Listen

Description

"The Denial of Death" by Ernest Becker is a comprehensive work synthesising various human sciences to explore humanity's fundamental struggle with the awareness of mortality. The text presents excerpts praising the book's insightful fusion of psychoanalytic and philosophical ideas, particularly those of Rank, to understand how the fear of death shapes human behaviour and the creation of cultural "hero systems." Becker examines how this terror influences childhood development, societal structures like religion, and individual psychological phenomena such as neurosis and transference. The author posits that much of human activity is a defence mechanism against the anxiety of death, driving the need for meaning and self-esteem. The excerpts also touch upon critiques of traditional psychoanalysis and the search for genuine heroism in the face of existential realities, suggesting that confronting our creatureliness is essential for mental well-being. Ultimately, the work grapples with the human condition, the inherent tension between our symbolic selves and our finite bodies, and the illusions we construct to deny death's inevitability.