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Origins of Religion, Cognition and CultureEdited by: Armin W. Geertz
Description It has often been said that the origins of religion, cognition and culture are beyond the ken of modern man. And yet, it is the most interesting, challenging and provocative of topics inthe natural and human sciences. Perhaps our origins are no longer as murky today as for previous centuries. The past twenty years have startled the world with major advances in a wide variety of disciplines and sciences: evolutionary psychology, cognitive archaeology, neuroscience, ethology, developmental psychology, social psychology, cognitive linguistics, palaeo-anthropology and genetics. These advances have significantly impacted on comparative religion and have led to the establishment of a burgeoning new field called the cognitive science of religion. This new field has succeeded in casting new light on age-old problems. Efforts to discover and explain the evolutionary origins of Homo sapiens sapiens have led to a wide variety of hypotheses attempting to decide what is particularly human about human beings. We witnessed such memorable ideas as the Grandmother Hypothesis, the aquatic ape, man the tool-maker, man the hunter, woman the gatherer, crossing symbolic thresholds, the speaking ape, social intelligence, the Great Hominid Escape, mankind’s epistemic hunger, the hybrid mind, and so on. All of these attempts to understand the origins of humanity have raised fundamental questions about the complex relationship between cognition and culture. Are they two sides of the same coin? Or is culture epiphenomenal to other more basic processes? And how does religion fit into the picture? Central to the debates on origins is the role of religion, religious ritual and religious experience. What came first: individual religious (ecstatic) experiences, collective observances of transition situations, fear of death, ritual competence, magical coercion, mirror neurons or temporal lobe religiosity? Together with the development of symbolic thinking, the role of material culture, written language and abstract thought in the development of religious systems are all central to the humanities and social sciences. Cognitive scientists are now providing us with important insights on phylogenetic and ontogenetic processes. Together with insights from the humanities and social sciences on the origins, development and maintenance of complex semiotic, social and cultural systems, a general picture of what is particularly human about humans could emerge. Reflections on the preconditions for symbolic and linguistic competence and practice are now within our grasp. The papers in this volume were presented at a conference held in Aarhus, Denmark in 2006. Presented by an exciting group of internationally respected scholars as well as innovative younger scholars from Scandinavia and abroad, and from a wide range of disciplines, these papers explore the interstices of religion, cognition and culture and, in the process, put culture centerstage in the cognitive science of religion. Contents Evolutionary scenarios William E. Paden: The prestige of the gods: Evolutionary continuities in the formation of sacred objects Ellen Dissanayake: Art as a human universal: An adaptationist view Luther H. Martin: The origins of religion, cognition and culture: The bowerbird syndrome Armin W. Geertz: The origins of morality and religion David A. Warburton: One version of the origins of religion Henrik Høgh-Olesen: The will to sacrifice: Sharing and sociality in humans, apes, and monkeys István Czachesz: The Evolutionary Dynamics of Religious Systems Joseph Bulbulia: Why “costly-signalling” models of religion require cognitive psychology Archaeology Pierre Liénard & Jesper Sørensen: Tools for thought Peter Jackson: The recognition of religion: Archeological diagnosis and implicit theorizing Mads Jessen & Niels Nørkjær Johannsen: Religion and the extra-somatics of conceptual thought Cognitive theories Jeppe Sinding Jensen: Cognition and meaning William W. McCorkle Jr.: From corpse to concept: A cognitive theory on the ritualized treatment of dead bodies Thomas Hoffmann: “Peekaboo!” and object permanence: On the play of concealment and appearance in cognition and religion Andreas Lieberoth: Religion and the emergence of human imagination Gretchen Koch: Care of the soul: Empathy in a dualistic worldview Uffe Schjødt: Modes of religious behavior Language, narrative and philosophy Mark Addis: Wittgenstein and the naturalness of religious belief Tom Sjöblom: Apetales: Exploring the deep roots of religious cognition William S. Waldron: Buddhist views on the causal relation between language, cognition and the evolution of worlds Tamás Bíró: Liturgical linguistics: Towards the syntax of communicating with the super-human agent in Judaism Peter Westh: Anthropomorphism in god concepts: The role of narrative Specifications
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