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It only remains for us to test our new hypothesis on one or two more
examples of the uncanny.
Many people experience the feeling in the highest degree in relation to
death and dead bodies, to the return of the dead, and to spirits and ghosts. As we
have seen some languages in use to-day can only render the German expression
an unheimlich house’ by ‘a haunted house’. We might indeed have begun our investigation with this example,
perhaps the most striking of all, of something uncanny, but we refrained from doing
so because the uncanny in it is too much intermixed with what is purely
gruesome and is in part overlaid by it. There is scarcely any other matter, however,
upon which our thoughts and feelings have changed so little since the very
earliest times, and in which discarded forms have been so completely preserved under
a thin disguise, as our relation to death. Two things account for our
conservatism: the strength of our original emotional reaction to death and the
insufficiency of our scientific knowledge about it. Biology has not yet been able to
decide whether death is the inevitable fate of every living being or whether it
is only a regular but yet perhaps avoidable event in life. It is true that the
statement ‘All men are mortal’ is paraded in text-books of logic as an example
of a general proposition; but no human being really grasps it, and our
unconscious has as little use now as it ever had for the idea of its own mortality.
Religions continue to dispute the importance of the undeniable fact of individual
death and to postulate a life after death; civil governments still believe that
they cannot maintain moral order among the living if they do not uphold the
prospect of a better life hereafter as a recompense for mundane existence. In our
great cities, placards announce lectures that undertake to tell us how to get
into touch with the souls of the departed; and it cannot be denied that not a
few of the most able and penetrating minds among our men of science have come to
the conclusion, especially towards the close of their own lives, that a contact
of this kind is not impossible. Since almost all of us still think as savages
do on this topic, it is no matter for surprise that the primitive fear of the
dead is still so strong within us and always ready to come to the surface on any
provocation. Most likely our fear still implies the old belief that the dead
man becomes the enemy of his survivor and seeks to carry him off to share his
new life with him. Considering our unchanged attitude towards death, we might
rather enquire what has become of the repression, which is the necessary condition
of a primitive feeling recurring in the shape of something uncanny. But
repression is there, too. All supposedly educated people have ceased to believe
officially that the dead can become visible as spirits, and have made any such
appearances dependent on improbable and remote conditions; their emotional attitude
towards their dead, moreover, once a highly ambiguous and ambivalent one, has
been toned down in the higher strata of the mind into an unambiguous feeling of
piety.¹
¹ Cf. Totem and Taboo.