Blog – words & images

Pataki vs Religion

Against Religion

Tamas Pataki

Scribe (2007)

Tamas Pataki could be accused of misleading advertising. His title should have been Against Christianity or Against Monotheism. And his cover image, with its implicit hard-science associations, is misleading too, because he argues against religion primarily on the basis of Freudian theory.

To be fair, Pataki does warn the reader in his introduction that he is going to focus on the monotheistic religions. Christianity (the religion of about 33% of the world’s population) is his main target, while Islam (20%) and Judaism (a mere 0.2%) are often caught in his field of fire but less often singled out. He barely mentions Hinduism (13%) or Buddhism (6%), and in fact his prime argument applies to them poorly or not at all. My use of ‘religion’ for the rest of this review follows his, misleading though it is.

Reasonably enough, Pataki feels that examining faith where it is central to the individuals’ life will reveal its essentials most clearly, so fundamentalists get more attention than moderates. But (almost incidentally) he is even more scathing about wishy-washy postmodernist interpretations of Christianity than about mainstream beliefs, finding that they make no sense even in religious terms.

Psychoanalysing monotheism, Pataki concludes that the real reasons people commit to religious beliefs are to satisfy unconscious narcissistic needs to belong, to feel loved and to feel superior. Then, he says, they build elaborate rationalisations around their religion which prevent and protect them from ever honestly examining their beliefs. Finally, since it is so delusional, religion is dangerous to both its adherents and the wider community: it is intrinsically authoritarian, bullying, defensive, conservative, anti-intellectual, anti-rational, paternalistic, infantilising and misogynistic.

Christians’ claims that our western civic and legal system are built on Christian foundations are, according to Pataki, historically inaccurate. In fact, he says, religion’s stance is that law must always be subject to faith, and he sees worrying similarities between Islamic law and the legislative agenda of the Christian Right. Reason and science suffer the same relegation to second-class status, ‘wrong’ whenever they contradict Authority.

There is surprisingly little overlap between this book and Dawkins’ The God Delusion. Pataki chooses not to consider attempts to prove or disprove the existence of God, he spends little time on the conflict between science and religion, and he presents quite a different – if even less flattering – explanation for the foundations of religious belief.

Pataki is an academic philosopher and Against Religion is as clearly and logically argued as one would expect from such an author. That does not guarantee that he is right, of course, and in fact the Freudian psychology he relies upon has all too many of the characteristics of the religions he attacks. However, Against Religion is a worthwhile contribution to a debate which is increasingly important as resurgent Christian fundamentalism pushes its way into mainstream geopolitics.

Review published in slightly different forms in TB (2007)
and The Australian Rationalist (2008),

and added to this site in Feb 2021

Terry Lane: God – the interview

Godd Interview coverGod: the interview

Terry Lane

ABC Books, second edition, 2004

Terry Lane prefaces his book with a warning and a plea, and it is only fair to repeat them here: the contents of his book, and therefore of my review, may disturb those who are content with their deeply held Christianity. That was not his wish, nor is it mine, and we would ask such people not to continue.

Lane is widely known in Australia as a radio interviewer for the ABC. When casually asked whom he would most like to interview, he said, ‘God.’ The idea took root and this book grew from it.

Continue reading “Terry Lane: God – the interview”

Sara Gruen: Water for Elephants

Sara Gruen Water for ElephantsIf you ever wanted to run away with the circus, if you have ever been passionately in love with the wrong person, if you are scared by the idea of a lonely old age in a nursing home, if you know some animals are cleverer and nicer than most people, if you love larger-than-life characters, lost worlds, high adventure and fairytale endings, then this book is for you.

Set in the USA in 1931, a period defined by Prohibition and the Depression, Water for Elephants follows Jacob Jankowski as he drops out of veterinary school and accidentally joins Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show On Earth, travelling by train across the country.

Continue reading “Sara Gruen: Water for Elephants”

Venero Armanno: Candle Life

candle life coverA young Australian writer in Paris, drowning in grief for the death of his girlfriend, is drawn into a surreal series of events by an enigmatic expatriate American. Sonny Lee, first encountered as a vagrant on the streets, may or may not have been the important literary figure he claims to have been, but he does eventually set the novel’s unnamed narrator on a path that spirals down into the darkness of the Parisian catacombs. His disturbing influence is counterbalanced by a sweet, mute Russian prostitute and an uncomplicatedly affectionate young Frenchwoman.

Candle Life has many parallels with John Fowles’ The Magus, likewise centred on a young writer isolated in a foreign community and manipulated into strange and frightening experiences which ultimately bring him self-knowledge; both even have sub-plots revisiting the Second World War, but The Magus is fifty years old, and shows it, while Candle Life is absolutely contemporary. For its major characters, all living on the fringes of society, stability is inconceivable while identity is fluid and drugs, casual sex and gratuitous violence are commonplace. Fowles would have been appalled by the collapse of social institutions, but he would have recognised that his questions about identity and the relationship between truth, fantasy and fiction, had been tackled anew with vigour and integrity.

Brisbane-born Venero Armanno teaches creative writing at the University of Queensland. The mode of his seventh novel matches its content, dreamlike in its swirl of action and illusion and its sudden changes of perspective. Candle Life is a wild, brilliant book.

Vintage, $32.95

Review originally published July 2006,
added to this site October 2020.

Browne: Rendezvous at Kamakura Inn

book coverAustralian writer Marshall Browne establishes a convincing Japanese ambiance for his tenth novel, a dark, bloody riff on the familiar theme of a good cop breaking the law to achieve justice.

A long, dangerous, Tokyo Police investigation into a corrupt politician is abruptly shut down, days short of success. The squad is broken up and its leader, Inspector Aoki, sent on leave. A prominent journalist breaks the story shortly afterwards and is brutally murdered in response – and we haven’t even reached the end of the prologue.

Continue reading “Browne: Rendezvous at Kamakura Inn”