Genealogy of Religion

Exploring the Origins, History and Future of Religion

Entries Tagged as 'religious'

The Professoriate: Surprisingly Religious

October 8th, 2010 · No Comments · Atheism, Daily Devolutions, Philosophy

Among the non-academic public, there is a general perception that university professors are irreligious.  As someone who has long been in and around academics, I have shared this perception and commented on it just the other day.  The actual numbers, it turns out, tell a different and surprising story.
In a recent article, Amarnath Amarasingam discusses [...]

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Making Religious Babies: A Cultural Phenomenon

October 5th, 2010 · No Comments · Cultural Evolution, Ecology, Evolution, Evolutionary Adaptation, Evolutionary Byproduct, Hunter-Gatherers, Shamanism

As I noted in A Tale of Two Religion Scholars, Dr. Michael Blume’s research (which you can find at Homo religious) shows that religious groups out-reproduce their secular counterparts.  The data are solid and correspond to the commandments of most religions: “Be fruitful and multiply.”
Given that religious people make more babies than secular people, Blume [...]

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Those Mystical Henges

July 30th, 2010 · No Comments · Archaeology, Classifications, Definitions, History, Neolithic, Pagans, Ritual

As I stated in The Supernatural and Stonehenge, it is “incredible that ninety percent of the area surrounding one of the most famous megalithic sites in the world has remained largely unexplored.  No wonder there are so many different theories and arguments about who built Stonehenge, why it was constructed, and how [...]

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Galileo: Religious or Secular Saint?

July 24th, 2010 · 2 Comments · Classifications, Definitions, Evolutionary Adaptation, Evolutionary Byproduct, History, Methodology, Shamanism

In the New York Times Science section, Rachel Donadio reports on a museum in Florence that treats Galileo as both a “secular” and “religious” saint; the curators thus commingle two concepts (the secular/religious) that were being developed during the Renaissance and which reached fruition during the Enlightenment:
The Galileo case is often seen starkly as science’s [...]

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