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8 - The origins of religion, cognition and culture: the bowerbird syndrome

from Part I - EVOLUTIONARY SCENARIOS

Luther H. Martin
Affiliation:
University of Vermont
Armin W. Geertz
Affiliation:
Aarhus University, Denmark
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Summary

[T]he emergence of culture remains a mystery to man. It will so remain as long as he does not succeed in determining, on the biological level, the modifications in the structure and functioning of the brain, of which culture was at once the natural result and the social mode of apprehension.

(Claude Lévi-Strauss 1976: 14)

We wished to awaken the feeling of man's sovereignty by showing his divine birth: this path is now forbidden, since a monkey (ein Affe) stands at the entrance.

(Friedrich Nietzsche [1887] 1971: §4, cited in Foucault 1977: 142)

As long as there are animals to behave and humans to wonder why, cognitive interpretations and explanations will be offered. In our view this is not only permissible, it is often enlightening. Sometimes it is even science.

(Jamieson & Bekoff 1996: 75–6)

Introduction

The pursuit of origins as an explanatory strategy has a long and generally unproductive history of increasingly diminishing returns (Masuzawa 2000). This was especially so during the nineteenth century when this quest, applied to human history, presumed a social-Darwinian view of evolutionary progress in which a natural history replaced but continued to function in the teleological manner of an earlier divine providence.

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Publisher: Acumen Publishing
Print publication year: 2013

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