Secularization of Healthcare: A Zizekian Model

Thomas Hampton

Abstract


In The Sublime Object of Ideology, Slavoj Žižek tells a story about Buddhist prayer wheels in Tibet as a model of secularization: a belief machine.  When routine actions are being performed, the animating principles or belief are no longer foregrounded in the process.  While the developers of the scientific method were mostly devout Christians and believed in God’s direct involvement in the affairs of earth, carefully repeating situations through controlled experiments convinced them any potential variance in the processes they investigated could be ignored.  Applied generally, through the process of secularization, religious acts are automated so that people can go about their business without requiring constant awareness of God’s presence.  While the foundations of science and innovations in healthcare have many connections with religion, the professionalization of medicine acts as a superstructure supporting the belief.  A Christian hospital today is like a prayer flag in the wind: operating automatically through set policies but actualizing theology through its repetition of care.

Keywords


Secularization; Žižek; Healthcare

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