Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The cognitive science of religion: a new alternative in biblical studies
- 2 Past minds: evolution, cognition, and biblical studies
- I Memory and the transmission of biblical traditions
- 3 How religions remember: memory theories in biblical studies and in the cognitive study of religion
- 4 Rethinking biblical transmission: insights from the cognitive neuroscience of memory
- 5 The interface of ritual and writing in the transmission of early Christian traditions
- 6 Computer modeling of cognitive processes in biblical studies: the primacy of urban Christianity as a test case
- 7 “I was El Shaddai, but now I'm Yahweh”: God names and the informational dynamics of biblical texts
- II Ritual and magic
- III Altruism, morality, and cooperation
- Bibliography
- Index of modern authors
- Subject index
5 - The interface of ritual and writing in the transmission of early Christian traditions
from I - Memory and the transmission of biblical traditions
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The cognitive science of religion: a new alternative in biblical studies
- 2 Past minds: evolution, cognition, and biblical studies
- I Memory and the transmission of biblical traditions
- 3 How religions remember: memory theories in biblical studies and in the cognitive study of religion
- 4 Rethinking biblical transmission: insights from the cognitive neuroscience of memory
- 5 The interface of ritual and writing in the transmission of early Christian traditions
- 6 Computer modeling of cognitive processes in biblical studies: the primacy of urban Christianity as a test case
- 7 “I was El Shaddai, but now I'm Yahweh”: God names and the informational dynamics of biblical texts
- II Ritual and magic
- III Altruism, morality, and cooperation
- Bibliography
- Index of modern authors
- Subject index
Summary
Much has been written about the relationship between ritual and writing in the world's religious traditions and societies. Sometimes ritual and literate activities have been taken as opposite poles in typologies of religious traditions. The German Egyptologist and cultural critic Jan Assmann, for example, has distinguished between two types of religion: cult religions and book-based ones. In the latter, the literary texts, in the form of a body of canonical writings, become “the pivotal factor, and ritual is left with only a framing and accompanying function” (Assmann 2006: 122). In cult religions, by contrast, the transmission of religious knowledge is based primarily on the principle of ritual repetition and the text—if a culture is literate—is embedded in the ritual and subordinated to it.
There is no denying that literacy has had an enormous impact on the cultural evolution of religions and societies (e.g., Goody 1986, 1987, 2000; Pyysiäinen 1999; Yunis 2003). It is also beyond doubt that literacy heavily influenced the formation of early Christianity (Gamble 1995; H. G. Snyder 2000; Heines-Eitzen 2000; Klingshirn & Safran 2004). From its earliest beginnings, Christianity was deeply engaged in the careful study and interpretation of the Jewish scriptures and producing its own texts. Part of these texts eventually came to constitute a Christian canon (i.e., a list of books that were acceptable for public reading in the context of worship; Gamble 1995: 215).
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- Mind, Morality and MagicCognitive Science Approaches in Biblical Studies, pp. 62 - 76Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2013