Josiah Royce, William James, and the Social Renewal of the “Sick Soul”: Exploring the Communal Dimension of Religious Experience
Religions September 27, 2024 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.3390/rel15091045 via DOAJ
Summary
This essay argues that Josiah Royce's communal model of religious experience complements William James's focus on private, individualistic experience, particularly regarding religious conversion. James's concept of the "sick soul" finding health through conversion is deepened by Royce's emphasis on overcoming alienation through participation in community. The author contends that bringing these two perspectives together offers a more complete account of personal transformation through communal renewal, relevant to contemporary issues of dislocation and self-preoccupation.
Study at a glance
| Design | theoretical or philosophical paper |
|---|---|
| Key finding | James's individualistic account of religious conversion gains depth and coherence when combined with Royce's emphasis on communal participation in overcoming alienation. |
Abstract
In The Sources of Religious Insight, Josiah Royce assesses William James’ pragmatic evaluation of exalted, private religious experience, advanced in The Varieties of Religious Experience as inadequate to encompass the full range of religious experience. Among other contributions, Royce adds social and communal experience to James’ individualistic appraisal. Rather than tacking on to the familiar contemporary critical conversation about the Jamesian restriction to private experience, I argue that James and Royce are helpfully brought together through an understanding of religious conversion: James’ foundational predicament of the “sick soul” returned to health through religious conversion gains depth and coherence through the attention Royce gives to overcoming alienation through communal participation. In our time of dislocation and self-preoccupation, drawing together these two seminal models of religious experience provides an instructive account of the individual’s transformation by way of communal renewal.