Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction: social minds, mental cultures – weaving together cognition and culture in the study of religion
- 2 Explanatory pluralism and the cognitive science of religion: why scholars in religious studies should stop worrying about reductionism
- 3 Early cognitive theorists of religion: Robin Horton and his predecessors
- 4 The opium or the aphrodisiac of the people? Darwinizing Marx on religion
- 5 Immortality, creation and regulation: updating Durkheim's theory of the sacred
- 6 Non-ordinary powers: charisma, special affordances and the study of religion
- 7 Malinowski's magic and Skinner's superstition: reconciling explanations of magical practices
- 8 Towards an evolutionary cognitive science of mental cultures: lessons from Freud
- 9 Piaget on moral judgement: towards a reconciliation with nativist and sociocultural approaches
- 10 Building on William James: the role of learning in religious experience
- 11 Explaining religious concepts: Lévi-Strauss the brilliant and problematic ancestor
- 12 The meaningful brain: Clifford Geertz and the cognitive science of culture
- 13 Cognitive science and religious thought: the case of psychological interiority in the Analects
- 14 Conclusion: moving towards a new science of religion; or have we already arrived?
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - Introduction: social minds, mental cultures – weaving together cognition and culture in the study of religion
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction: social minds, mental cultures – weaving together cognition and culture in the study of religion
- 2 Explanatory pluralism and the cognitive science of religion: why scholars in religious studies should stop worrying about reductionism
- 3 Early cognitive theorists of religion: Robin Horton and his predecessors
- 4 The opium or the aphrodisiac of the people? Darwinizing Marx on religion
- 5 Immortality, creation and regulation: updating Durkheim's theory of the sacred
- 6 Non-ordinary powers: charisma, special affordances and the study of religion
- 7 Malinowski's magic and Skinner's superstition: reconciling explanations of magical practices
- 8 Towards an evolutionary cognitive science of mental cultures: lessons from Freud
- 9 Piaget on moral judgement: towards a reconciliation with nativist and sociocultural approaches
- 10 Building on William James: the role of learning in religious experience
- 11 Explaining religious concepts: Lévi-Strauss the brilliant and problematic ancestor
- 12 The meaningful brain: Clifford Geertz and the cognitive science of culture
- 13 Cognitive science and religious thought: the case of psychological interiority in the Analects
- 14 Conclusion: moving towards a new science of religion; or have we already arrived?
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Cultures are the collective output of human mental abilities.
(Sperber 1985a: 3)The academic study of religion spans many disciplines. Given its thematic rather than methodological orientation, it has always borrowed its tools from diverse academic domains in order to make sense of religious phenomena. And as the field developed in parallel with other social disciplines, it also shares with them common ancestors — some of the founders and greatest figures of disciplines like modern philosophy, psychology, anthropology and sociology are also widely considered to be among the founders of the academic study of religion (McCorkle & Xygalatas 2012).
Cognitive science is also widely interdisciplinary, spanning many scientific domains and levels of analysis, since it emerged as the cumulative result of work in fields as diverse as computer science, linguistics, psychology, philosophy, anthropology and neuroscience. Cognitive science provided a paradigm shift in the study of human behaviour which became known as the “cognitive revolution” (Barkow 2006) and resulted in the abrupt collapse of the previously dominant behaviourist view of human nature. What was revolutionary about this new perspective was that the mind was no longer seen as a blank slate but as a complex computational system that is pre-equipped with universal mental mechanisms that underlie all human thought and behaviour (Pinker 2002). This radically different view of human nature implied a shift not only in theory but also in method.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Mental CultureClassical Social Theory and the Cognitive Science of Religion, pp. 1 - 10Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2013