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The Sources of Religious Insight

af Josiah Royce

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343718,881 (2.75)1
Of this book, based on his lectures at Lake Forest College in 1911. Josiah Royce wrote, ""It is one of the easiest of my books to read...it contains the whole sense of me in a brief compass."" Here Royce probes the neuralgic point in the philosophy of religion. The essays aim at religious unity and emphasize communal religious experience based on a faith shared by a community's members through their authentic loyalty and deeds of service. It is an urgently needed counterpoint to William James's individualistic views in Varieties of Religious Experience. Through his unique essay on ""The Religious Mission of Sorrow,"" Royce offers a healing remedy for a world suffocating with sufferings.… (mere)
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Good but heavy going. Some chapters had me completely engaged while others were difficult to get through. The concept of the book was what drew me in. Royce intended this to be an exploration of the universal source of religious insight. He mentions Christianity and Buddhism, but no others. This is not a problem in itself, but Royce was a man of his time and culture so much of the language used is steeped in Christianity. My issue with this was when words, such as salvation, are used they call to mind specific Christian concepts which I felt overshadowed Royce's message. Glad I read it and I'm interested in reading more of Josiah Royce's books.k ( )
  pmackey | Mar 8, 2023 |
Josiah Royce (1855-1916), one of the first American philosophers, has largely disappeared from view. He started as a student of pragmatist William James, but then clearly went his own way, reconnecting with the idealistic tradition. This is also evident from this publication, the result of 7 lectures that Royce gave in 1911. In it he quotes William James several times, especially his ‘The Varieties of Religious Experience’. According to James, religion is primarily an individual experience, not a social one, as the French sociologist Emile Durkheim had argued. Royce contradicts that: individual experiences are certainly important, but the whole domain of the social is at least as important. Rightly so.
What will shock many believers is that Royce rejects the importance of the factor of revelation or mystical experience, but then mainly on logical-philosophical grounds. It is therefore not surprising that Royce's strongest emphasis is that reason can also be an important source of religious insight. “Reason is the power to see widely and steadily and connectedly,” he writes. Insight into the greater context is the pre-eminent way for him to arrive at the truth, thus connecting with the divine, and also inspiring our actions. It is an absolutely valid reasoning for me.
But at the same time it exposes a weakness in Royce's argument: he looks at things very cerebrally, which is natural for a philosopher, but he runs the risk of covering only part of the human experience. To begin with, Royce has limited the basis of what religious experiences are. For him, it is the insight people have into their own failing, into the ‘human condition’, which they inevitably link with the desire for salvation, a salvation that can only come from something super/out-of-human. In my opinion, this starting point almost automatically brings Royce to his views on the rationalist input. In a sense that seems to make him guilty of reductionism, in order to be able to easily prove his rationalist thesis.
Another weakness is the way he formulates things: these are lectures, so the accessibility in itself is quite high. But this is a text that is more than a century old, and that is also noticeable in the sometimes archaic turns of phrase, and the still very complicated reasoning. Royce is also extremely careful, clearly to spare his audience, and that also sometimes makes for very roundabout reasoning. In short: this is a very interesting text, but definitely too difficult for the average reader. ( )
2 stem bookomaniac | Feb 23, 2023 |
I found this 1912 book to be surprisingly worthwhile. It's a set of lectures by Harvard academic Josiah Royce, with a scope situated somewhere between philosophy of religion and religious psychology. It is not theological or sectarian. When Royce observed that "It is useless to make some new sect whose creed shall be that there are to be no sects" (294), I could not help thinking with amusement that he was indicting the Plymouth Brethren, just such a sect, as well as their "non-denominational" successors among "Bible-believing" Christians.

Speaking during the later part of the Progressive Era, Royce refers to William James as "my dear friend" (27), and particularly in the book's fourth section "The World and the Will" he is at some pains to explain how his views both accord with and differ with those attributed to philosophical Pragmatism. In an earlier section on "Individual Experience and Social Experience" he also details his particular understanding of James' theory of religion, as well as providing a surprisingly generous and sympathetic gloss on Nietzsche's "Titanism" (60 ff.).

Although Royce's willingness to class Christianity and Buddhism as the "higher religions of mankind" (8) and his use of the search for human "salvation" as the touchstone of religion as such seem like stigma of a thinker with whom I would find few if any points of agreement, he develops his argument with a good deal of care and patience. In the culmination of his fifth lecture "The Religion of Loyalty," he arrives at what I consider to be cardinal truth: "For our attention is now fixed, not on a condition to be called salvation, but on a rule for doing something in accordance with our own true will" (188). Before the lecture concludes, he progresses from this pivot to insisting that "your true cause is the spiritual unity of all the world of reasonable beings" (205, italics in original).

The final lecture is concerned with what Royce calls "The Invisible Church" which transcends all limited doctrines and specific cultures, although he gives no signal of having drawn on esoteric thinkers such as Eckartshausen and Lopukhin for his use of this phrase. Royce is sufficiently scrupulous in his avoidance of theological identification that it is impossible to tell if he originally took "Invisible Church" from the contexts in which it has been used as a gloss on Augustinian anti-Donatist notions supposed to be common to all Western Christianity, or if he was specially receptive to the Protestant usage which allowed for institutional legitimation via a supra-historical avoidance of Roman Catholicism. In any event, Royce uses it in neither sense, and he is explicit that he extends "membership" in the Invisible Church to those "loyal" to non-Christian religions, as well as to the "cynics and rebels" who attack "the narrowness of our nature, the chaos of our unspiritual passions, the barren formalism of our conventions" (285).

So, while there are any number of points where I feel my views to be in friction with those of Royce, I found his treatment on the whole to be both coherent and productive of useful reflection. I would recommend it to clergy, scholars of religion, and others willing to give serious thought to its questions.
2 stem paradoxosalpha | Jul 2, 2021 |
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Of this book, based on his lectures at Lake Forest College in 1911. Josiah Royce wrote, ""It is one of the easiest of my books to read...it contains the whole sense of me in a brief compass."" Here Royce probes the neuralgic point in the philosophy of religion. The essays aim at religious unity and emphasize communal religious experience based on a faith shared by a community's members through their authentic loyalty and deeds of service. It is an urgently needed counterpoint to William James's individualistic views in Varieties of Religious Experience. Through his unique essay on ""The Religious Mission of Sorrow,"" Royce offers a healing remedy for a world suffocating with sufferings.

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