Genealogy of Religion

Exploring the Origins, History and Future of Religion

Entries Tagged as 'religious writings'

Literacy & Books: Shaping Religious Experience

August 21st, 2010 · No Comments · Axial Age, Cultural Evolution, Definitions, History

Over at The Atlantic, Heather Horn interviews Andrew Pettegree, who has just written a history of the book titled The Book in the Renaissance.  After pondering the (bright) future of books, they discuss the profound ways in which vernacular books and a literate public forever changed religious experience:
But one mustn’t ignore that the mainstay of [...]

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Triumph of the Texts: Religion as Word

July 26th, 2010 · 1 Comment · Archaeology, Axial Age, Classifications, Definitions, History, Hunter-Gatherers, Methodology, Shamanism

Nearly 5,500 years ago or about 3,500 BCE, the Sumerians began writing about supernatural matters; in a sense, this marks the origin of what most people today understand as “religion.”  This relatively modern and provincially Western understanding of religion is on full display in Paul Raushenbush’s article introducing HuffPo Religion’s new series on religious texts [...]

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The Hydra Head of Islam

July 22nd, 2010 · 2 Comments · Axial Age, Globalization, History, Philosophy

Over at HuffPo Religion, Cynthia Boaz has written an earnest piece that implores Americans to think harder about Islam and not simply demonize it.  I agree with much of what she says but the unfortunate fact is that her plea will fall on few or deaf ears.  Not many religious or political extremists are reading [...]

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