We have a delusion detector on my ward at the Allan
a novel written by Yasmin Khadra (a pseudonym of
Memorial Institute. It comes in the form of a Haitian
Algerian author Mohammed Moulessehoul) set in
psychiatric nurse. Every time a Haitian patient is admitted
Afghanistan that follows the fortunes of a married couple
to the ward with some bizarre ideas, we ask this nurse to
living under the Taliban regime. Violence and humiliation
talk to the patient and tell us whether his or her "crazy"
are daily events as the Mullahs try to impose their values
ideas are delusional or just typical of the island culture. So
if a Haitian lady feels that she is hexed or that all her
In Infidel, the Muslim writer, Hirsi Ali, writes about her
problems are caused by someone poking a voodoo doll,
our professional delusion detector will decide if the particular description of magic is within or outside the
turned to the verses on how women were supposed to
behave with their husbands. We owed our husbands absolute obedience, he told the mothers and teenage girls
Recently a young deeply spiritual and very religious
who had gathered to listen to him. If we disobeyed them,
Muslim male was admitted to the ward because he had
stopped eating and drinking in order to purify himself. He
A further example is found in Jon Krakauer's Under the
desperately wanted to make sure that he would be allowed
Banner of Heaven, a non-fiction account of a
to enter Paradise if he should die. He didn't seem
fundamentalist Mormon sect in Utah. What would a
depressed and his thinking was otherwise normal.
Mormon delusion detector say about Dan Lafferty, a
Fortunately at that time we had a Saudi resident working
devout believer, who, along with his brother, murdered
on the ward and she was able to assure us, without
two people (a third brother and his wife) because they
reservation, that the patient's thinking was delusional. In
rebelled against the religious requirement of polygamous
fact recently the patient again stopped eating and the
marriage? He testified that he was ordered to kill by God.
family consulted a local Sheik who tried to convince the
In an interview with Krakauer, Dan "believes … that the
young man that God would not want him to avoid food or
most salient fact of existence is the immutable division of
drink, "It's against our religion," he said, but the young
humankind into those who are inherently righteous and
those who are inherently evil. 'Some were chosen to be
A family that I saw a few years ago raised related issues.
children of God and others became children of the devil.
A Pakistani man and his French Canadian wife believed
Either you're a brother-a child of God-or an asshole-a
that their 19-year-old son, who suffered from a severe
child of the devil." So what does our delusion detector
form of schizophrenia, was possessed by a djinn. Djinns
find? According to Krakauer, "Most folks in Utah regard
are malevolent spirits commonly believed in some Middle
Dan Lafferty's theology as both preposterous and
Eastern cultures to cause all kinds of illness and abnormal
horrifying, but they concede that he seems to be a true
behaviour. That part was easy for me to understand. What
was more difficult occurred when I saw the family in
In the first example I gave, a fictional Haitian patient, a
therapy. The family consisted of the parents and three
nation's culture accounts for ideas that to us Canadians
brothers, one of whom was the patient. At the beginning
would be delusional. In the second, our Muslim
of one session, mother came in to the office wearing dark
gentleman, we had to rule out appropriate religious ideas
sun glasses which she refused to take off. I thought I saw
before deciding that the patient was, in fact, ill. In the third
swelling and a bruised cheek under her glasses. When I
case, we see that it is possible that several members of a
asked about it, father defiantly said that he hit his wife
family hold beliefs (which may or may not be congruent
because she was sun bathing on their porch wearing only a
with their culture) that are delusional, or at least seem so
bathing suit. The three boys shouted at their mother that
to someone looking in from the outside. And in the case of
she deserved to get hit and that god would punish her. She
the devout Mormon, we see how fundamentalist beliefs
can rationalize murder; or were they delusions?
With only minor changes in the details, this family could have been found in the pages of The Swallows of Kabul,
Hirsi Ali, Ayaan, Infidel, Free Press, 2007.
Khadra, Yasmina, The Swallows of Kabul, (trans. John Cullen),
3 Krakauer, Jon, Under the Banner of Heaven, Doubleday, 2003.
St. Mary's Hospital Psychiatry Grand Rounds, November 22, 2007.
Wiviott, Gerald (2007) The psychology of fundamentalism
Let me define delusion. It is a fixed, false belief, not
psychological motives of the individual fundamentalist
correctable upon presentation of appropriate evidence, and
and propose a number of theories, most of which derive,
- very important - not part of a subcultural norm. Well
in one way or another, from a psychoanalytic perspective.
how big does the subculture have to be before we can
chalk up a crazy idea to something other than a delusion?
1. We hold beliefs that unite us to a group. That identity
Are the wafer and wine really the body and blood of
provides security for the person whose sense of self is
Christ? Well, no, but enough people believe it so that is
not delusional. How about a wire strung up around a
Group norms and values are accepted and expressed
neighbourhood? Is this eruv really the extended wall of a
in order to feel the embrace of the group. While "faith
house? What about the 39 members of Heaven's Gate, a
and belief can be the most powerful motivating forces
religious cult, who collectively suicided when the Haley
in human life" at the extreme, "Reality is replaced
Bopp comet was nearest the sun believing that they would
with delusions, perspectives with myopia at a level
be reborn on a starship hidden in the tail of the comet,
which attains an almost erotic level of collective
certain of a better fate than the one awaiting them on
hysteria." (Stephen Morgan, The Psychology of Terror
earth. Does 39 make a subculture, or were they all
delusional - in other words, if one of them survived and
Rituals help solidify group identity, perhaps even at
came to the emergency room, would he be considered
the expense of individual identity. Alan Shapiro, an
psychotic for holding such beliefs if, in every other way,
American poet writes about an old friend of his who
These questions seem more topical today. In a recent New
He talked about the 613 mitzvot (commandments),
York Times article, Paul Krugman wondered whether the
which govern every aspect, every moment, of a Hasid's
administration in Washington was cynical or delusional in
life, and how a life lived according to the Law infuses
planning its famous "surge." He couldn't decide (both
everything-lovemaking, eating, even bodily
imply contempt for the government), but the mere fact that
functions-with holiness and joy … the more [I
he could raise the question ought to make us consider the
watched him] the more it seemed that the holy joy he
role of delusional thinking in everyday life. And look at
felt (and I have no doubt that he felt it) was not a
the controversy caused by Richard Dawkins's popular
personal joy but the joy of personal extinction, the joy
book, The God Delusion. In it Dawkins asserts that the
of the body transformed through ritual and unremitting discipline into a transpersonal vessel for the holy spirit,
belief in a transcendent being, responsible for cosmic
creation and consciously involved in the lives of people, is delusional. Strictly speaking, both Krugman and Dawkins
2. To insure that we are not threatened by ideas that are
misuse the word "delusion." For better or worse, the
not part of the group identity, we project onto those
Neocon ideas are a subcultural norm, and belief in God is
who hold contrary ideas images of sin, evil, and
more of a cultural norm than is atheism, which at least is a
degradation. Thus certain cultures try to sever ties
with the world outside their domain in order not to be contaminated. David Brooks, in a January 25 NY
What's important here is the notion that 'delusion' means
Times Op-Ed piece, described the currant situation in
'not real'. It's a false belief, fixed, and not correctable, yet
Iraq, "Amid the turmoil, the complexity of life falls
here we are using the term to describe ideas held by
away, and things are reduced to stark polarities:
groups of people. Are they all delusional? The "not part of
Sunni-Shiite or Shiite-Sunni, human-subhuman. Once
a subcultural norm" requirement reduces the number of
this mental descent has begun, it is possible to kill
people who might be considered to be delusional, but it
without compunction." We employ the mechanism of
makes context important. Is the belief inside or outside a
splitting to create us-against-them scenarios. We (and,
subculture? And the same way that context determines
by inclusion, I) are all good and they (the other) are all
'delusion', context determines reality, as I will show
Now what does all this have to do with the psychology of
fundamentalism? It would be a lot simpler to look at the
6 Morgan, Stephen, The Mind of a Terrorist Fundamentalist, Awe-
4 Krugman, Paul, "Quagmire of the Vanities," New York Times, Jan. 8,
7 Shapiro, Alan, The Last Happy Occasion, University of Chicago
5 Dawkins, Richard, The God Delusion, Houghton Mifflin, 2006.
8 Brooks, David, New York Times, Jan. 25, 2007.
Wiviott, Gerald (2007) The psychology of fundamentalism
3. As you might expect from an analytic framework,
quality much like genes. Such ideas have a particular
sexual conflict has been proposed to account for
appeal, meet a vital need, provide some kind of
fundamentalist thinking. There are several variations
advantage, probably psychological, and, therefore,
of this model: in one, men's fear of the feminine
have staying power. He believes that the "meme"
underlies the kind of patriarchy and subjugation of
hypothesis accounts for the widespread notions that lie
women that is seen in many fundamentalist cultures.
at the heart of the world's religions, and when taken to
In another, it is the fear of the uncontrollable that
extreme, they evolve into fundamentalism.
leads to ideologies that provide clear and rigid rules to
But I don't think that this kind of hypothesizing captures
govern sexual behaviour, another characteristic of
the essence of the psychological roots of fundamentalism.
fundamentalist cultures. Listen again to Hirsi Ali2:
Fundamentalism is more about a way of thinking than it is
I found it remarkable how many esteemed Muslim
about the content. And here I want to bring in the concept
thinkers had philosophized at such length about how
of epistemology. That is the branch of philosophy that
much female skin could be bared without causing
deals with knowledge. Not knowledge about things but,
chaos to break out across the landscape. Of course
rather, "what do we mean when we think we know
almost all these thinkers agreed that once a girl reaches
something?" Do we think that what we know corresponds
puberty, every part of her body except her face and her
to a reality that exists out there, independent of us, and
hands must be covered when in the company of any men who are not immediate family, and at all times
that our knowledge corresponds to that reality? Sure, in
outside her home. This was because her bare skin
everyday life, we are in pretty good shape if our
would involuntarily cause men to feel an
knowledge of a banana leads us to peel that banana before
slicing it into our cereal. No doubt a scientist could provide empirical evidence to support such a practice. But
Surely these ideas would register with the Outremont
what about "knowing when life begins in utero" or "the
Orthodox Jews who lobbied for frosted glass on the
age of the earth"? What does it mean to say that we know
windows of the local YMCA. Let's face it, the
the Messiah is coming, or, for that matter, that Jesus, or
physicality and intensity of sexual feelings can be
the Hidden Imam, will one day return? If we think that our
unsettling, even explosive, and fundamentalist
"knowledge" about these issues is the same as our
knowledge of a banana, we are using an "absolutist"
4. From a more existentially oriented analytic framework,
epistemology. If, on the other hand, we recognize that
human beings live with the awareness of their own
much of what we call knowledge is culturally determined,
mortality - we are all going to die. For many this
or consequent to our own unique experience or education,
reality is fraught with unbearable anxiety; it is easy to
we will not be so quick to assume that our knowledge is
understand why so many religions offer images that
the only correct explanation or the "Truth." We will be
assuage death anxiety. Belief in Heaven, Paradise,
using a contextual epistemology which allows for
reincarnation, and the soul all offer consolation. The
more intense the individual's fear, the more rigidly
Postmodernists, in taking this relativity to an extreme,
held the belief. The greater the outside threat (or the
make moral principles seem vague and trivial. They also
greater the perception of threat) the more desperate is
risk being so respectful of cultural diversity that any
the need to defend the comforting belief against
criticism of cultural practices becomes unacceptable.
criticism, skepticism, evidence, or denial.
(Think about female circumcision, as an example.) One
5. Man senses his insignificance in the face of an
might make the case that fundamentalist ideologies are a
overwhelming and uncaring universe. Seeking
growing response, first, to the lack of moral absolutes and,
guidance and meaning, he turns to sources which give
second, to notions of cultural diversity. In fact, since 9/11,
answers. Doubt and questioning only lead to more
our tolerance for cultural diversity has shrunk as the U.S.
anxiety, so a literal interpretation of the literature is
has demonstrated a missionary zeal to spread the Truth:
preferred. Religious fundamentalism is characterized
"freedom and democracy" and, in some places, reasonable
by literal readings of the relevant texts. There is
accommodation notwithstanding, laws banning the
neither room for debate, interpretation, nor literary
wearing of religious clothing and symbols are being
6. Another theoretical perspective is offered by Dawkins,
But what does all this talk about epistemology have to do
the Professor of evolution. He suggests that "memes"
with fundamentalism, and where does psychology fit in?
or ideas that emerge at some point in human history,
There is no doubt that fundamentalists see the world as if
often across cultures, have a "survival of the fittest"
their knowledge of it were absolute. Rigidly held beliefs,
Wiviott, Gerald (2007) The psychology of fundamentalism
intolerance of alternative points of view, capacity to
groups or cults. In other words, people with psychological
reinterpret history to fit their worldview, and rejection of
vulnerabilities will seek out "subcultures" whose ideas,
scientific evidence are all manifestations of a
perspectives and values offer comfort. Take a charismatic
fundamentalist ideology. Not just religions, mind you, but
leader and he or she will find willing followers, followers
also systems of government and economic theories can
whose own weakness is fortified by the energy,
become endowed with the characteristics of
confidence and conviction of a leader who preaches
fundamentalism. Look at Pol Pot's Cambodia, or Mao's
salvation no matter what flavour it comes in.
China, or the Israel imagined by Yagil Amir, the assassin
To maintain loyalty to a leader, even a dead one, rigid
of Yitzhak Rabin. Even Baptists call those Baptists who
group-think becomes the norm. Baruch Goldstein was an
favour gay rights "Fundamentalists of the Left."
Israeli doctor and a follower of Rabbi Meir Kahane, the founder of the Jewish Defence League. In 1994, Goldstein
These ideas blend into psychology when we think about
walked into a mosque in Hebron during prayer services
how an absolutist epistemology (or fundamentalist
and shot to death 29 Muslims and wounded 150 before
thinking) relates to imagination. I contend that there are
being killed by the survivors. His tombstone has become a
two kinds imagination: the first underlies the ability to
pilgrimage site. It reads: "Here lies the saint, Dr Baruch
create; here it is the ability to imagine other worlds, other
Goldstein, blessed be the memory of the holy man, may
ways in which things can be organized, other explanatory
the Lord avenge his blood, who devoted his soul to the
models. The second is the ability to imagine other minds.
Jews … His hands are innocent and his heart is pure. He
Believe me, this is not as simple or as common as you
was killed as a martyr of God." Grandiosity and hero-
might think. It is the capacity for empathy or, as Martin
worship are a potent, sometimes lethal, mix.
Buber defines it, the "bold swinging into the other." And to do that, one has to assume an openness, a non-
Another dimension may be biological. Imagination might
judgmental attitude, a sense of wonder and curiosity about
have a lot to do with brain circuitry. There is no doubt that
how the other mind makes sense of the world. Empathy
some people have more robust imaginations than others,
requires a recognition that each mind is unique. From a
and likewise, some people have much higher developed
psychological perspective, we can see that fundamentalists
capacity for empathy. However, with relatively few
lack the capacity for empathy and their imaginative world
exceptions, I don't think that biology or individual
psychology are responsible for the fundamentalism we see on a vast scale.
In How to Cure a Fanatic, Amos Oz prescribes imagining the other as part of the cure. He writes,
I think culture shapes not only what we think, but also
"Imagining the other, in my view, is not only an æsthetic
how we think. And culture does this on one level by using
business. It's an ethical imperative. Inside the family-not
the family as a conduit to pass on values, but more
just between nations or between communities-imagining
explicitly in its education systems. I remember my wife
the other is a moral imperative. I want to tell you a secret
telling me about her days as a teacher at a Lubovitch day
(don't quote me): I think that imagining the other is also
school. Certainly clothing regulations were in place to
great pleasure. A secret pleasure and a great pleasure. I
maintain modesty; that didn't surprise me. But what did
think imagining the other turns us not only into better
was the censorship of reading material and the topics that
neighbours, or better spouses, it even turns us into better
could be discussed. And she told me that the students
lovers." But, as I've implied, it's fear of the other, the
could not watch commercial TV and were not allowed to
unique and separate other, that lies at the heart of
see movies. What is different about educating children in
that milieu and home schooling in the States where 43% of home schooled children come from Evangelical
How do we account for the existence of fundamentalism?
families, or the Amish without electricity, or the
I already expressed skepticism that the answer will be
Maddrasses in Pakistan? It is obvious that the content of
found in individual analytic models of psychological
the curricula varies, but what doesn't is the
development. That doesn't mean that in some cases,
epistemological foundation of all the teaching - there is
individual fears, conflicts and vulnerabilities may make
only one reality, one way of conceptualizing the world,
someone prone to rigid thinking or to joining fanatic
one way of understanding ethics and metaphysics, and the
knowledge that is being transmitted corresponds to the one
9 Sharlet, Jeff, Through a Glass Darkly, How the Christian Right is
reality that exists out there independent of culture and
Reimagining U.S. History. Harper's, December, 2006
experience. This is the nature of fundamentalism - the
10 Buber, Martin, I and Thou, Free Press, 1971
11 Oz, Amos, How to Cure a Fanatic, Princeton University Press, 2006.
Wiviott, Gerald (2007) The psychology of fundamentalism
indoctrination of young children into a way of thinking
buck conformity, to question, and to doubt. It takes
that renders them impervious to alternate models of
courage to give up the big weapon of "Truth."
understanding their world, even blind to evidence from
Knowing the truth, or at least feeling that one is in
possession of the truth, boldly affects one's personality.
We can erect wall around schools and fences to separate
Think of the beatific glow on the face of someone who has
nations; we can censor books, imprison dissident writers
found the answer to life's mysteries and the answer to the
and, if necessary, murder or execute those willing to
vexing problems of deciding right from wrong; see how
disseminate ideas that threaten the beliefs underlying
earnestly they want to share the answer with you. As
group identity. But the 21st Century has seen the rise of
Amos Oz says, the fanatic wants nothing more than to help
technologies that allow ideas to jump over fences,
those who haven't found the truth. In a somewhat tongue-
disregard borders, evade censors, and leap freely from an
anonymous source into a secret computer hidden in a
Bin Laden's immediate target may have been New York, or
teenager's closet. For cults this is a way of attracting
Madrid, but his goal was to turn moderate, pragmatic
adherents; for fundamentalists these technologies are a
Muslims into "true" believers, into his kind of Muslim.
formidable threat to their ability to control the
Islam, in bin Laden's view, was weakened by "American
epistemological agenda. How will they recreate their
values," and to defend Islam, you must not just hit the West
borders and limit the availability of alternative views? The
and hit it hard, you must eventually convert the West. Peace
answer lies at the heart of the "Clash of Civilizations."
will prevail only when the world is converted not to Islam, but to the most fundamentalist and fierce and rigid form of
Recently a documentary film, The Jesus Camp was
Islam. It will be good for you. Bin Laden essentially loves
shown in Montreal. It illustrated with frightening clarity
you; by his way of thinking September 11 was a labor of
the role of education in shaping the thinking patterns of
love, he did it for your own good, he wants to change you,
impressionable children. Again, I want to emphasize that
it is not so much the content as it is the process of thought
But in a striking juxtaposition, Oz immediately goes on to
that is so important. The film focuses on the work of
Pastor Becky Fischer, an Evangelical Christian, who runs a summer camp called Kids on Fire that prepares children
Very often these things begin in the family. Fanaticism
to be soldiers in God's army. I'll quote from a review by
begins at home. It begins precisely with the very common
urge to change a beloved relative for his or her own good. It begins with the urge to sacrifice oneself for the sake of a
Ms. Fischer understands full well that the indoctrination
dearly loved neighbor; it begins with the urge to tell a child
of children when they are most impressionable (under
of yours, "You must become like me not like your father."
13 and preferably between 7 and 9) with evangelical
Or among married couples, "You have to change, you have
dogma is the key to the movement's future growth, and
to see things my way or else this marriage is not going to
she compares the Kids on Fire to militant Palestinian
training camps in the Middle East that instill an
But if people are not willing to change, if they are not
aggressive Islamist fundamentalism. The term war, as in culture war, is repeatedly invoked to describe the
willing to accept the Truth, fanatic believers are prepared
fighting spirit of a movement already embraced by 30
In October, 2006, at a debate on the grounds of Dublin's
At one point in the film, a 12-year-old home-schooled boy
Trinity College, Omar Brooks, a British-born Muslim
is reading a book ridiculing evolution and mocking the
extremist, said Prophet Mohammed's message to
idea that science has any relevance in his education. One
nonbelievers is: "I come to slaughter you." He went on to
can imagine that if this lad began to question some of the
say, "We are Muslims… We drink the blood of the enemy,
ideas that he is being fed, he would be branded a traitor by
and we can face them anywhere. That is Islam and that is
his community. This, of course, was the fate of Hirsi Ali,
jihad." But another young Muslim in the crowd watching
who rejected the religious values and clan traditions in
the debate waved his finger at the radicals and shouted,
which she was raised. For Amos Oz, being a traitor is a
"This is not ideology. It's mental illness." That too is
good thing because it assumes the capacity to change, to
subject for debate, but who is going to be the delusion detector? Or has delusional thinking already become a
13 "Jesus Camp," film directed by Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady,
15 Radicals vs.moderates: British Muslims at crossroads. CNN.com,
14 Holden, Stephen, New York Times, Sept. 22, 2006.
Wiviott, Gerald (2007) The psychology of fundamentalism
From 9/11 to family life, fundamentalist ways of thinking
themselves. And we have to have the courage to be
are seen to pervade the very fabric of our daily lives. From
traitors, to acknowledge that we have not found the
spouses to nations, from our neighbourhood to the planet,
answer, but rather that we have found an answer that feels
intolerance of differences is tearing us apart. It would be
right for now, and we know that others have found their
funny if it weren't so sad. But, as Oz reminds us, we have
comfortable answers. Some of those answers may seem
to see the humour in it. We have to retain the ability to
delusional to us, as ours may appear to them, but it matters
laugh at ourselves. That is a sure antidote to the
less what is the content than what boundaries contain it.
fundamentalist in us - fundamentalists can't laugh at
References
1. Khadra, Yasmina, The Swallows of Kabul, (trans. John
9. Sharlet, Jeff, Through a Glass Darkly, How the Christian Right is Reimagining U.S. History. Harper's, December, 2006.
2. Hirsi Ali, Ayaan, Infidel, Free Press, 2007.
10. Buber, Martin, I and Thou. Free Press, 1971
3. Krakauer, Jon, Under the Banner of Heaven.
11. Oz, Amos, How to Cure a Fanatic. Princeton
4. Krugman, Paul, Quagmire of the Vanities. New York
5. Dawkins, Richard, The God Delusion. Houghton
13. "Jesus Camp," film directed by Heidi Ewing and
6. Morgan, Stephen, The Mind of a Terrorist
14. Holden, Stephen, New York Times, Sept. 22, 2006.
Fundamentalist. Awe-Struck E-Books, 2001.
15. Radicals vs.moderates: British Muslims at crossroads.
7. Shapiro, Alan, The Last Happy Occasion. University of
* Lawrence Harrison's The Central Liberal Truth, How
8. Brooks, David, New York Times, Jan. 25, 2007.
Politics Can Change a Culture and Save it From Itself provides a background for understanding how culture plays a role in cultivating fundamentalism.
IMPORTANCE OF SYSTEMATIC IDENTIFICATION OF RNA-BINDING PROTEINS IN A HYPERTHERMOPHILIC ARCHAEON 1 Institute for Advanced Biosciences, Keio University, Tsuruoka, Yamagata 997-0017, Japan Tel: +81-235-29-0524; Fax: +81-235-29-0525; E-ma2 Department of Environmental Information, Keio University, Fujisawa, Kanagawa 252-8520, Japan (Received October 26, 2006 Accepted October 30, 2006) Abst
Electron Transport Chain In non-biologic systems, energy is produced in the form of heat by direct reaction between hydrogen and oxygen, then heat can be transformed into mechanical or electric energy. This process is explosive, inefficient and uncontrolled. In biologic systems, the cells use electron transport chain to transfer electrons stepwise from substrates to oxygen. Thus producing ene