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Modern Medicine:
The New
World Religion
The Hidden Influence of Beliefs and Fears
by Olivier Clerc, France
When the
Christian missionaries of the last three or four centuries were
evangelizing so-called "primitive people, they believed that they had
only to destroy or burn the various cult objects of these people in order
to eradicate their religions, superstitions, and customs.
Centuries after the conquistadors tried to stamp out the Inca culture, or
the Inquisition tried to stamp out the protestant heresies, or the
similar attempts to annihilate the Voodoo, or the many African and Asian
religions, we know that such arrogant high-handedness does not work. These
beliefs still continue today, sometimes under different guises, long after
the objects of worship associated with them have been destroyed.
This lesson from history is not only valid for primitive people and their
religions. It can equally be applied if not more so to aspects of our
own modern society. Indeed, even a superficial study of contemporary
culture will reveal that the supposed secularization of present day society
is just an illusion. Even though most people do not conform to the outward
show of religious custom and practice mostly Judeo-Christian in western
culture the beliefs and superstitions remain deeply embedded in their
subconscious, influencing many aspects of their daily lives without them
realizing it.
And as several sociology studies have shown, the superstitious beliefs that
used to be attached to the formal religions have in many cases simply been
transferred to other objects, persons or events. The daily evening
television news bulletins, watched by millions worldwide in their
respective countries, the stars of show business and sport, humanitarian
associations, cults and all sorts of other things in modern life, these
have now become the new gods we venerate or fear, or the shrines at which
we worship or curse, and where we still experience those primitive
religious urges and feelings, where we can believe without necessarily
having to think or rationalize.
However, it is in the field of medicine that this unconscious transposition
of the religious experience - and more specifically the Judeo-Christian
ideology, myths, beliefs, expectations and hopes - seems to have had the
greatest impact. The facts show clearly - for anyone taking the time to
study them - that medicine enjoys today an astonishing degree of undeserved
credit that is out of all proportion to its actual results or promises.
Real health keeps regressing, while the great medical "miracles, such
as vaccines and antibiotics, are now clearly showing their limitations,
which some had foreseen and warned of right from the start. This undeserved
credit comes mostly from the fact that medicine and science have replaced
religion as the only certain belief in an uncertain world. And the doctors
and scientists are seen as the priests of the new religion, delivering
through the certainties of science what the old discredited gods were not
able to deliver. If we can no longer believe in the miracles, the cures,
and the curses of the old religions, we can certainly believe in the
miracles, the cures and the destructive powers of the new science.
Almost imperceptibly, medicine has taken on a saving, or messianic role,
the characteristics of which we must examine. Looking back through history,
there is a sense in which medicine can be said to have displayed
characteristics that have at various times characterised
the Roman Catholic Church: autocracy, centralization, the control and
manipulation of people, censorship, propaganda, total obedience,
infallibility, the destruction of heretics, the stamping out of
individuality. All this, of course, has been done in the name of public
health and the general good, just as the church acted for mankinds
salvation.
Let me make my position clear. I am not a conspiracy theorist. I do not
believe that doctors, scientists and governments are intentionally and
corruptly conspiring together, abusing their powers in pursuit of wealth,
"Big Brother and "Brave New World just a step
away. But rather, I do believe we are faced with a phenomenon that is
largely of the unconscious kind.
What I believe is happening is that people, whether within the medico-pharmaceutical
industry or outside it, are being subconsciously influenced by their deeply
rooted myths, fears and superstitions which are now being projected onto
the new screens of science and medicine. This produces an amazing paradox.
Although medicine sees itself as exclusively scientific and rational, with
no room for spiritual or human dimensions (such as psychic healers, or
shamans, who are dismissed as charlatans), it organizes itself and
functions in a way that can be described as intrinsically religious. The
paradox is that by rejecting any spiritual dimension medicine in fact
becomes the toy of the forces and myths it tries to ignore and cannot
control. Mere denial of somethings existence has never made it disappear,
except perhaps in our consciousness, but instead, it is banished to our
subconscious mind, where, beyond our control, it can roam free, wreak
havoc, and wield even greater power.
We can see, then, that even though our society considers itself to be
secular, it has remained as Christian as it was a century ago, but with two
major differences. Firstly, our society is not aware of it. It believes
itself to be rational, scientific, and free of superstition. It fails to recognise that it is still, in effect, observing the
old religious rituals, but under a new guise. Secondly, our society now
lives its religious experiences through secular forms - medical ones, in
particular - and has at the same time transferred its hopes and aspirations
from the spiritual world to the material.
Medicine, then, has become the new world religion. The specific myths,
beliefs and rites of Christianity have been unconsciously projected over
medicine since Pasteur. As I explain in detail in my book, we can establish
a very close parallelism between the catholic religion and modern medicine,
although, for lack of space, I cannot go into all the details of each
comparison in this article. In brief:
- physicians have taken the place of priests;
- vaccination plays the same initiatory role as baptism, and is accompanied
by the same threats and fears;
- the search for health has replaced the quest for salvation;
- the fight against disease has replaced the fight against sin;
- eradication of viruses has taken the place of exorcising demons;
- the hope of physical immortality (cloning, genetic engineering) has been
substituted for the hope of eternal life;
- pills have replaced the sacrament of bread and wine;
- donations to cancer research take precedence over donations to the
church;
- a hypothetical universal vaccine could save humanity from all its
illnesses, as the Saviour has saved the world
from all its sins;
- the medical power has become the governments ally, as was the Catholic
Church in the past;
- "charlatans are persecuted today as "heretics were yesterday;
- dogmatism rules out promising alternative medical theories;
- the same absence of individual responsibility is now found in medicine,
as previously in the Christian religion;
- patients are alienated from their bodies, as sinners used to be from
their souls.
People are still being manipulated by their fears and childish hopes. They
are still told that the source of their problems is outside them, and that
the solution can only come from the outside. They are not allowed to do anything
by themselves and they must have the mediation of priest-physicians, the
administration of drug-hosts, and the protection of vaccine-absolutions.
Just as the magnetic field of a magnet placed under a sheet of paper
controls the way iron filings fall on its surface, revealing the invisible
lines of force between the two poles of the magnet, a "religious
field likewise imperceptibly structures and organises
the development of modern medicine. Invisible, impalpable, this
"religious field is made up of all the beliefs, myths and values of
the Christian - and more specifically the Catholic - religion. In other
words, the secularisation of society happened
only on the surface. We took away the "iron filings, the specific
religious forms, but we did not change the "current of thoughts, the
underlying "religious field, which continued to exert the same
influence, but through medicine. That is the reason why behind the
different structures of medicine and the Church of Rome we find the same fundamental
concepts, the same relationships, the same characteristics, the same fears,
the same hopes and expectations.
This substitution of medicine for religion has had many unfortunate
consequences. In medical research, it influences what should be looked for
and what can be discovered. Any discovery or theory that is at odds with
the over-arching orthodoxy is rejected, and its authors called heretics.
Entire areas of research, as well as promising new lines of approach, are
thus disqualified.
Furthermore, the unconscious need to bring the medical world into
"religious obedience frequently leads to (involuntary) falsifications
of results, as became clear with Pasteur's discoveries. The medical credo
takes precedence over reality, something that scientists refuse to
acknowledge when it does not correspond with their preconceived ideas.
And lastly, the hidden religious dimension of modern medicine inhibits the
free debating of already fixed beliefs, and preventing them from being
properly re-examined and criticised. Indeed,
dogmatism, irrationality and passions - all characteristic of the religious
experience - take precedence over any calm and carefully thought out
argument, even over the most tenuous facts. The same vehemence that led
Galileo to be condemned by the Church for his theories, in spite of the
scientifically demonstrable facts, is now being used by medicine to reject
any thesis that is contrary to its own dogmas. Science has learnt its
lessons from the Church.
My aims in writing and lecturing on this topic have therefore been several.
Firstly, I wanted to bring to the fore this phenomenon of projection and
transfer of religious content, which takes place in the medical field. In
recognizing this phenomenon, we should then dissociate from medical practice
the spiritual aspirations that quite logically can only be satisfied in the
spiritual dimension. It is dangerous to mistake eternal life with physical
immortality, or to think we can achieve collective salvation through
science and genetic engineering instead of individual salvation through
transformation and personal achievements.
I also hope that by bringing to the fore the influence of religious beliefs
in medicine, which is but one example of a very widespread phenomenon
today, readers will start thinking about how their beliefs filter their
perceptions, biasing and distorting them. Every time an object, a person, a
social group or an event becomes the target of religious projections, there
is danger. Their real characteristics fade in the eyes of those who colour them with their beliefs. These targets then
become the objects of religious urges, impervious to any rationalisation, whether they are expressed through
fear, hatred, "devilisation and search for
scapegoats, or through deification, idealisation
and unconditional devotion. From Princess Diana to Wacco,
and from Mother Teresa to Saddam Hussein, there are numerous examples of
the kind of consequences brought about by this transfer of religious
expression to real persons or situations.
Beyond this dissociation of medicine and religion, I would like to
encourage an increased awareness of the fears found in the depths of our
consciousness, which remain the hidden determining factors of most of our
actions. As shown in my book, these fundamental fears - fear of death,
mostly, but also fear of evil, fear of suffering, fear of separation, fear
of solitude - have lead humanity, at all times throughout history, to make
up all kinds of beliefs, in an effort to exorcise these fears. Then, with
the development of science and the rise of intellectualism, mankind has
tried to justify rationally these beliefs, hidden under the cloak of
medicine and life sciences.
In other words, there are three layers superimposed inside us:
1) a core of fears, from which we have learned
to protect ourselves by covering it with
2) a layer of beliefs, which make us feel safe
(even though those fears have not disappeared), this layer being itself
dissimulated under
3) an intellectual varnish, a rational facade,
which give us the illusion of having transcended superstitions and beliefs,
and which shelters us from our fears, keeping us barricaded behind
intellectual knowledge.
But in reality, as soon as any unexpected event scratches this varnish, our
underlying beliefs and fears reveal their presence and their indirect
influence.
As long as they are not acknowledged, accepted and transformed, these fears
will feed on every area of human endeavour. The
intellect cannot think freely and the heart may not love fully, as long as
both of them are hamstrung by the permanent task of appeasing our deepest
anxieties, which keep trying to re-surface in our consciousness. No
technological innovation, no scientific discovery, no external knowledge
will ever enable us to avoid this confrontation with ourselves, and - more
specifically - with our shadow. It is quite instructive to see to what
degree the intellectual and technical knowledge of this century - often
quite remarkable - remains captive to the fears that haunt society. We only
have to look at the poor state of our planet, at the multiplicity of wars
and at the emergence of new diseases, to see how this way of using our
inner capacities is unproductive.
Finally, through this increasing awareness and consciousness to which I
invite my readers, I hope to encourage greater individual responsibility,
be it on the medical or on the spiritual level. It seems inexplicable to me
that we should give away our power to whatever external authority (priests,
physicians, experts) and then blame them for
abusing us with it. Very few people are capable of being totally impartial
and disinterested, especially when money and power are at stake. And
especially when psychological studies show that the noblest motivations
often go hand in hand with more dubious unconscious intentions.
Therefore, taking personal responsibility for our own health, our own inner
evolution, and our own life at every level, without rejecting any available
help or advice, remains the safest and most rewarding attitude. The obscurantism
that endures under new forms will not so much be fought by the lights of
science than by the sparks of our own self-awareness, that each one may
awaken in himself. At least, such is my
conviction.
This text was written for CONTINUUM Magazine and is based on the book "Médecine, Religion et Peur; linfluence cachée des croyances by Olivier Clerc
The book has been published with Editions Jouvence,
1999. France.
The author can be contacted at [email protected]
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