Genealogy of Religion

Exploring the Origins, History and Future of Religion

Entries Tagged as 'Plains Indians'

Dream, Trance, Vision

November 29th, 2011 · 4 Comments · Cognition, Hunter-Gatherers, Shamanism

There can be little doubt that fluctuations in consciousness are a major contributing factor to beliefs in the supernatural. Although there are other aspects of mind that are also contributing factors (such as agency detection, theory of mind, causal sequencing, and pattern imposition), one thing that surely would have mystified or perplexed early modern humans [...]

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Consciousness, Dreams & The Supernatural

September 21st, 2011 · 14 Comments · Cognition, Hunter-Gatherers, Shamanism

The notion of binaries or opposites is deeply entrenched in Western culture and thought. Although it seems perfectly natural to perceive and categorize the world in terms of dichotomies (black-white, either-or), what seems natural is actually learned. Our teacher in this regard is Aristotle, who was so impressed by the Pythagorean Table of Opposites that [...]

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Southern Death Cult: Data & Meaning

March 23rd, 2011 · No Comments · Archaeology, Hunter-Gatherers, Methodology, Power, Shamanism

John Jeremiah Sullivan’s piece on America’s ancient cave art has prompted some thinking — always the sign of good writing. If you haven’t read it yet, you should. Here are some of the things that have me cogitating:
Simek the Scientist v. Reilly the Symbolist

This is not a lawsuit — it is the tension Sullivan establishes [...]

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Spreading Leg Woman?

February 6th, 2011 · 4 Comments · Archaeology, Hunter-Gatherers, Ritual

Over at Discovery, Jennifer Viegas reports on an 11,000 year old piece of elk antler, found in Poland, that is incised with zigzags:

The artifact will be described in the March issue of the Journal of Archaeological Science. Polish archaeologist Tomasz Plonka talked to Viegas about the find:
“The ornament is composed of groups of zigzag lines [...]

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Plains Indian Supernaturalism

December 4th, 2010 · No Comments · Classifications, Definitions, Hunter-Gatherers, Shamanism

Having just finished Robert Lowie’s classic Indians of the Plains (1954), I thought it appropriate to comment briefly on chapter six, which is titled “Supernaturalism.” 
Lowie begins by noting that Indians did not recognize the physical/metaphysical dichotomy that characterizes Western thought, but they “can and did react vehemently to perceptions that are wholly out of the [...]

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Reconstructing Earliest Amerindian Shamanisms

October 1st, 2010 · No Comments · Archaeology, Ecology, History, Hunter-Gatherers, Neolithic, Shamanism

In The Religions of the American Indians, Ake Hultkrantz is clearly interested in reconstructing the supernatural beliefs and practices that the First Americans would have carried with them to the New World.  Because Hultkrantz wrote the majority of the book (in Swedish) in 1967 and updated it for the English translation in 1979, the “Clovis [...]

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Is Belief in Gods Adaptive?

September 20th, 2010 · No Comments · Definitions, Evolutionary Adaptation, Evolutionary Byproduct, History, Hunter-Gatherers, Shamanism

Over at NPR, Alix Spiegel presents a stimulating piece (which you can listen to or read) that asks: Is Believing in God Evolutionarily Advantageous? It seems to me that framing the question in this way suggests certain answers, all of which are neatly ensconced within Western and modern understandings of what constitutes “religion.”  The story’s [...]

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Non-Religious Chimpanzees Cooperate and War for Territory

June 28th, 2010 · No Comments · Cultural Evolution, Ecology, Economy, Evolution, Evolutionary Adaptation, Evolutionary Byproduct, History, Hunter-Gatherers, Neolithic, Power, Shamanism

There have been many articles over the past week reporting that an unusually large group (150 members) of chimpanzees in Kibale National Park, Uganda has been engaging in systematic territorial expansion by attacking and killing neighboring groups.  The Nature article notes that this is “cooperative behavior” and then quotes from the New York Times story:
These [...]

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