4.8 • 621 Ratings
🗓️ 24 January 2022
⏱️ 38 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
On today’s episode of The Addicted Mind Podcast, Duane talks with Paul Schulte, the author of We Agnostics: How William James, Father of American Psychology, Advanced A Spiritual Solution to Addiction: How a Venerated Harvard Doctor Inspired the 12 Step Movement.
Paul is going to talk about Williams James's philosophy, what he brought to addiction treatment and addiction care, and how his work strongly influenced the work of Bill Wilson, founder of the 12-step program, Alcoholics Anonymous.
He talks about how William James was able to articulate the theme he saw in human change – something that has been talked about in religious circles and spirituality for over 3,000 years. It’s the theme of a person who is lost, feels broken, and ultimately is able to find serenity and calmness.
With a degree in drug and alcohol addiction counseling, Paul did an internship at the UCLA School of Medicine. There, he was drawn into what was going on with the different types of treatment and the influences of the 12-step movement.
He came across William James’ Book, The Varieties of Religious Experience, which has had a tremendous influence on American life. Paul very much resonated with William’s experiences, how he had developed all of his ideas about the unconscious, and where these urges to suddenly stop what seems like a chronic behavior comes from in humans.
William questions what causes these transformations in humans. Way before Freud developed his idea of the subconscious, William was one of the early pioneers of the subconscious and the desire to move towards a new form of regeneration of the human spirit coming from the subconscious.
In this episode, you will hear:
Key Quotes:
[06:19] - “William James was on to something about the obsession of the mind. But certainly, the spiritual element of trying to get cleaned up. That was a very big quantum leap in the understanding of addiction.”
[10:09] - “I had this thing in me, this weird soul-sickness in the way before I picked up my first drink."
[14:20] - “That feeling of self-loathing, and alienation and fear, which are basically the three marks of that soul sick.”
[14:39] - “The mark of a spiritual experience is twofold. One, life gets bigger. And number two, we feel like we belong and that there's a union with other people.”
[23:26] - “We're not falling apart, when we think we're falling apart, we're actually falling together.”
[27:05] - “It's from this sense of destitution, that we rebuild ourselves, and when all the shams and all the lies of dishonesty are peeled away."
[30:50] - "We don't go around excusing behavior. We forgive the behavior."
[33:57] - “The fundamental point of helping others is self-forgetfulness, and the more that we engage in self-forgetfulness, the better off we are going to be because we get away from that oppressive ego, which wants to reassert itself.”
If you really enjoyed this episode, we’ve created a PDF that has all of the key information for you from the episode. Just go to the episode page at www.theaddictedmind.com to download it.
Supporting Resources:
The Varieties Of Religious Experience: A Study In Human Nature
Episode Credits
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0:00.0 | Hello, everyone. Welcome to the Addicted Mind podcast. |
0:09.6 | My name is Twin Austerlund, and I'm your host, and we are on to another episode. |
0:16.1 | Today's guest is Paul Schulte, and he is the author of the book We Agnostics, |
0:22.9 | How William James, Father of American Psychology, advanced a spiritual solution to addiction, |
0:30.9 | how a venerated Harvard doctor inspired the 12-step movement. |
0:36.3 | So Paul is going to talk about William James' philosophy and what he brought to addiction treatment |
0:49.9 | and addiction care and how his work strongly influenced Bill Wilson's work, the founder of |
0:59.1 | the 12-step program Alcoholics Anonymous, and talk about how William James was able to articulate the theme he saw in human change that has been talked about in religious circles and spirituality for over 3,000 years, that theme that goes through it of a person who is |
1:33.6 | lost, feels broken, is able to find their way out and find serenity and calmness. |
1:45.1 | So in this episode, we dig deep into looking at that and talking about it. |
1:52.8 | I hope you enjoy this conversation as much as I did. |
1:57.6 | It was great to really kind of step back and look at the themes that are there in |
2:06.6 | human change and in that, I guess, I could say, desire to feel different, be different, to get out of our suffering. |
2:23.6 | So I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. And if you are enjoying the Addicted Mind podcast, |
2:31.3 | share it with a friend or write a review in iTunes. I really do appreciate that as well. |
2:36.0 | And think about joining our Facebook group and just go to Facebook, type in the Addicted Mind podcast, click join, and continue the conversation online. |
2:44.9 | All right, everyone, let's go ahead and start this episode. |
2:51.6 | Hello, everybody. Welcome to the addicted mind. My guest is Paul Schulte, and we're going to |
3:00.6 | talk about his book, We Agnostics, How Williams James, Father of American Psychology, |
3:10.3 | advanced a spiritual solution to addiction. Paul, I'm really excited to get into this topic and to talk about it and get your thoughts on it. |
3:16.3 | So first, please introduce yourself. |
3:19.3 | Okay, so yeah, so I'm from LA where you are, and I am Irish-German, and so, you know, |
... |
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