72: Does Fatherlessness Cause Atheism? Dr. Paul Vitz

   

PatrickCoffin.media

 

Published on Apr 24, 2018

Help us keep our show independent and unfiltered.
Patrick Coffin Show is 100% listener supported.

Go to https://www.patrickcoffin.media/donate

SUBSCRIBE!

Sign up for our Inside Scoop newsletter with the best of The Patrick Coffin Show each week: http://www.patrickcoffin.media/scoop

*********

Tweet to Patrick: https://twitter.com/Patrick_Coffin

Follow Patrick on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/patrickcoffin.media/

Check out our swag:
https://www.patrickcoffin.media/swag

For Catholic Resources:
www.patrickcoffin.net/all-products

*******************************************

Are atheists uniformly dedicated to truth and evidence, to rational thought and logic? Might there be a hidden causal factor at play in more cases than one would imagine? Psychologist and researcher Dr. Paul Vitz thinks so. It’s fatherlessness.

His latest book, Faith of the Fatherless: The Psychology of Atheism, sets forth the case that abusive, absent, or weak fathers very often provide the psychological soil from which atheist weeds are more likely to fester. Using example after example of leading atheists (start the list with Nietzsche, Hume, Sartre, Russell, Camus, Freud, and the so-called New Atheists Dennett, Dawkins, and Hitchens), Vitz reviews the basic life biography and finds a “father wound” in one degree or another.

He doesn’t reduce atheism to a pop psych theory (not all atheists share the same experience of an abusive father, and, besides, human beings are complex) but he carefully traces the atheists own words and the ways in which their respective intellectual journies led them to reject God—the Father.

It’s a fascinating read. And, as you’ll soon find out, Dr. Vitz is a fascinating guest.

In this interview, you will learn:
Why Sigmund Freud was right in asserting that God is “an exalted father,” but not in the way Freud believed
How the memories of even a long deceased father can influence your faith perspective
Why Jesus called God Father and not Mother
The reasons why Vitz did a control group comparison of philosophers and other writers of the same era and social backgrounds who had warm, close relationships with their father—and how their spiritual outlook differed from the atheist group
Why “public atheists” (those devoted to writing and debating their atheism) is overwhelmingly a male phenomenon
Why, when women leave a relationship with God they usually don’t become atheists, but they form a new relationship: yogi, guru, New Age community, goddess worship, etc.

Resources mentioned in this episode:
Faith of the Fatherless: The Psychology of Atheism, by Paul C. Vitz
Surprised By Joy: The Shape Of My Early Life,  by C.S. Lewis
The Last Superstition: A Refutation of the New Atheism by Edward Feser
My Father, Bertrand Russell by Katherine Tait
Soul Searching: The Religious and Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers  by Christian Smith and Melinda Lundquist Denton


  AutoPlay Next Video