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Thoughts, articles and essays by Dr. Richard Beck
Dr. Richard Beck is Associate Professor of Psychology at Abilene Christian University
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at 11.06.2009 12:36 PM | 2 comments |

at 7:26 AM | 6 comments |
The first study I want to review was done by Dan, Page, Bonnie and Kelsey. This team of students was inspired to investigate how conformity and authority affect attitudes regarding torture.Recent polling done by the Office of Research at ACU found that ___ of ACU Faculty supported the use of torture against suspected terrorists. In light of these results, the ACU Psychology Department is following up with a survey to gather more information about student opinions regarding the use of torture.The blank was filled in with one of two numbers, 20% or 80%. The research question was, would the students informed that 80% of the faculty endorsed torture also be more likely to endorse torture, conforming to the majority opinion of the authority figures? By contrast, would those reading that only 20% endorsed torture move in the opposite direction, following the majority of the faculty in the rejection of torture?
at 11.05.2009 7:32 PM | 2 comments |
With over three million YouTube views you've probably seen this. But we just discovered this today. at 11.04.2009 7:43 AM | 5 comments |
After reading the Pew report (where Christians were found to be more in favor of torture than non-Christians) I asked the students to ponder the link between religion and violence. There is, obviously, an association. Islamic terrorists flew planes into buildings on 9/11 and Christian terrorists shoot abortion doctors or lynch gay people. In both cases the violence is motivated by the conviction that God sanctions the killing.While they were enjoying themselves, some of the wicked men of the city surrounded the house. Pounding on the door, they shouted to the old man who owned the house, "Bring out the man who came to your house so we can have sex with him."At this point in the text the researchers added a second experimental manipulation. For half of the participants the following lines were inserted into the story:
The owner of the house went outside and said to them, "No, my friends, don't be so vile. Since this man is my guest, don't do this disgraceful thing. Look, here is my virgin daughter, and his concubine. I will bring them out to you now, and you can use them and do to them whatever you wish. But to this man, don't do such a disgraceful thing."
But the men would not listen to him. So the man took his concubine and sent her outside to them, and they raped her and abused her throughout the night, and at dawn they let her go. At daybreak the woman went back to the house where her master was staying, fell down at the door and lay there until daylight.
When her master got up in the morning and opened the door of the house and stepped out to continue on his way, there lay his concubine, fallen in the doorway of the house, with her hands on the threshold. He said to her, "Get up; let's go." But there was no answer. Then the man put her on his donkey and set out for home.
When he reached home, he took a knife and cut up his concubine, limb by limb, into twelve parts and sent them into all the areas of Israel. Everyone who saw it said, "Such a thing has never been seen or done, not since the day the Israelites came up out of Egypt. Think about it! Consider it! Tell us what to do!"
Then all the Israelites from Dan to Beersheba and from the land of Gilead came out as one man and assembled before the LORD in Mizpah. The leaders of all the people of the tribes of Israel took their places in the assembly of the people of God, four hundred thousand soldiers armed with swords. (The Benjamites heard that the Israelites had gone up to Mizpah.) Then the Israelites said, "Tell us how this awful thing happened."
So the Levite, the husband of the murdered woman, said, "I and my concubine came to Gibeah in Benjamin to spend the night. During the night the men of Gibeah came after me and surrounded the house, intending to kill me. They raped my concubine, and she died. I took my concubine, cut her into pieces and sent one piece to each region of Israel's inheritance, because they committed this lewd and disgraceful act in Israel. Now, all you Israelites, speak up and give your verdict."
The assembly fasted and prayed before the LORD and askedThe story then continues with the Isrealites taking up arms against the Benjamites. In the ensuing battle ten of thousands are killed on both sides. Given the experimental manipulation, half of the participants read that this retaliatory violence was commanded by God.
‘‘What shall be done about the sins of our brothers in Benjamin?’’;
and the LORD answered them, saying that no such abomination
could stand among his people. The LORD commanded Israel to
take arms against their brothers and chasten them before the LORD.
at 11.03.2009 8:35 AM | 4 comments |
I'm reading Cornel West's memoir Brother West. I enjoyed this story from his childhood:Though I had accepted Jesus into my heart, it was not my nature to dwell on literal notions of heaven and hell. In fact, when my Sunday School teacher, the wonderous Mrs. Sarah Ray, posed the question, "If there is only one place left in heaven, would you take it?" my answer was, "No."
"Why in heavens not?" asked Mrs. Ray.
"Because I'd have to do the Christian thing, and the Christian theing would be to let someone else pass into heaven first."
Mrs. Ray was amazed. "And you'd choose to fall into hell, Cornel?"
I just assumed that Jesus has promised to be with me even until the end of the world. So I just stand on his promise. I have always believed that ours is in the trying; the rest is not our business.
at 11.02.2009 2:54 PM | 8 comments |
One of the joys I have teaching at ACU is doing research with undergraduates. In the coming posts I'd like to share a bit of the research I supervised this summer working with some very talented students: Allison, Whitney, Daniel, Page, Bonnie, Courtney and Kelsey. The students plan to present their research this coming spring at a psychological conference.Do you think the use of torture against suspected terrorists in order to gain important information can often be justified, sometimes be justified, rarely be justified, or never be justified?The following likert scale was provided:
at 10.30.2009 2:20 PM | 2 comments |
I was a big fan of the book Freakonomics and have a copy of SuperFreakonomics on my bedstand. Today on the Freakonomics blog, a blog about human behavior and incentives, Stephen Dubner writes today about what might be the greatest question he's ever been asked. It's from a journalist in India:You state that your book is based on one fundamental assumption about human nature: people respond to incentives. Which is another way of saying that people are basically selfish. Take someone like Jesus Christ. What was his “incentive” to go on the cross?Dubner is looking for perspectives on this question. Surf on over to the Freakonomics blog and let him know what you think.
at 9:01 AM | 2 comments |
Andrew Sullivan pointed to Volkswagen's Fun Theory project, where they use fun to make the world a better place. A flash mob is the result of social networking via technologies like cell-phone text messaging, viral email, Facebook, etc. Essentially, a flash mob leader will typically choose a crowded public space (think city center, campus commons, massive train station, shopping mall (ick), etcetera). The flash mob leader or mob network will communicate a detailed plan to a critical mass, including a designated meeting space at a designated time, with specific instructions, such as, “Bring a pillow for a massive fight in the City Center,” or “Bring an umbrella to the center of campus and we’ll form a massive canopy under which we will sing children’s songs.” Then, as if the event had never happened, participants will nonchalantly walk away and fade back into the street crowd and go their separate ways.Here's the example Tyler posted:
at 7:59 AM | 0 comments |
Slate has a slideshow with commentary about skull-themed fashion, then and now.at 10.29.2009 6:38 PM | 2 comments |
The Huffington Post has up an article about demonic candy. Apparently, Pat Robertson's Christian Broadcasting Network posted a blog by Kimberly Daniels warning of evil Milk Duds and satanic candycorn. I surfed to the CBN website but it looks like they took the post down. But according to Huff Post the CBN writer wrote that:"During this period demons are assigned against those who participate in the rituals and festivities. These demons are automatically drawn to the fetishes that open doors for them to come into the lives of human beings. For example, most of the candy sold during this season has been dedicated and prayed over by witches."
at 12:21 PM | 7 comments |
One more Halloween-week post!
Facsimile copies of the July 8, 1947 Roswell Register can be purchased all over Roswell. The Register story eventually made its way onto the news wires and got reported around the country, in big city papers and on the radio. You can read more about the Roswell UFO Incident here.
The back area of Area 51 is a bunch of sets with aliens placed in them: A backyard barbecue, a bar, an alien autopsy room, a living room. You pose yourself in these scenes and take as many pictures as you want, being as goofy as you want. Here's Brenden in one scene:
Here's the birthday boy chilling with an alien:
Finally, here's yours truly in an outhouse, taking care of business, with an alien:
The serious UFO visitor also makes a stop at the International UFO Museum and Research Library:
The Museum is mainly, although its trying to be more, a record of the media and newspaper coverage of the Roswell incident with most of the "exhibits" being newspaper clippings hung on the wall. But there was also lots of neat vintage UFO material documenting the UFO craze in America in the 1950s and 60s. Here's Aidan looking at a circa-1950s UFO identification guide:
We also watched an interesting documentary about crop circles while at the museum. Very illuminating.Question:I think this highly important for my non-Christian readers to note. Please, if you are a non-Christian reader, don't think that invoking the name of Jesus will help you escape from an alien abduction. This only works for us Christians. Non-Christians will have to try something else. Best of luck with that.
Does invoking the name of JESUS CHRIST to stop an Abduction experience work for everyone that uses it?
Answer:
No it does not. It is not a magic word. For those who have accepted JESUS CHRIST as their LORD and Master and have made a personal relationship with him it does work.
at 11:10 AM | 0 comments |
More Halloween-week fun.The graving hobby encompasses a range of activities: There are tombstone tourists who plan vacations around the resting places of 1950s Hollywood stars and military gravers who track down the government-issue markers of fallen 101st Airborne soldiers. Genealogical gravers fill blank spots in their family tree with information gleaned from far-flung headstones. Preservationist gravers use bleach to clean mottle from 200-year-old markers. Many gravers just like to hang out in cemeteries and look at the stones.Many gravers use the website Find a Grave, which Slate calls "The Facebook for the Dead."
I also thought, "As for men, God tests them so that they may see that they are like the animals. Man's fate is like that of the animals; the same fate awaits them both: As one dies, so dies the other. All have the same breath; man has no advantage over the animal. Everything is meaningless. All go to the same place; all come from dust, and to dust all return. Who knows if the spirit of man rises upward and if the spirit of the animal goes down into the earth?"
So I saw that there is nothing better for a man than to enjoy his work, because that is his lot. For who can bring him to see what will happen after him?
at 10.28.2009 6:19 PM | 3 comments |
Continuing with our week of Halloween-themed posts.

at 10.27.2009 6:57 PM | 5 comments |
Some thoughts and links to get us all in the Halloween spirit:My own view is that the concept of monster cannot be erased from our language and thinking. It cannot be replaced by other more polite terms and concepts, because it still refers to something that has no satisfactory semantic substitute or refinement. The term's imprecision, within parameters, is part of its usefulness. Terms like "monster" and "evil" have a lot of metaphysical residue on them, left over from the Western traditions. But even if we neuter the term from obscure theological questions about Cain, or metaphysical questions about demons, the language still successfully expresses a radical frustration over the inhumanity of some enemy. The meaning of "monster" is found in its context, in its use.3)
So this Halloween season, let us, by all means, enjoy our fright fest, but let's not forget to take monsters seriously, too. I'll be checking under my bed, as usual. But remember, things don't strike fear in our hearts unless our hearts are already seriously committed to something (e.g., life, limb, children, ideologies, whatever). Ironically then, inhuman threats are great reminders of our own humanity. And for that we can all thank our zombies.
at 10.26.2009 11:32 AM | 5 comments |
We've reached the final post in this series. Let's review where we've been and work toward a constructive conclusion.[Disgust's] propensity for magical thinking and its connection to group-based prejudice and exclusion make it look particularly unreliable...even the moralized form of disgust partakes in the demand for purity and freedom from contamination, a demand that is all to easily connected to the denigration of persons who are unpopular, and too little tethered to any concrete issue of wrongdoing, for which evidence might be offered and examined.In the end, Nussbaum rejects disgust as a criterion for the law. She admits the adaptive and protective functions of disgust, but concludes that disgust is too toxic a category upon which to build a just and civil society.
at 10.23.2009 11:25 PM | 0 comments |
In the past few posts we have been discussing the existential facets of disgust. Specifically, disgust researchers have noted that certain disgust triggers appear to function as “animal reminders.” That is, events and experience that remind us of our physical, animal “nature” are found to be degrading, demeaning and disgusting. Generally speaking, these reminders cluster around the human body, particularly its oozier and metabolic aspects. The body is a continual reminder that we are biologically contingent creatures, animals captured by the cycles of death and decay, eating and excreting, sex and reproduction.The love which is proclaimed in many churches that worship the [American] dream carefully disregards the outcome of love. These churches speak of love as helping others, but they ignore what helping others does to the person who loves. They ignore the fact that love is self-expenditure, a real expending, a real losing, a real deterioration of the self. They speak as if love the person who is loving had not problems, had no needs…They say to people: “Since you have not unanswered needs, why don’t you go and help the other people who are in need?” But they never go on to add “If you do this, you too will be driven into need.” By not stating the outcome of love they give the childish impression that Christian love is some kind of cornucopia where we can meet everyone’s needs and problems and still have everything we need for ourselves! And believe me, there are grown-up people who speak this kind of nonsense…[all this is the] illusion that some people can give without receiving, can nourish others without thereby becoming impoverished themselves—in short the illusion of perpetual affluence…the dreadfulness of this illusion lies in the fact that it is so inauthentic; it is so phony…If ever you approach a needy person with the illusion that you are a creature of purely bestowing love, then to that needy person you will seem totally alien, totally superior…Active love occurs within the fellowship of neediness, within the neediness of the one who serves and leads, and the one who serves in neediness…Too often we hear the lie that to love is to help others without this help having any effect upon ourselves.This is the deep reason blindness to our own need undermines a life of mercy. The issue does begin with empathy, seeing my need reflected in the lives of others. But it doesn't stop there. Mercy is costly. True love moves me into need. Which is, admittedly, a scary prospect. It is an act of faith and it requires a community, a “fellowship of neediness” to use McGill’s phrase. And it is within the giving and receiving of this “fellowship of neediness” where the life and love of God is fully expressed and experienced. In this, the life of the Trinity creates the life of the church or, rather, the life of the church participates in the life of God.
at 10.21.2009 7:21 AM | 3 comments |
In 1987 the photographer Andres Serrano unveiled his controversial work Piss Christ. Piss Christ was a photograph of a crucifix submerged in a mixture of blood and urine. The work broke into public consciousness in 1989 when members of the US Senate expressed outrage that Serrano had received $15,000 from the American National Endowment for the Arts. Senators called the work "filth," blasphemous," and "abhorrent." One Senator said, "In naming it, [Serrano] was taunting the American people. He was seeking to create indignation. That is all right for him to be a jerk but let him be a jerk on his own time and with his own resources. Do not dishonor our Lord." Later, in 1997, the National Gallery in Melbourne, Australia was closed when members of a Christian group attacked and damaged Piss Christ.What are we to make of this work: what are we to understand by it, and how can we interpret it? Most obviously were enraged by the combination of the most iconic image of Christianity--the Crucified Christ--with human bodily fluid, and felt that this work set out deliberately to provoke viewers to outrage. The artist almost certainly aimed to provoke a reaction, but what reaction? The fact that urine is involved is crucial here. But was the use of urine simply intended, as some of Serrano's detractors have claimed, to cause offense? Had the artist deliberately set out to show disrespect to this religious image, by placing it in urine? Some felt this was tantamount to urinating on the crucifix. I would suggest that, even if some viewers and commentators feel that it was the artist's intention, or part of his intention, to be offensive, there are also other ways to interpret this work. Let us acknowledge that if Serrano had only used blood here this image might not have caused such huge outrage. It is, after all, much more common to associate Christ and his body with blood, because of his shedding of blood on the cross. We are used to seeing crucifixes running with blood, and the wounds of Christ spurting blood. While blood may be a bodily fluid that can cause unease, it is not reviled in the same way as a bodily waste product such as urine. The use of the slang or offensive word "piss" in the title of Serrano's work reminds us that this fluid is wholly undesirable. The artist plays upon the viewer's discomfort, even outrage, at seeing the image of Christ crucified, suspended in a mixture of blood and urine, and almost certainly intends to shock, but to what end? I would suggest that the use of urine here is intended to introduce, or in fact restore, some shock to the image of the Crucifixion. After seeing countless reproductions of hundreds of year's worth of Crucifixion images, a modern viewer's reactions to the Crucifixion of Christ might become dulled. A shock such as the one provided by Serrano's Piss Christ might remind a modern viewer what the image of the Crucified Christ really means. The process of viewing the Crucified Christ through the filter of human bodily fluids requires the observer to consider all the ways in which Christ, as both fully divine and full human, really shared in the base physicality of human beings. As a real human being Christ took on all the characteristics of the human body, including its fluids and secretions. The use of urine here can therefore force the viewer to rethink what it meant for Christ to be really and fully human.It is very unlikely that Serrano had Williamson's take in mind when he photographed Piss Christ. The intentions of the artist are not available to us. And yet, we shouldn't think that the intentions of the artist should trump as the final verdict regarding the "true meaning" of Piss Christ. Each of us is free to interact with the piece as we choose, walking away with interpretations unique to our own perspective. In short, even if Serrano intended Piss Christ to be a subversive commentary upon Christianity I think it perfectly appropriate that the gospel be allowed to read Piss Christ subversively, robbing the artwork of its transgressive goal and harnessing it as a deep theological commentary regarding the Incarnation. If transgressive modern artists seek to offend and subvert the status quo, so can the gospel. Two can play at that game.
In all the history of Christianity there has hardly been so sophisticated, so Biblically grounded, and so thoroughgoing a theology of God's transcendence as developed by Arius and his followers. Their whole concern was to honor God by setting him above and in contrast to his creatures. They sought to preserve the glory of God by divesting his reality of all those weaknesses and deficiencies which mark his creatures, and by giving him the most absolute kind of mastery over his creatures.Wanting to protect the absolute Otherness of God, a worthy goal, Arius and his followers insisted that any physical, created ("begotten") thing could not, by definition, fully partake of the divine nature. The debates surrounding the doctrine of the Trinity, therefore, were not about the paradoxes of the math (i.e., How can God be three in One?). Rather, admission of Jesus into the Trinity was a debate about the qualities and nature of God. McGill summarizes,
The issue between Arius and Athanasius, then, has nothing to do with whether God is one or two or three. It has to do with what quality makes God divine, what quality constitutes his perfection. From the perspective of self-contained absoluteness and transcendent supremacy, Arius can only look upon God's begetting as Son as a grotesque blasphemy.The problem with Arius's view of God, according to Athanasius, is that Arius's self-contained and perfect God is sterile. Arius's God needs nothing. Consequently, Arius's God cannot love. Love, according to McGill, presupposes need. The Son needs the Father and the Father, to be love, needs the Son. By placing need and dependency (the Son) within the Godhead the dynamic, mutual and self-giving nature of love is now found to characterize the life of God. Love, via the need of the Son, is deified in the interactions of the Trinity. As McGill summarizes, "Love and not transcendence, giving and not being superior, are the qualities that mark God's divinity." Thus, "since giving entails receiving, there must be a receptive, dependent pole within the being of God."
It is very common for men within the satanic frame of reference to identify need as the great "flaw" in things. Therefore, they picture God as one who lacks this flaw, who as no needs, who stands independently and immutably within the circle of his own identity. What they feel compelled to remove from their picture of God is that which they most fear and most despair; their own condition of need.Is this analysis correct? Is our ambivalence concerning the Incarnation a flight from our own need, dependency and vulnerability? Our discussions over the last few posts seem to answer in the affirmative. Our utter dependency is nowhere more manifest than in our vulnerability to death. In fact, death is what defines human need. The forces of death are always at work in my body. For example, to fend off death, I must eat. I am always moving into hunger, always in need. And if I eat, I must defecate and urinate. The whole metabolic cycle is driven by the forces of death and decay and my daily efforts to fend them off.
This image makes me uncomfortable.The first two prompts were drafted to capture an emotional response to each scenario (i.e., discomfort, offense) while the last two prompts were drafted to capture a more intellectual, perhaps theological, response. All the ratings for each scenario were highly correlated. That is, those who found a particular image demeaning were also likely to report the image as uncomfortable, unbliblical and unrealistic. The measure of Incarnational ambivalence was the sum of the four ratings across all the body scenarios.
This image is demeaning to Jesus.
This image is unrealistic.
This image is unbiblical.
at 10.20.2009 12:44 PM | 3 comments |
at 10.19.2009 7:49 AM | 3 comments |
[Note to regular readers: This post reworks some previously published material on this blog. But there is lots of new stuff as well.]These words 'just' and 'justice of God' were a thunderbolt to my conscience. They soon struck terror in me who heard them. He is just, therefore, He punishes. But once when in this tower I was meditating on these words, "the just lives by faith," "justice of God," I soon had the thought whether we ought to live justified by faith, and God's justice ought to be the salvation of every believer, and soon my soul was revived. Therefore it is God's justice which justifies us and saves us. And these words became a sweeter message for me. This knowledge the Holy Spirit gave me on the privy in the tower.Luther had his great insight, this theological thunderbolt, while taking a dump. In the years after Luther many Lutheran historians worked to "clean up" this image. It seemed scandalous that the great insight of the Protestant faith occurred during a bowel movement. Should not this insight have occurred to Luther as he sat hunched over the book of Romans in his study? Isn't that a more appropriate location and posture for such a wondrous spiritual revelation?
At the end of the fifteenth century, we see the themes concerning death begin to take on an erotic meaning. In the oldest dances of death, Death scarcely touched the living to warn him and designate him. In the new iconography of the sixteenth century, Death raped the living. From the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries, countless scenes or motifs in art and literature associate death with love, Thanatos with Eros. These are eroticomacabre themes...These associations have carried into the modern period, largely through the work of Freud. The sex/death association is graphically on display in modern media. With the rise of extremely violent films we now recognize the genre of "torture porn," where we watch implacable killers, the embodiment of Death, chase screaming, scantily clad girls. In his famous essay The Pornography of Death Geoffrey Gorer compares sexual pornography with the modern horror media (film, graphic novels and books):
Neither type of fantasy can have any real development, for once the protagonist has done something, he or she much proceed to do something else, with or to someone else, more refined, more complicated, or more sensational than what occurs before. This somebody else is not a person; it is either a set of genitals, with or without secondary sexual characteristics, or a body, perhaps capable of suffering pain as well as death...[both involve] sighs, gasps, groans, screams, and rattles concomitant to the described actions...Both types of fantasy are completely unrealistic, since they ignore all physical, social, or legal limitations, and both types have complete hallucination of the reader or viewer as their object.Sociologically, it seems that sex and death are often intermingled and reinforcing obsessions. Why might this be? As discussed in the last post, sex may function as an animal reminder. As a biological activity sex is ubiquitous throughout the animal kingdom. We both recognize this fact and are scandalized by it. What parent has not been embarrassed with his children at the zoo when two animals are caught in the act of reproduction? It seems indecent to watch, but these are just animals. It's just a natural biological activity. Nothing pornographic about it. But we stand, embarrassed, and quickly try to move the kids on to the next exhibit.
The seven words you can never say on television refer to sexuality and excretion: they are names for feces, urine, intercourse, the vagina, breasts, a person who engages in fellatio, and a person who acts out an Oedipal desire.But it’s not only sexuality and excretion that are implicated in profanity. Pinker goes on:
But the capital crime in the Ten Commandments comes from a different subject, theology, and the taboo words in many languages refer to perdition, deities, messiahs, and their associated relics and body parts. Another semantic field that spawns taboo words across the world’s languages is death and disease, and still another is disfavored classes of people such as infidels, enemies, and subordinate ethnic groups. But what could these concepts—from mammaries to messiahs to maladies to minorities—possibly have in common?Pinker suggests that these semantic clusters can be united by noting that profanity generally creates a strong negative emotion. More specifically, many profanities appear to be associated with the psychology of disgust and contamination. Urine, feces, blood, and other bodily effluvia are routinely referenced in obscene speech as well as being reliable disgust elicitors. But the profanity/disgust link is incomplete as it fails to capture facets of religious cursing (e.g., damn, hell), references to sexual intercourse (e.g., the f-word), or references to body parts (e.g., breasts, genitalia). What can link these sources of profanity?
at 10.16.2009 7:53 AM | 0 comments |
We now enter Part 4--Mortality--the final posts in this series. Check out the sidebar to see the overall flow and structure of the series.1. Food2. Body products (e.g., feces, vomit)3. Animals (e.g., insects, rats)4. Sexual behaviors (e.g., incest, homosexuality)5. Contact with the dead or corpses6. Violations of the exterior envelope of the body (e.g., gore, deformity)7. Poor hygiene8. Interpersonal contamination (e.g., contact with unsavory persons)9. Moral offenses
We began these posts by considering the first domain, core disgust. Specifically, we described the unique psychology associated with disgust with a particular focus on the contamination "logic" associated with the disgust response. This analysis was important because it illuminates, given the associations between disgust and purity, how many of us think about moral and social issues. Consequently, we spent Parts 2 and 3 examining how disgust psychology is implicated in moral judgments and social exclusion. Reviewing the posts in Part 2, we discussed a variety of consequences that occur when moral issues are framed by purity metaphors. A quick survey of those consequences:1. Core Disgust: FoodRevulsion centered around eating and oral incorporation. The adaptive core of disgust.2. Sociomoral Disgust: Moral offenses, peopleRevulsion centered around moral and social judgments. The aspect of disgust related hospitality in Matthew 9.3. Animal-Reminder Disgust: Gore, deformity, animals, hygiene, deathRevulsion centered around stimuli that function as death/mortality reminders. The existential aspect of disgust.
1. Purity metaphors activate disgust psychology and the associated contamination logic.The list above are just some of the effects we noted in Part 2 regarding the influence of disgust upon the moral reasoning and the experience of sin within the life of the church. In Part 3 we turned to the social side of sociomoral disgust, where disgust properties are applied to individuals and populations. In Part 3 we made the following observations about sociomoral disgust:
2. Given various features of contamination logic our reasoning about "purity violations" is governed by various appraisals. For example, contact and proximity become important considerations. Dose insensitivity frames the violation in catastrophic terms. And purity violations are felt to be permanent and beyond rehabilitation.
3. The Macbeth Effect. Given the strong psychological association between physical cleansing and spiritual purity laboratory studies have shown how acts of physical cleansing--ritual or real--can replace and substitute moral effort and repentance. Hand washing literally substitutes for acts of justice.
4. Although all sins are generally considered to be purity violations (given understandings of God's holiness in both the Old and New Testaments) some sin categories are uniquely characterized by purity metaphors. Specifically, sexual sins are often structure by the metaphor of "sexual purity." This uneven use of purity metaphors across the domain of sin behaviors may be one explanation for why certain sin categories are felt to be more toxic and severe within certain faith communities. Purity sins tend to be unfairly and unreasonably stigmatized by the group. This creates greater shame and self-loathing for certain classes of sins.
5. Purity logic is often incompatible with impulses toward justice and love. Efforts toward purity tends to, given the contamination logic in play, employ quarantines. Obviously, a quarantine strategy impedes efforts aimed at inclusion, welcome and hospitality. This quarantine logic also affects notions of decorum, dignity and propriety in the life of the church. For example, what can legitimately be discussed within the church? What kind of language and cultural references are taboo? What norms govern dress and behavior within the church? In short, the quarantine strategy seeks to create a space of holiness where vulgar, profane or worldly modes of conduct are prohibited.
6. Finally, the disgust reaction in the face of purity violations is largely an irrational and emotional response. Thus, debates about purity violations are often immune to rational conversation or discussion. Rather, people tend to sit with their felt experiences regarding what is or is not improper, degrading or illicit. These judgments are not produced through calm deliberation but tend to be the product of differences in individual and cultural sensibilities. Consequently, conversations regarding purity categories tend to leave us communally dumbfounded. A "feeling of wrongness" is the only warrant deployed and we are stuck if people don't share those feelings. This dumbfounding often occurs when conservatives and liberals discuss moral issues.
1. Although we all recognize extreme cases of sociomoral disgust in incidents of genocide and hate we often fail to recognize that sociomoral disgust is affecting all of us and is an everyday affair. Examples of "everyday disgust" are scapegoating, Singer's moral circle, the psychology of infrahumanization, and contempt.Having investigated the core, moral and social disgust we now turn to the third and final disgust domain, animal-reminder disgust.
2. Disgust and love are reciprocal processes. Disgust erects and monitors boundaries of the self and love, as a secondary process, allows those boundaries to be crossed. We see this in sexual intimacy, where access to the body is granted, but we also see it in allowing people access to the sacred spaces of life: Home, church, nation. The reciprocal nature of disgust and love greatly complicates simplistic formula such as "love the sinner but hate the sin." That is, if disgust is implicated in the response to the sin love of the sinner is psychologically compromised. Love and revulsion work against each other.
3. Unless sociomoral disgust is addressed in the heart efforts toward justice, hospitality or charity will be, in the end, ineffective and distancing. The "will to embrace" must proceed any judgments of the Other. Embrace must be deep and should not be reduced to social or political rearrangements and accommodations.
...the essence of man is really its paradoxical nature, the fact that he is half animal and half symbolic...This is the paradox: he is out of nature and hopelessly in it; he is dual, up in the stars and yet housed in a heart-pumping, breath-gasping body...His body is a material and fleshy casing that is alien to him in many ways--the strangest and most repugnant way being that it aches and bleeds and will decay and die. Man is literally split in two: he has an awareness of his own splendid uniqueness in that he sticks out of nature with a towering majesty, and yet he goes back into the ground a few feet in order blindly and dumbly to rot and disappear forever. It is a terrifying dilemma to be in and have to live with...The knowledge of death is reflective and conceptual, and animals are spared it. They live and they disappear with the same thoughtlessness: a few minutes of fear, a few seconds of anguish, and it is over. But to live a whole lifetime with the fate of death haunting one's dreams and even the most sun-filled days--that's something else.This offensive union--the attachment of our symbolic/spiritual selves with a body--is also implicated in what we might call, following the psychodynamic psychologists, the "scandal of anality." That is, if humans feel like (or at least desire to be) spiritual, angelic, god-like and immortal beings then participation in basic metabolic acts--eating and excreting--is experienced as offensive and illicit. Becker elaborates:
Excreting is the curse that threatens madness because it shows man in his abject finitude, his physicalness, the likely unreality of his hopes and dreams. But even more immediately, it represents man's utter bafflement at the sheer non-sense of creation: to fashion the sublime miracle of the human face, the mysterium tremendum of radiant feminine beauty, the veritable goddess that beautiful women are; to bring this out of nothing, out of the void, and make it shine in noonday; to take such a miracle and put miracles again within it, deep in the mystery of eyes that peer out--the eye that gave even the dry Darwin a chill: to do all this, and to combine it with an anus that shits! It is too much. Nature mocks us...A wonderful example of the animal-reminder facet of disgust and how it relates to human degradation and mortality is found an account from the Puritan leader Cotton Mather. Mather was urinating outside when a dog came up beside him and lifted his leg. Man and dog taking a piss together, side-by-side. Mather contemplates the scene he's in:
I was once emptying the Cistern of Nature, and making Water at the Wall. At the same Time, there came a Dog, who did so too, before me. Thought I; “What mean and vile Things are the Children of Men, in this mortal State! How much do our natural Necessities abase us and place us in some regard, on the Level with the very Dogs!”…Accordingly, I resolved, that it should be my ordinary Practice, whenever I step to answer the one or other Necessity of Nature, to make it an Opportunity of shaping in my Mind some noble, divine Thought.In short, disgust seems to be protecting us from an existential confrontation. We resist reminders that we are, indeed, animals, vulnerable bodies prone to illness, injury, age and, eventually, death. As Martha Nussbaum writes:
...disgust pertains to our problematic relationship with our own animality. Its core idea is the belief that if we take in the animalness of animal secretions we will ourselves be reduced to the status of animals. Similarly, if we absorb or are mingled with the decaying, we will ourselves be mortal and decaying. Disgust thus wards off both animality in general and the mortality that is so prominent in our loathing of our animality.Given that "human disgust reactions are typically mediated very powerfully by the awareness of death and decay" Nussbaum notes, along with Becker, that "human beings cannot bear to live with the constant awareness of mortality and of their frail animal bodies." Thus, "self-deception may be essential in getting us through a life which is soon bound for death." Disgust aids in the self-deception by prompting us to push the stimuli away creating a quick restoration of our existential equanimity.
'Birth, and copulation, and death.Birth, sex and death. Each graphically displays our animal nature and physical dependencies. Each is associated, as we will see, with disgust psychology, a psychology activated to protect us from the illicit and pornographic nature of the human predicament. And yet, humanity revolves around these experiences. Birth, sex and death, "that's all the facts" of our life. The scandal of the Incarnation and the church is the movement down into the "brass tacks" of life. To refuse to flee from life and to resist our instinctive revulsions. To meet God in the middle of 'birth, copulation and death.'
That's all the facts when you come to brass tacks;
Birth, and copulation, and death.'
at 10.14.2009 7:36 AM | 5 comments |
In our extended examination of sociomoral disgust we have been exploring the psychological dynamics of social exclusion, rejection and expulsion. The key observation was the recognition that disgust and love are reciprocal processes. Disgust is the primary process erecting boundaries between the self and the world. Love is a secondary process that allows others access to the "territory of the self." This access is physical (allowing kinds of physical touch, intimacy, or proximity), social (creating intimate webs of friends and family), behavioral (allowing people inside one's moral circle and granting them special claims on our time, effort and resources) and emotional (granting access to warmth and acceptance within our hearts and minds). Matthew 25Then the King will say to those on his right, 'Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world. For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.'
"Then the righteous will answer him, 'Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink? When did we see you a stranger and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you? When did we see you sick or in prison and go to visit you?'
"The King will reply, 'I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.'
Hospitality to needy strangers distinguished the early church from its surrounding environment. Noted as exceptional by Christians and non-Christians alike, offering care to strangers became one of the distinguishing marks of the authenticity of the Christian gospel and of the church. Writing from the first five centuries demonstrate the importance of hospitality in defining the church as a universal community, in denying the significance of the status boundaries and distinctions of the larger society, in recognizing the value of every person, and in providing practical care for the poor, stranger, and sick.
For much of church history, Christians addressed concerns about recognition and human dignity within their discussion and practices of hospitality. Especially in relation to strangers, hospitality was a basic category for dealing with the importance of transcending social differences and breaking social boundaries that excluded certain categories or kinds of persons...Hospitality resists boundaries that endanger persons by denying their humanness.
Because the practice of hospitality is so significant in establishing and reinforcing social relationships and moral bonds, we notice its more subversive character only when socially undervalued persons are welcomed. In contrast to a more tame hospitality that welcomes persons already well situated in a community, hospitality that welcomes "the least" and recognizes their equal value can be an act of resistance and defiance, a challenge to the values and expectations of the larger community.
Strangers, in the strict sense, are those who are disconnected from basic relationships that give persons a secure place in the world. The most vulnerable strangers are detached from family, community, church, work, and polity. This condition is most clearly seen in the state of homeless people and refugees. Others experience detachment and exclusion to lesser degrees.When we offer hospitality to strangers, we welcome them into a place to which we are somehow connected--a space that has meaning and value to us. This is often our home, but it also includes church, community, nation, and various other institutions. In hospitality, the stranger is welcomed into a safe, personal, and comfortable place, a place of respect and acceptance and friendship. Even if only briefly, the stranger is included in a life-giving and life-sustaining network of relations.
I Corinthians 5It is actually reported that there is sexual immorality among you, and of a kind that does not occur even among pagans: A man has his father's wife. And you are proud! Shouldn't you rather have been filled with grief and have put out of your fellowship the man who did this? Even though I am not physically present, I am with you in spirit. And I have already passed judgment on the one who did this, just as if I were present. When you are assembled in the name of our Lord Jesus and I am with you in spirit, and the power of our Lord Jesus is present, hand this man over to Satan, so that the sinful nature may be destroyed and his spirit saved on the day of the Lord.Your boasting is not good. Don't you know that a little yeast works through the whole batch of dough? Get rid of the old yeast that you may be a new batch without yeast—as you really are. For Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed. Therefore let us keep the Festival, not with the old yeast, the yeast of malice and wickedness, but with bread without yeast, the bread of sincerity and truth.
I have written you in my letter not to associate with sexually immoral people—not at all meaning the people of this world who are immoral, or the greedy and swindlers, or idolaters. In that case you would have to leave this world. But now I am writing you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.
I want to concentrate on social agents. Instead of reflecting on the kind of society we ought to create in order to accommodate individual or communal heterogeneity, I will explore what kind of selves we need to be in order to live in harmony with others.
...the will to give ourselves to others and "welcome" them, to readjust our identities to make space for them, is prior to any judgment about others, except that of identifying them in their humanity. The will to embrace precedes any "truth" about others and any construction of their "justice." This will is absolutely indiscriminate and strictly immutable; it transcends the moral mapping of the social world into "good" and "evil."
As I stress the priority of the "will to embrace," my assumption is that the struggle against deception, injustice, and violence is indispensable. But how should that struggle take place? How should "truth" and "justice" be identified? Negatively, my argument is almost a Nietzschean one: there is far too much dishonesty in the singleminded search for truth, too much injustice in the uncompromising struggle for justice. The Nietzschean feel of the negative argument is, however, but the flip side of my positive argument, which rests squarely on the "wisdom of the cross": within social contexts, truth and justice are unavailable outside the will to embrace the other. I immediately continue to argue, however, that the embrace itself--full reconciliation--cannot take place until the truth has been said and justice done. There is an asymmetrical dialectic between the "grace" of self-donation and the "demand" of truth and justice. Grace has primacy: even if the will to embrace is indiscriminate, the embrace itself is conditional.
at 10.10.2009 9:07 AM | 16 comments |
Jim and Pam got married this week on The Office.Matthew 22The most important point, for me, about The Office wedding is how Jim and Pam figure out a way to give it away to their friends. The wedding is no longer for them, but for their friends, for those invited to the wedding as guests. Secure in their marriage on the boat Pam and Jim are free to give the ceremony away.
Jesus spoke to them again in parables, saying: "The kingdom of heaven is like a king who prepared a wedding banquet for his son. He sent his servants to those who had been invited to the banquet to tell them to come, but they refused to come...
"Then he said to his servants, 'The wedding banquet is ready, but those I invited did not deserve to come. Go to the street corners and invite to the banquet anyone you find.' So the servants went out into the streets and gathered all the people they could find, both good and bad, and the wedding hall was filled with guests.
at 10.08.2009 6:40 PM | 9 comments |
In this post I want to continue to explore how sociomoral disgust affects everyday interactions. Along the way we will talk about contempt, marriage and the church in first century Corinth. We will also revisit the moral circle in light of Eucharist.
The most common method of expressing contempt is by movements about the nose, or round the mouth; but the latter movements, when strongly pronounced, indicate disgust. The nose may be slightly turned up, which apparently follows from the turning up of the upper lip; or the movement may be abbreviated into the mere wrinkling of the nose...We seem thus to say to the despised person that he smells offensively, in nearly the same manner as we express to him by half-closing our eyelids, or turning away our faces, that he is not worth looking at.You can see the association, particularly the wrinkling of the nose, between the face of contempt and the face of disgust by comparing the face of the young woman in Plate V (contempt) with faces of the men (disgust). Darwin also goes on to note another association between disgust and contempt, the act of spitting:
Spitting seems an almost universal sign of contempt or disgust; and spitting obviously represents the rejection of anything offensive from the mouth. Shakspeare makes the Duke of Norfolk say, "I spit at him— call him a slanderous coward and a villain." So, again, Falstaff says, "Tell thee what, Hal,--if I tell thee a lie, spit in my face." Leichhardt remarks that the Australians "interrupted their speeches by spitting, and uttering a noise like pooh! pooh! apparently expressive of their disgust." And Captain Burton speaks of certain negroes "spitting with disgust upon the ground." Captain Speedy informs me that this is likewise the case with the Abyssinians. Mr. Geach says that with the Malays of Malacca the expression of disgust "answers to spitting from the mouth;" and with the Fuegians, according to Mr. Bridges "to spit at one is the highest mark of contempt."Finally, Darwin notes how both disgust and contempt serve the same expulsive and boundary-monitoring function:
We have now seen that scorn, disdain, contempt, and disgust are expressed in many different ways, by movements of the features, and by various gestures; and that these are the same throughout the world. They all consist of actions representing the rejection or exclusion of some real object which we dislike or abhor...Contempt is generally distinguished from disgust in that it introduces a hierarchical component. Not only do we wrinkle our noses in contempt, we "look down our nose" at the people offending us. That contempt is a hierarchical emotion shouldn't be surprising. Recall that disgust regulates the divinity ethic which is metaphorically understood to be a vertical--"higher" versus "lower"--dimension. What is lower and closer to the animals is "looked down on" from the more elevated human perspective. Thus, it is no surprise that "superior" groups experience both disgust and contempt in response to "inferior" groups.
Well-to-do or aristocratic Romans, like Greeks, often had a low opinion of those who practiced a trade, and many of Paul's problems in Corinth seem to have been caused by the wealthy and the social climbers among Corinthian Christians who were upset at him for not meeting their expectations for a great orator and teacher...In a city where social climbing was a major preoccupation, Paul's deliberate stepping down in apparent status would have been seen by many as disturbing, disgusting, and even provocative.Another instance of the rich Christians causing problems for the poorer members is seen in how the Corinthian Christians were taking each other to court over legal disputes. Generally, only the rich and privileged could expect justice from the Roman court system. Thus, we can assume that rich Christians were taking poor fellow Christians to court in the expectation of a favorable verdict.
Probably, as Theissen suggests, "the weak" in Corinth are poor Christians for whom eidolothuta [idol food] was especially likely to have religious associations, because they had eaten it before only at some public temple feast for on a holiday in the temple. This would explain their strong scruples.But the rich/poor fissure that particularly interests us was the behavior of the Corinthian church during the Lord's Supper. Again, the Lord's Supper was to be the lived reenactment of Jesus' inclusive fellowship. In the life of church the rich and the poor in Corinth were to welcome each other as equals around the Lord's Table. But something, as we have seen, was amiss in Corinth. The wealthy members were, in various ways, expressing contempt for the poor in the church. Thus, it comes as no surprise that the experience of the Lord's Supper became exclusive rather than inclusive. Paul describes the situation in chapter 11:
In the following directives I have no praise for you, for your meetings do more harm than good. In the first place, I hear that when you come together as a church, there are divisions among you, and to some extent I believe it. No doubt there have to be differences among you to show which of you have God's approval. When you come together, it is not the Lord's Supper you eat, for as you eat, each of you goes ahead without waiting for anybody else. One remains hungry, another gets drunk. Don't you have homes to eat and drink in? Or do you despise the church of God and humiliate those who have nothing? What shall I say to you? Shall I praise you for this? Certainly not! ... So then, my brothers, when you come together to eat, wait for each other.What, exactly, was going on in Corinth during the Lord's Supper? It seems clear that the rich/poor “divisions” were causing a failure to "wait for each other" during the Lord's Supper. This "failing to wait" was causing some Christians to become well fed and drunk while others were going hungry.
Now the body is not made up of one part but of many. If the foot should say, "Because I am not a hand, I do not belong to the body," it would not for that reason cease to be part of the body. And if the ear should say, "Because I am not an eye, I do not belong to the body," it would not for that reason cease to be part of the body. If the whole body were an eye, where would the sense of hearing be? If the whole body were an ear, where would the sense of smell be? But in fact God has arranged the parts in the body, every one of them, just as he wanted them to be. If they were all one part, where would the body be? As it is, there are many parts, but one body.In short, it seems clear that, for Paul, the divisions in the church were being caused by contempt and disgust. Some members of the Corinthian church were not "honorable" or "presentable." Paul's reference to genitalia is striking. That is, the genitalia, being "not presentable" are covered up in public out of modesty. Yet, Paul flips the meaning of this in a powerful way. If some members were, via the metaphor, akin to to genitalia they should not be treated with shame, disgust or contempt. Rather, is not our covering up of our "private parts" a sign that these parts require special attention, care, and treatment? Paul is arguing that, rather than expelling, hiding or marginalizing these "less presentable" members, special attention should be given to care for and include these members into the body. Only then will there be "no divisions in the body." Once again we see how inclusion occurs when sociomoral disgust boundaries are dismantled.
The eye cannot say to the hand, "I don't need you!" And the head cannot say to the feet, "I don't need you!" On the contrary, those parts of the body that seem to be weaker are indispensable, and the parts that we think are less honorable we treat with special honor. And the parts that are unpresentable are treated with special modesty, while our presentable parts need no special treatment. But God has combined the members of the body and has given greater honor to the parts that lacked it, so that there should be no division in the body, but that its parts should have equal concern for each other.
In many ways [a Roman] meal was an occasion for gaining or showing social status. And it might be in many regards a microcosm of the aspirations and aims of the culture as a whole. Paul's attempt to deconstruct the social stratification that was happening in the Lord's Supper goes directly against the tendency of such meals...the sacred tradition concerning the Lord's Supper is recited specifically to encourage social leveling, to overcome factionalism created by stratification and its expression at meals, and to create unity and harmony in the congregation.In conclusion, we have been mediating in this post upon contempt, the hierarchical cousin of disgust. Specifically, like disgust, contempt is a boundary psychology. More, it is an infrahumanization psychology where "superiors" "look down on" their "inferiors." Consequently, when contempt emerges sociomoral barriers, sociological and psychological fissures, are erected. We see this in marriages. We see this in the church at Corinth.
at 10.07.2009 8:15 AM | 3 comments |

at 10.05.2009 5:26 PM | 12 comments |
To give you all a break from disgust psychology I thought I'd just jot a note trying to gather together some stuff I've been reading on the Internet over the last few months.The fiscal conservatives:Mixed in with these conservative groups we might also throw in:
These are the small government conservatives, many are libertarian. Ron Paul is a representative figure.
Signs at Tea Party: No Taxation Without Representation.
The social conservatives:
These are the religious conservatives who care deeply about family-values, prayer in school, abortion, evolution and gay marriage issues. James Dobson and Sarah Palin are representative figures.
Signs at Tea Party: Abortion is Murder.
The security conservatives:
These are the conservatives that promote the military and favor nation-building efforts (often with an apocalyptic, pro-Israel twist). Dick Cheney is a representative figure.
Signs at Tea Party: I'd Rather Be Waterboarding.
Southern populism:This is a strange brew that often leads to tension. Currently, given our economic troubles, the fiscal conservatives and populists seem to have taken center stage. The main charge against Obama is socialism or Hitler-like fascism. This is a change from the social conservatism that has tended the dominate the Republican Party since Reagan. That is, right now the most vocal conservatives are those riled up about fiscal overreaching rather than about abortion or gay marriage. Interestingly, these libertarian-leaning conservatives often side with liberals on some of these social issues, wanting the government to butt out of bedrooms and other life decisions.
These are the anti-government conservatives. Glenn Beck is a representative figure.
Signs at Tea Party: Support the Economy. Buy Ammo.
at 12:53 AM | 5 comments |
In the last post we considered extreme forms of sociomoral disgust. Consequently, although we might recognize sociomoral disgust at work in genocide, hate and ethnic cleansing most decent people feel unaffected, on a personal level, by this analysis. The behaviors are too extreme, too hateful.The body is one of the things in which our true feelings are located, but it is not the only one, and it may not even be the principal one...Least of all is the self limited to the body. A person literally projects or throws himself out of the body, and anywhere at all. As the great William James put it almost 80 years ago: A man's "Me" is the sum total of all that he can call his, not only his body and his mind, but his clothes and house, his wife and children, his ancestors and friends, his reputation and works, his lands and horses, his yacht and his bank-account. In other words, the human animal can be symbolically located wherever he feels a part of him really exists or belongs...You get a good feeling for what the self "looks like" in it extensions if you imagine the person to be a cylinder with a hollow inside, in which is lodged his self. Out of this cylinder the self overflows and extends into the surroundings, as a kind of huge amoeba, pushing its pseudopods to a wife, a car, a flag, a crushed flower in a secret book. The picture you get is of a huge invisible amoeba spread out over the landscape, with boundaries very far from its own center or home base.
One way of describing intimacy (and/or love) is as that state in which various disgust rules are relaxed or suspended…Changing diapers, overcoming the disgust inherent in contaminating substances, is emblematic of the unconditional quality of nurturing parental love. Without such overcoming, the act would have no emblematic significance. Love means a kind of self-overcoming in this context, the overcoming of powerful aversions, and the suspension of purity rules that hold you in their grip. It means that your fastidiousness, your own purity of being, must be subordinated to the well-being of the next generation.
A person’s tongue in your mouth could be experienced as a pleasure or as the most repulsive and nauseating intrusion depending on the state of relations that exist or are being negotiated between you and the person. But someone else’s tongue in your mouth can be a sign of intimacy because it can also be a disgusting assault. The marks of intimacy depend upon the violability of Goffman’s “territories of the self.” Without such territory over which you vigilantly patrol the borders there can be nothing special in allowing or gaining access to it…Consensual sex means the mutual transgression of the disgust-defending boundaries.
One might hazard the idea that in their early stages relations of intimacy and love seem more governed by the regime of rights and grants, but with the passage of time and the routinization of permitted boundary transgressions, the loved one passes eventually from an intimate autonomous other to something more akin to one’s own vital organ…So in the end two fleshes are made one.What we discover in all this is that disgust and love are reciprocal processes. Disgust erects boundaries while love dismantles boundaries.
An advantage of conceiving sin as the practice of exclusion is that it names as sin what often passes as virtue, aseptically in religious circles. In the Palestine of Jesus' day, "sinners" were not simply "the wicked" who were therefore religiously bankrupt, but also social outcasts, people who practiced despised trades, Gentiles and Samaritans, those who failed to keep the Law as interpreted by a particular sect. A "righteous" person had to separate herself from the latter; their presence defiled because they were defiled. Jesus' table fellowship with "tax collectors and sinners", a fellowship that indisputably belonged to the central features of his ministry, offset this conception of sin. Since he who was innocent, sinless, and fully within God's camp transgressed social boundaries that excluded outcasts, these boundaries themselves were evil, sinful, and outside God's will. By embracing the "outcast," Jesus understood the "sinfulness" of the persons and systems that cast them out.In short, Jesus was radically rethinking the notion of sin in the life of Israel. Up until Jesus' ministry sin was primarily understood to be a purity violation. Again, this was driven by the Levitical and priestly traditions. But another impulse existed in the life of Israel. This impulse was expressed by the prophets who were increasingly skeptical of the purity tradition. For the prophets God demanded justice over purity, mercy over sacrifice:
Amos 5. 21-24How are we to define sin and holiness? The justice and purity traditions often offered competing and conflicting visions to Israel. As Walter Brueggemann summarizes (italics are mine):
I hate, I despise your religious feasts;
I cannot stand your assemblies.
Even though you bring me burnt offerings and grain offerings,
I will not accept them.
Though you bring choice fellowship offerings,
I will have no regard for them.
Away with the noise of your songs!
I will not listen to the music of your harps.
But let justice roll on like a river,
righteousness like a never-failing stream!
Hosea 6.6
"For I desire mercy, not sacrifice,
and acknowledgment of God rather than burnt offerings."
[The purity and justice] trajectories of command serve very different sensibilities and live in profound tension with each other. The tradition of justice concerns the political-economic life of the community and urges drastic transformative and rehabilitative activity. The tradition of holiness focuses on the cultic life of the community and seeks a restoration of a lost holiness, whereby the presence of God can again be counted on and enjoyed.Jesus' ministry of table fellowship enters into this tension in the life of Israel. As he does so Jesus explicitly connects his acts of table fellowship with the voice of the justice tradition. As seen in Matthew 9 Jesus echoes Hosea: "I desire mercy, not sacrifice."
In Israel, then, as in other human societies, the symbolic system is organized first and foremost as a defense against the violence of contagion, the impurity of the confused and formless…The rational organization of productive work and everyday life therefore requires taboos relating to pollution and warding off the threatened danger which pollution represents. The focal points of the symbolic systems are centers of purity from which is excluded the impure, the misshapen, the undifferentiated, anything that breaks down forms…Pollution means confusion and the dissolution of the elements involved; it is a curse. People reject it to the point of avoiding even simple contact or touching, since impure is so violent as to be contagious.These “centers of purity” were, as Belo describes, “centers of consumption”:
In Israel the symbolic field was organized around three centers, each of which corresponds to one of the three instances of social formation. All three were centers or foci of consumption: the table, the “house” (in the sense of a group of kinspeople; that is what the quotation marks around the word indicate), and the sanctuary; this means the consumption of food at meals, consumption of bodies in sexual activity, and ideological consumption in religious sacrifice.Once again we see the intermingling of core and sociomoral disgust where food aversions are generalized to sociomoral spaces such as table-fellowship, familial affection, and religious participation. Consequently, certain persons, based upon appraisals of contagion, were excluded from these sociomoral spaces: Table, house, and sanctuary. These “unclean” people were denied table-fellowship and access to sacred spaces. Into this milieu Jesus enters preaching a subversive message that undermines the contagion view of sin by allowing the “unclean” entrance into the “family space” of table fellowship.
The violence takes the form of human aggression; the system of prohibitions I shall call the debt system (the word “debt” usually being translated sin). [The debt impulse] operates in everything that attacks the body: theft, murder, aggression, hostility, desolation.Belo argues, as we have been arguing, that the systems of contagion and debt were fighting for the hearts and minds of Israel. Contagion separated the pure from the contaminated drawing a boundary around the pure and regulating the unclean to the “outside.” And if one transgressed the sociomoral barriers in the name of love the purity codes would be violated. The two systems were at an impasse.
[It] is the heart (inside) and the evil machinations (outside), [which are] the things that really pollute humanity. The list of the evils belongs to the debt system (theft, murder, adultery, and avarice; the others are variants that can be easily inscribed in these four), a fact already indicated by the seat assigned to them, namely, the heart. The key to the opposition of the two circuits in which the components are not directly equivalent (foods and evil machinations) is to be found in the inside/outside scheme. The inside is the stomach in one case, the heart in the other. What comes from the stomach goes into the privy (a place of pollution and filth); what comes from the heart are practices involving debt (aggression).Volf joins Belo at this point:
Central to both strategies for fighting exclusion is the belief that the source of evil does not lie outside of a person, in impure things, but inside a person, in the impure heart (Mark 7:15). Against the background of the two strategies, the pursuit of false purity emerges as a central aspect of sin--the enforced purity of a person or a community that set itself apart from the defiled world in a hypocritical sinlessness and excludes the boundary breaking other from its heart and its world. Sin is here the kind of purity that wants the world cleansed of the other rather the heart cleansed of the evil that drives people out by calling those who are clean "unclean" and refusing to help make clean those who are unclean. Put more formally, sin is "the will to purity" turned away from the "spiritual" life of the self to the cultural world of the other...In sum, on way of reading the gospels is to see Jesus entering into the great debate of Israel concerning the notion of sin and righteousness. Which tradition--purity or justice--should regulate the life of Israel? What, in the end, does God demand? According to Volf and Belo Jesus effects a redefinition of the purity traditon. Unrighteousness is the failure of love rather than as sociomoral pollution. What makes you unclean is the heart. Thus, Belo concludes that Jesus gives “the debt system a privileged place over the pollution system." A verdict on the Great Debate has been handed down.
at 10.01.2009 6:34 PM | 6 comments |
[Note to regular readers. With some additions, this post is a remix of some previously posted material.]From the time (perhaps around age seven or eight) when children somehow learn to play with those ubiquitous paper devices known as "cootie-catchers," pretending to catch foul bugs from the skin of children who are disliked or viewed as an out-group, children practice a form of disgust-based social subordination known to all societies, creating groups of humans who allegedly bear the disgust-properties of foulness, smelliness, contamination.
In short, sociomoral disgust is implicated in the creation of monsters and scapegoats, where outgroup members are demonized and selected for exclusion or elimination. As David Gilmore writes in his book Monsters, a monster is "the demonization of the 'Other' in the image of the monster as a political device for scapegoating those whom the rules of society deem impure or unworthy--the transgressors and deviants." These deviants are considered to be "[d]eformed, amoral, [and] unsocialized to the point of inhumanness." Take, for an example, the Nazi propaganda film The Eternal Jew where an early shot in the film showed rats emerging from a sewer juxtaposed with a crowd of Jewish persons in a Polish city. In America, as another example, proponents of anti-gay legislation have circulated pamphlets that gay men eat human feces and drink human blood. AggressiveGiganticMan-eatingMalevolentHybridsGruesomeAtavisticPowerfulViolent
When Aaron has finished making atonement for the Most Holy Place, the Tent of Meeting and the altar, he shall bring forward the live goat. He is to lay both hands on the head of the live goat and confess over it all the wickedness and rebellion of the Israelites—all their sins—and put them on the goat's head. He shall send the goat away into the desert in the care of a man appointed for the task. The goat will carry on itself all their sins to a solitary place; and the man shall release it in the desert.
The sad good in this bad thing is that it actually works. In the train of the murder [of the scapegoat] the community finds that this sudden war of all against one delivers it from the war of each against all. The sacrifice of one person as a scapegoat discharges the pending acts of retribution between members of the group. It 'clears the air.' The contagion of reciprocal violence is suspended, a circuit breaker has been thrown. The collective violence is reconciling because it reestablishes peace. This benefit seems a startling, even magical result, an outcome much greater than could be expected from a simple mob execution...The one mobbed as the most reprehensible criminal now is revered as the bringer of peace, one with a divine vocation to die and restore order for the people. So the victim becomes a god, memorialized in myth, and the killing becomes a feature of a foreordained plan, a pattern and a model. In the face of future threats, similar response will be required. Rituals of sacrifice originated in this way, tools to fend off social crisis. And in varied forms they are with us still.
Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster.
at 9.30.2009 9:14 AM | 5 comments |
In the previous posts we've been focusing on notions of purity with a particular focus on how disgust psychology regulates facets of moral reasoning, for good or ill. In the coming posts we turn to consider the way disgust properties become attached to human beings.In Tierra del Fuego a native touched with his finger some cold preserved meat which I was eating at our bivouac, and plainly showed disgust at its softness; whilst I felt utter disgust at my food being touched by a naked savage, though his hands did not appear dirty. (p. 256)Both core and sociomoral disgust intermingle in this narrative. Core disgust is plainly seen in how both Darwin and the native center their disgust on food. However, sociomoral disgust is evidenced in Darwin’s disgust at a “naked savage” touching his food. That is, in sociomoral disgust people and entire populations can be seen as sources of contamination. Thus, contact with these persons can elicit the strong revulsion of the disgust response. Note how the divinity ethic is also implicated. The person touching Darwin's meat is "naked" and a "savage." Although Darwin was fairly enlightened for his day when it came to race, we get the sense from Darwin that the British gentleman is higher up the scale of human cultural evolution. Closer, presumably, to God and further, presumably, from the beasts. The focus on nudity is diagnostic. There is something base and undignified about the lack of clothing. It is animalistic. Again we see disgust mingle with notions of the divine and profane.
Thus, throughout history, certain disgust properties—sliminess, bad smell, stickiness, decay, foulness—have repeatedly and monotonously been associated with, indeed projected onto, groups by reference to whom privileged groups seek to define their superior human status. (p. 347)This picture is even more troubling when we remember that religious systems often institutionalize, overtly or tacitly, sociomoral disgust. The most obvious example of this is the Hindu caste system where many people are born into the “Untouchable” caste of society. But Hinduism is by no means atypical in this regard. In the Old Testament, the people of Israel viewed Gentiles as a source of potential defilement. In Christianity, distinctions are made between the “Saved” and the “Lost” and the “Church” and the “World” where the World and its Sin is considered to be a potential pollutant to the church.
Luke 7Again, the issue here is the notion of contact. The complaint is, specifically, about the person "who is touching him" combined with "the kind of woman she is."
Now one of the Pharisees invited Jesus to have dinner with him, so he went to the Pharisee's house and reclined at the table. When a woman who had lived a sinful life in that town learned that Jesus was eating at the Pharisee's house, she brought an alabaster jar of perfume, and as she stood behind him at his feet weeping, she began to wet his feet with her tears. Then she wiped them with her hair, kissed them and poured perfume on them.
When the Pharisee who had invited him saw this, he said to himself, "If this man were a prophet, he would know who is touching him and what kind of woman she is—that she is a sinner."
Matthew 8What is intriguing about this story is the sequence. Jesus touches the leper first. Then the command "Be clean!" is offered. That is, Jesus's first move is into ritual defilement. By touching the leper first Jesus intentionally and willfully seeks contamination. This is striking because the expected sequence would be purification first and then contact. Jesus, surprisingly for the onlookers, does the opposite. Contact followed by purification. In is worth reflecting upon how various Chistian communities approach this sequence. Purification then contact? Or contact then purification?
When he came down from the mountainside, large crowds followed him. A man with leprosy came and knelt before him and said, "Lord, if you are willing, you can make me clean."
Jesus reached out his hand and touched the man. "I am willing," he said. "Be clean!"
at 9.27.2009 7:32 PM | 5 comments |
A few week ago you'll recall that I discussed four "moral situations" from a study conducted by Haidt, Koller & Dias (1993):1) A woman is cleaning out her closet, and she finds her old American flag. She doesn’t want the flag anymore, so she cuts it up into pieces and uses the rags to clean her bathroom.2) A family’s dog was killed by a car in front of their house. They had heard that dog meat was delicious, so they cut up the dog’s body and cooked it and ate it for dinner.3) A brother and sister like to kiss each other on the mouth. When nobody is around, they find a secret hiding place and kiss each other on the mouth.4) A man goes to the supermarket once a week and buys a dead chicken. But before cooking the chicken, he has sexual intercourse with it. Then he thoroughly cooks it and eats it.
1) Ethic of AutonomyViolations to autonomy and agency. Limitations of freedom or violations of rights. Core values are freedom, choice, harm, individualism, and rights.2) Ethic of CommunityFailures of duty and solidarity with the group. Core values are duty, role-obligation, respect, loyalty, preservation of community, compliance with authority and norms.3) Ethic of DivinityDisrespect for or degradation of the sacred found in God, human dignity or the Order of Creation. Core values are purity, sanctity, propriety and dignity.
Because the notion of harm or damage lies at the core of anger's cognitive content, it is clear that it rests on reasoning that can be publicly articulated and publicly shaped. Damages and harms are a central part of what any public culture, and in any system of law, must deal with; they are therefore a staple of public persuasion and public argument...anger (and nonanger) may be misguided, but if all the relevant thoughts stand up to scrutiny, we can expect our friends and fellow citizens to share them and to share our anger...Disgust is very different from anger...You can teach a young child to feel disgust at a substance--by strong parental reactions and other forms of psychological influence. Imagine, however, trying to convince someone who is not disgusted by a bat that bats are in fact disgusting. There are no publicly articulable reasons to be given that would make the dialogue a real piece of persuasion. All you could do would be to depict at some length the alleged properties of bats, trying to bring out some connection, some echo with what the interlocutor already finds disgusting: the wet greedy mouth, the rodentlike body. But if the person didn't find those things disgusting, that's that.
advertising to children - automobile safety - Barbie dolls - "big box" chain stores - cheesecake photos - clothing from Third World factories - consumer product safety - corporate-owned farms - defense-funded research - disposable diapers - disposable packaging - ethnic jokes - executive salaries - fast food - flirtation in the workplace - food additives - fur - hydroelectric dams - IQ tests - logging - mining - nuclear power - oil drilling - owning certain stocks - poultry farms - public holidays (e.g., MLK day) - research on stem cells - research on breast cancer - spanking - suburbia ("sprawl") - sugar - tax cuts - big government - toy guns - violence on television - weight of fashion modelsConversely, there are many behaviors that that are becoming amoralized in relation to the feelings of previous generations. As examples Pinker lists divorce, illegitimacy, working motherhood, marijuana use, homosexuality, masturbation, sodomy, oral sex, atheism, and the practice of non-Western culture.
If disgust is problematic in principle, we have all the more reason to regard it with suspicion when we observe that it has throughout history been used as a powerful weapon in social efforts to exclude certain groups and persons...[disgust] often doesn't stop at feces, cockroaches, and slimy animals. We need a group of humans to bound ourselves against, who will come to exemplify the boundary between the truly human and the basely animal.To summarize the last ten posts, we have been approaching the events in Matthew 9 from the stance of morality. We've discussed disgust psychology, the magical thinking involved in contamination appraisals and the entailments of purity metaphors. We've discussed how notions of sin and holiness are regulated by disgust psychology and, thus, create communal dumbfounding. And yet all this isn't the most disturbing aspect of Matthew 9. The problem of Matthew 9 isn't in the moral reasoning of the Pharisees, that they shouldn't have framed the situation using a purity metaphor. No, the real problem in Matthew 9 is that the Pharisees saw human beings as vectors of contamination and pollution.
at 9.25.2009 8:52 AM | 6 comments |
In the last post we noted how disgust regulates the moral foundation of Purity/Sanctity. We mainly focused on purity violations. In this post I'd like to examine the role of disgust in notions of sanctity, holiness and the divine.The focus of this tradition of holiness, which we may find rooted in the first three commands of the Decalogue, is that those zones of life that are inhabited by Yahweh in an intense way must be kept pure and uncontaminated. Thus this material is instructional and has a status not unlike canon law to protect such zones of holiness and, in a more general way, to prevent the disordering power of impurity from disrupting the life of Israel. The great threat to holiness that can jeopardize the presence of Yahweh in the community of Israel is to create a disorder by mixing things in a way that confuse and distort. The antidote to such confusion is to sort out and make distinctions, so that nothing is wrongly mixed that will disturb the order that belongs to the holiness of the Creator…it is the work of priestly instruction to maintain orderly distinctions.
Welcome to the blog of Richard Beck, Associate Professor and experimental psychologist at Abilene Christian University. Most of my recent published work is on the interface of faith and existentialism (see the sidebar for summaries of much of this work). See here for my educational background and research publications. The title of this space comes from two places. First, as a research psychologist I try to integrate theology with data from the experimental social sciences. Second, many of the essays you will find here are theological experiments, exploratory and provisional essays that do not necessarily represent my views on matters of faith or ethics.
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