Genealogy of Religion

Exploring the Origins, History and Future of Religion

Entries Tagged as 'anthropomorphism'

Lost in (Western) Translation

June 2nd, 2011 · 2 Comments · Classifications, Cultural Evolution, History, Hunter-Gatherers

There is a sense in which we are all cultural narcissists. By this, I mean that because all of us are acculturated at a particular time and in a particular place, we have a strong tendency to view other times and places through our own cultural lens. These lenses are prismatic and what we see [...]

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The Belief Instinct

February 3rd, 2011 · 9 Comments · Cognition, Evolutionary Adaptation, Evolutionary Byproduct, History, Shamanism

In a few days Jesse Bering’s new book, The Belief Instinct, will be published in the United States. It has already been published in the UK as The God Instinct. The title change seems a bit odd and the opposite of what one might have expected. Something like ninety percent of Americans believe in God, [...]

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Stephen Hawking on Religion: “Science Will Win”

July 19th, 2010 · 1 Comment · Archaeology, Axial Age, Cognition, Cultural Evolution, History, Hunter-Gatherers, Neolithic, Power

Over at ABC News, Ki Mae Heussner reports on a Diane Sawyer interview of the renowned physicist Stephen Hawking with this contentious headline: “Stephen Hawking on Religion: Science Will Win.”  This is an unfortunate banner.  During the interview, Sawyer asked if religion and science could be reconciled.  Hawking’s response was profoundly unhelpful:
“There is a fundamental [...]

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Sumerian Spiritualism: The Earliest Organized Religion

June 27th, 2010 · 4 Comments · Archaeology, Cultural Evolution, Ecology, Economy, History, Neolithic, Pagans, Power

It was with great sadness that I read a recent article in the New York Times documenting the pillaging and destruction of Mesopotamian archaeological sites in Iraq.  Although these Sumerian, Akkadian, and Babylonian sites — and previous excavations — receive scant attention outside small groups of antiquities scholars, they are of critical importance to our [...]

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Inviting God to Dinner — Evangelical Make Believe

March 8th, 2010 · No Comments · Cognition, Evolutionary Byproduct, Shamanism

Andrew Brown from The Guardian recently attended a talk by Tanya Luhrman, a cultural anthropologist at Stanford who is studying the charismatic Christian Vineyard churches in California.  Having attended similar churches in my youth, I was particularly interested in the kinds of things an ethnographer might have observed.  Brown’s report provides some context:
The Vineyard churches [...]

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