Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I EVOLUTIONARY SCENARIOS
- 1 Whence religion? How the brain constructs the world and what this might tell us about the origins of religion, cognition and culture
- 2 Why “costly signalling” models of religion require cognitive psychology
- 3 The prestige of the gods: evolutionary continuities in the formation of sacred objects
- 4 The evolutionary dynamics of religious systems: laying the foundations of a network model
- 5 Art as a human universal: an adaptationist view
- 6 The significance of the natural experience of a “non-natural” world to the question of the origin of religion
- 7 Religion and the emergence of human imagination
- 8 The origins of religion, cognition and culture: the bowerbird syndrome
- 9 The will to sacrifice: sharing and sociality in humans, apes and monkeys
- 10 Apetales: exploring the deep roots of religious cognition
- Part II COGNITIVE THEORIES
- Index
3 - The prestige of the gods: evolutionary continuities in the formation of sacred objects
from Part I - EVOLUTIONARY SCENARIOS
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I EVOLUTIONARY SCENARIOS
- 1 Whence religion? How the brain constructs the world and what this might tell us about the origins of religion, cognition and culture
- 2 Why “costly signalling” models of religion require cognitive psychology
- 3 The prestige of the gods: evolutionary continuities in the formation of sacred objects
- 4 The evolutionary dynamics of religious systems: laying the foundations of a network model
- 5 Art as a human universal: an adaptationist view
- 6 The significance of the natural experience of a “non-natural” world to the question of the origin of religion
- 7 Religion and the emergence of human imagination
- 8 The origins of religion, cognition and culture: the bowerbird syndrome
- 9 The will to sacrifice: sharing and sociality in humans, apes and monkeys
- 10 Apetales: exploring the deep roots of religious cognition
- Part II COGNITIVE THEORIES
- Index
Summary
This is an attempt to reflect on some evolutionary connections between the formation of religious objects and what can be called prestige dispositions. I approach the topic as a historian of religion concerned with recurrences in pan-human behaviour, and also with integrative ways of explaining those recurrences such that compatibilities between biological and cultural frames of analysis can be exposed.
The study of religion shows patterned behaviours affected by the presence of stereotypical social representations. In terms of evolutionary theory, these are habitation behaviours that could be considered human versions of environment construction (Odling-Smee et al. 2003) and emergent symbolic cultures (Chase 1999), as well as essentialized cues that amount to dense forms of social eco-capital. Historians of religion and Durkheimian sociologists call them sacred objects and institutions, and forms of worldmaking. These objects have been given analytical value in terms of agency inference and relevance (Boyer 2001; McCauley & Lawson 2002), ritual invariance (Rappaport 1999), commitment devices (Sosis & Alcorta 2004), category boundaries as information-processing cues (Anttonen 2004), pollution avoidance (Boyer 2001: 212–15, 237–40), status (Milner 1994) and earlier, in the work of social anthropologists, kin affiliation and collective order (e.g. Mary Douglas). In broad terms, and in a way that might complement the above, I consider here the evolution of religious complexes as systemic forms of enculturated prestige. Perhaps it adds one more piece to the puzzle.
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- Information
- Origins of Religion, Cognition and Culture , pp. 82 - 97Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2013