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- Newsgroups: alt.atheism
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!torn!nott!cunews!gj156879
- From: gj156879@alfred.carleton.ca ( gj student 156879)
- Subject: VALIS: insanity and religion
- Message-ID: <gj156879.727630147@cunews>
- Sender: news@cunews.carleton.ca (News Administrator)
- Organization: Carleton University
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 15:29:07 GMT
- Lines: 36
-
- Mathew, and others interested,
-
- Valis was a great novel, and the main characters religious experiences
- were very similar to symptoms of schizophrenia. However, recall that
- some of the symptoms could not simply be explained away by mental
- illness. The sudden knowledge of his son's illness and knowing
- exactly what the illness is, verified by the doctor, is the one
- example that comes to mind.
-
- The trouble in the novel is that the character doesn't accept the
- things that occur to him at a face-value level. He attempts to
- explain them, going over and over the same material, trying to
- formulate a universe where such things could occur. The more he did
- this, the more he distanced himself from reality.
-
- I'd argue that this happens with many religious movememnts, where
- their was some sort of basis, perhaps even a "mystical" experience,
- but the explanataions and dogma, rules, bureaucracy, etc. all pile up
- on top of the foundation, until all that's left is a garbled mess.
-
- A religion has to keep a basis in reality. If it doesn't, it becomes
- ivory-tower-like, and you end up with Popes telling people that
- condoms are evil, resulting in many stupid deaths.
-
- Nik
-
- PS
- Check out "A SCANNER DARKLY", which is a damned fine read, also by
- Philip K Dick. Sort of a 60s paranoid fantasy that blew me away when
- I read it. Also, not there are some bigtime similarities between
- VALIS and RADIOFREE ALBERMUTH, another amazing book. (The pink laser
- occurs in both, if I recall correctly...)
-
-
-