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Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association
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The Role of an Early-Life Variant of the Oedipus Complex in Motivating Religious Endeavors

Marvin P. Osman

9735 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 446 Beverly Hills, CA 90212, marpaosman{at}aol.com

A close reading of sources Freud used in writing Totem and Taboo supports the thesis that a predecessor archaic oedipus complex is instrumental in motivating religious worship. This early-life complex manifests a psychodynamic in which birth, growth, and self-realization, to varying degree in each individual, tend to be psychically correlated with diminution and harm vis-à-vis one's procreators. As a result, the psychodynamic is likely to induce unease over youth exercising its powers. The story of Adam and Eve, which depicts a growing self-determination being stymied and coming to grief, is a mythic epitome of this psychodynamic. Religious practices serve to expiate the sense of unease, partly by replenishing and even recasting seemingly diminished procreators, through myth and ritual, into omnipotent, immortal entities, and partly by reversing individuation's challenge to authority by exhorting submission to, and even union, with the divine parent. The sources used in demonstrating the various means whereby religious practices serve to ameliorate the burden of "original sin" include W. R. Smith (1894), the Old Testament, and studies of archaic religious rites, including those of the Aztecs.

Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, Vol. 52, No. 4, 975-997 (2004)
DOI: 10.1177/00030651040520041601


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