Description

Book Synopsis

Religious Hatred and Human Conflict focuses the lens of psychodynamic psychology on a phenomenon that often confounds conventional thinking the intensity of conflict with religious or quasi-religious dimensions.

The book highlights six dimensions of religion: identity, doctrine and practice, emotion and experience, mythology, sacred values and power and control, exploring how these can give rise to religious hatred and lead to marginalisation, persecution and even genocide. It also explores reasons for the evolution of religion and religious hatred, and their relationship with human behaviour through contemporary issues such as fundamentalism, martyrdom, clerical narcissism and apocalyptic belief. Acland examines how religious hatred and conflict may be transcended by facilitating processes of dialogue and diapraxis which enable a systematic understanding of prejudices and projections. Last, it offers practical methods and strategies for helping individ

Trade Review

'It is a unique publication and it fills an important practical and theoretical gap in the existing literature … It is innovative and refreshing that the author integrates psychodynamic perspectives into the work – this is an important lacuna in the literature. The work fills a gap by approaching the question of religious hatred and conflict with religious dimensions from multiple different conceptual angles, many of which are much neglected in the field.' - David Leech, Senior Lecturer, Dept of Religion and Theology, University of Bristol, UK



Table of Contents

PART 1: Contexts and cultures

Chapter 1: Beginning, background and biases

Chapter 2: Three backstories

Conflict resolution and transformation

The psychology of religion

Psychodynamic psychology

Inspirational beginnings: Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung

Rehabilitating Jung

Beyond Freud and Jung

PART 2: What is religious hatred?

Chapter 3: Thinking about religious hatred

Anatomies of hatred

Hatred and evolution

Hatred and the Other

From hatred to genocide

Hatred and thoughtcrime

Religion and hatred as addictions

Chapter 4: Psychodynamic approaches to religious hatred

Complexes

Complexes and religious traditions

Cultural complexes

The Shadow

Complexes and Shadows in transmission

PART 3: Religious hatred and the dimensions of religion

Chapter 5: Six dimensions of religion

Dimensions of religion

The dimensions of religion, religious hatred and the problem of evil

Chapter 6: The identity dimension

Religion and identity

Conflicting religious identities and the idea of the "Other"

The narcissism of small differences

The Persona, the Shadow and the Other

Chapter 7: The doctrine and practice dimension

Religious doctrine and the Golem Effect

Fundamentalism

Fundamentalism, hatred and violence

The psychology of fundamentalist doctrine and practice

Groups and group practices

Fundamentalism as a form of cultural complex

Chapter 8: The emotional and experiential dimension

The missing dimension

Marks of religious experience

Emotions and religious experience

The psychology of religious experience

Religious hatred and the Divided Self

Healing the Divided Self

Religious hatred as the failure to individuate

Hatred and the Self

Chapter 9: The mythological dimension

Approaching mythology

Social impacts of myth

Impacts of myth on individuals

Mythology and religious hatred

Modern myths

Cosmic wars

When myth leads to martyrdom

The psychology of Armageddon

Mythmaking and scapegoating

Chapter 10: The sacred values dimension

The nature of sacred values

Sacred values and personal motivation

Valuing sacred values

Pseudo-sacred values

Secular values that turn sacred

Sacred values and religious hatred

Sacred values and uncertainty

Chapter 11: The power and control dimension

The impetus to control

Constraints as control

Compensatory control

Terror Management Theory

From control to paranoia

Control through clericalism

Evolution of religious control

PART 4: Working through religious hatred

Chapter 12: The search for answers

Understanding religion

Appreciating the emotional and unconscious

Beyond dialogue

Re-framing religious hatred as a psychospiritual problem

Incorporating the transcendent function

The practicalities of conflict resolution: dialogue and diapraxis

Diapraxis: process and structures

Using the dimensions of religion as a structure for dialogue and diapraxis

Afterword

References

Index

Religious Hatred and Human Conflict

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Sat 27 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Andrew Floyer Acland

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      View other formats and editions of Religious Hatred and Human Conflict by Andrew Floyer Acland

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 1/12/2023 12:09:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781032500508, 978-1032500508
      ISBN10: 1032500506

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Religious Hatred and Human Conflict focuses the lens of psychodynamic psychology on a phenomenon that often confounds conventional thinking the intensity of conflict with religious or quasi-religious dimensions.

      The book highlights six dimensions of religion: identity, doctrine and practice, emotion and experience, mythology, sacred values and power and control, exploring how these can give rise to religious hatred and lead to marginalisation, persecution and even genocide. It also explores reasons for the evolution of religion and religious hatred, and their relationship with human behaviour through contemporary issues such as fundamentalism, martyrdom, clerical narcissism and apocalyptic belief. Acland examines how religious hatred and conflict may be transcended by facilitating processes of dialogue and diapraxis which enable a systematic understanding of prejudices and projections. Last, it offers practical methods and strategies for helping individ

      Trade Review

      'It is a unique publication and it fills an important practical and theoretical gap in the existing literature … It is innovative and refreshing that the author integrates psychodynamic perspectives into the work – this is an important lacuna in the literature. The work fills a gap by approaching the question of religious hatred and conflict with religious dimensions from multiple different conceptual angles, many of which are much neglected in the field.' - David Leech, Senior Lecturer, Dept of Religion and Theology, University of Bristol, UK



      Table of Contents

      PART 1: Contexts and cultures

      Chapter 1: Beginning, background and biases

      Chapter 2: Three backstories

      Conflict resolution and transformation

      The psychology of religion

      Psychodynamic psychology

      Inspirational beginnings: Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung

      Rehabilitating Jung

      Beyond Freud and Jung

      PART 2: What is religious hatred?

      Chapter 3: Thinking about religious hatred

      Anatomies of hatred

      Hatred and evolution

      Hatred and the Other

      From hatred to genocide

      Hatred and thoughtcrime

      Religion and hatred as addictions

      Chapter 4: Psychodynamic approaches to religious hatred

      Complexes

      Complexes and religious traditions

      Cultural complexes

      The Shadow

      Complexes and Shadows in transmission

      PART 3: Religious hatred and the dimensions of religion

      Chapter 5: Six dimensions of religion

      Dimensions of religion

      The dimensions of religion, religious hatred and the problem of evil

      Chapter 6: The identity dimension

      Religion and identity

      Conflicting religious identities and the idea of the "Other"

      The narcissism of small differences

      The Persona, the Shadow and the Other

      Chapter 7: The doctrine and practice dimension

      Religious doctrine and the Golem Effect

      Fundamentalism

      Fundamentalism, hatred and violence

      The psychology of fundamentalist doctrine and practice

      Groups and group practices

      Fundamentalism as a form of cultural complex

      Chapter 8: The emotional and experiential dimension

      The missing dimension

      Marks of religious experience

      Emotions and religious experience

      The psychology of religious experience

      Religious hatred and the Divided Self

      Healing the Divided Self

      Religious hatred as the failure to individuate

      Hatred and the Self

      Chapter 9: The mythological dimension

      Approaching mythology

      Social impacts of myth

      Impacts of myth on individuals

      Mythology and religious hatred

      Modern myths

      Cosmic wars

      When myth leads to martyrdom

      The psychology of Armageddon

      Mythmaking and scapegoating

      Chapter 10: The sacred values dimension

      The nature of sacred values

      Sacred values and personal motivation

      Valuing sacred values

      Pseudo-sacred values

      Secular values that turn sacred

      Sacred values and religious hatred

      Sacred values and uncertainty

      Chapter 11: The power and control dimension

      The impetus to control

      Constraints as control

      Compensatory control

      Terror Management Theory

      From control to paranoia

      Control through clericalism

      Evolution of religious control

      PART 4: Working through religious hatred

      Chapter 12: The search for answers

      Understanding religion

      Appreciating the emotional and unconscious

      Beyond dialogue

      Re-framing religious hatred as a psychospiritual problem

      Incorporating the transcendent function

      The practicalities of conflict resolution: dialogue and diapraxis

      Diapraxis: process and structures

      Using the dimensions of religion as a structure for dialogue and diapraxis

      Afterword

      References

      Index

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