PASSION
The first thought that came to my mind was one word: Passion.
Fundamentalists are known for their passion much more than for their
rational approach to issues. When I
think of the televangelists, or the Charismatics, or Jonathon Edward’s blazing
sermon “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”, I think of very fiery emotional
and passionate behaviors. Christianity
Today, a major Fundamentalist organization, says that Pentacostalism is the
fastest growing Christian movement in the world including the United States and
Europe. And I realized that this wasn’t
restricted to religions as I considered the demagogues in the Tea Party, and of
course one of the greatest demagogues in recent history, Hitler. They all appeal to the emotions, especially
the emotion of fear, much more than the rational part of the mind. If I could coin (bitcoin?) a phrase it would
be “If I can instill passion in a person, I can motivate them to do anything.” (I should also say that this includes
passionate lovers who have been led astray for irrational reasons.)
But while this might explain the effect, it does not
really explain the cause. To delve into
the cause, I want to paint a picture of a model of the mind. Our mind consists of a rational mind (prefrontal lobes) and
also an irrational part. The term “irrational
brain” is a poor choice of words because it has a negative effect on many
people – unwarranted as it is. This
irrational brain includes our intuitive mind, our creative mind, and, most
important for this essay, our emotional reactions (amygdala). Although it is a simplification, I’m just
going to discuss these two parts of the brain and refer to them as the rational
mind and the emotional mind.
The rational mind uses the language of logic, science,
math, etc to determine what is True or what is Not True – Aristotelian Logic. It has a binary function where something is
either one or the other, True or False, Right or Wrong. This leads us to knowledge which is why we
have such the knowledge explosion that we have today – especially in science
and neurobiology - the study of the mind through scientific observations using
fMRI’s (functional MRI’s). However the
emotional mind uses the language of metaphor and stories to discern Truth. There can be many Truths so it is not binary
like the rational mind. Some of these
Truths may even be opposite of other Truths.
Like a pizza divided into slices.
Each slice points to the center, the Truth, but some may be opposite
from another or exist alongside of other Truths. These Truths lead to wisdom.
The emotional mind is where we find our “Fight or Flight”
response and our whole spectrum of emotional reactions. This emotional mind is responsible for
emotional reactions rather than emotional states like joy, happiness, etc. And so the language is story and metaphor
which will cause these emotional reactions.
There is little emotional reaction to the language of the rational
mind. The rational mind is the main
organ that separates humans from other animals and is responsible for
recognizing and identifying the emotional reactions and then processing them
and then directing our behavior accordingly.
So a person with a highly developed rational mind will control their
emotional reactions much more than a person with a lesser developed rational
mind. The rational mind does not deny or
dismiss the emotional reactions, but it recognizes these reactions, processes
them in the frontal lobes, and then determines the best behavior. An emotional person will only react without
reflecting.
So a person who is much more emotionally driven will
react emotionally without reflecting and will experience and react to passion
much more than a rationally driven person.
An emotionally driven person will also desire a hierarchy structure of
society where there is someone telling them what to do and how to do it. A rationally driven person will think
independently and will often reject the authority of a hierarchy. So it becomes easy for a charismatic leader
to inflame a congregation and then to direct their actions such as how to
donate their money. Imagine a person
addressing a Humanist group and requiring them to pay 10% of their income
(tithe) to the local organization, and then to pay more money (offerings) to outside
charitable causes.
(The following is merely a mind game and not meant to say
what is Truth, to say nothing about what is True.) An interesting metaphor might be Freud’s
concept of Displacement. (Freud is much better understood as metaphor
rather than strict science.) Here he
posits that if one emotion is squeezed, or controlled, then it will appear
elsewhere in an out-of-proportion way in another emotional scene. Like a balloon where you squeeze one part of
it, and the balloon pops out on another side.
If Fundamentalists are sexually repressed, then it might be natural to
have them express their passions in an exaggerated manner about other things
such as social causes.
But in a more scientific vein, Humanists tend to be more
rational about the matters of life so there is often not much Passion
found. And even if there were passion,
it is not directed by a hierarchy telling us how to vent our Passion and
granting us salvation for doing what we’re told.
What’s the solution?
Educate people to use the skills of critical analysis.
David Kimball
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