According to at least one scholar, there are fundamentalist strains within at least four of the world's major religions: Hinduism, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. If so, this would suggest to me that fundamentalism has some sort of psychological basis. That is, a basis in something, such as human psychology, that transcends any particular religion. For if fundamentalism were wholly a product of religion, then we would not likely see it in more than one religion, and certainly not in dissimilar religions.
So what is the ultimate basis of fundamentalism?
I lean towards thinking of fundamentalism as based or rooted in two distinct personality types. First, the authoritarian leader personality type, and second the authoritarian follower personality type. In fact, there seems to be little about fundamentalism that ultimately cannot be in whole or part explained as a product of those two personality types. Especially if one recognizes that fundamentalist religions are more or less religions "as seen through the eyes of" those two types.
So, for instance, fundamentalist Christianity is Christianity "as seen through the eyes of" authoritarian personality types. Fundamentalist Judaism is Judaism "as seen through the eyes of" authoritarian personality types. And so on....
Last, fundamentalism not only transcends any particular religion, but it transcends religion all together. This is consistent with it being rooted in -- not any specific religiosity -- but a type of personality. So, for instance, both Nazism and Soviet Style Communism are essentially political systems built by authoritarians and, in effect, secular fundamentalisms.
But what do you think are the roots of fundamentalism? Why?
So what is the ultimate basis of fundamentalism?
I lean towards thinking of fundamentalism as based or rooted in two distinct personality types. First, the authoritarian leader personality type, and second the authoritarian follower personality type. In fact, there seems to be little about fundamentalism that ultimately cannot be in whole or part explained as a product of those two personality types. Especially if one recognizes that fundamentalist religions are more or less religions "as seen through the eyes of" those two types.
So, for instance, fundamentalist Christianity is Christianity "as seen through the eyes of" authoritarian personality types. Fundamentalist Judaism is Judaism "as seen through the eyes of" authoritarian personality types. And so on....
Last, fundamentalism not only transcends any particular religion, but it transcends religion all together. This is consistent with it being rooted in -- not any specific religiosity -- but a type of personality. So, for instance, both Nazism and Soviet Style Communism are essentially political systems built by authoritarians and, in effect, secular fundamentalisms.
But what do you think are the roots of fundamentalism? Why?