatural guardian. People then use this illusion to explain the world's terrors.

Broader

Creating
Excellent

Constrains

Bothering about
Yet to rate

Problem

Misperception
Presentable

Value

Illusory
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Disillusionment
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Metadata

Database
Global strategies
Type
(F) Exceptional strategies
Subject
  • Psychology » Psychology
  • Content quality
    Yet to rate
     Yet to rate
    Language
    English
    Last update
    Dec 3, 2024