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Title: Anthropological debates on origin


1
Anthropological debates on origin
  • 02.10.2003

2
Readings
  • Durkheim, E. 1995 1912. The Elementary Forms of
    the Religious Life. New York The Free Press, pp.
    1-12, 34-44, 419-22. (Abridged versions reprinted
    in Lessa and Vogt Lambek)
  • Tylor, E.B. 1873. Primitive Culture. London John
    Murray, Chapter 11. (Reprinted in abridged form
    as Animism in Lessa and Vogt)

3
Theory
  • 1) The study of origin
  • 2) The study of function
  • 3) The study of meaning

4
Discussion topics
  • Roots of evolutionary approach to religion
  • Darwin, Comte, Hegel, Engels
  • Friedrich Max Müller
  • Herbert Spencer
  • Sir Edward B. Tylor
  • Sir James Frazer
  • Emile Durkheim

5
Roots of evolutionary approach to religion (I)
  • Charles Darwin
  • The Origin of Species (1859)
  • theory of biological evolution
  • Led to the interest in social evolution

6
Roots of evolutionary approach to religion (II)
  • Auguste Comte - positivist sociology
  • three stages in the development of human thought
  • 1) Theological stage
  • explanations took form of myths concerning
    spirits and supernatural beings
  • 2) Metaphysical stage
  • explanations of the world in terms of and
    essences, in the manner of Greek idealist
    philosophers (transitional stage)
  • 3) Positivist stage
  • understanding through observation and experiment.

7
Roots of evolutionary approach to religion (III)
  • Hegel Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion
    (1821-31)
  • No religious belief and rite should be rejected
    as superstition, error, and deceit
  • One should get to know what is rational in
    them.
  • three phases of religious consciousness
  • 1) The religion of nature (Die Naturreligion).
  • 2) The religions of spiritual individuality
  • 3) Christianity

8
Hegel (I)
  • Die Naturreligion
  • Spirit is not distinct from nature
  • Magic is the most immediate form of this phase
    of religion.
  • Chinese religion, Hinduism and Buddhism
  • more developed forms of this phase
  • In Zoroastrianism - first signs of the emergence
    of the spiritual element of subjectivity out of
    nature

9
Hegel (II)
  • The religions of spiritual individuality
  • spirit a personal deity independent of the
    natural world
  • Jewish, Greek, and Roman religions
  • religions of sublimity, beauty, and utility
  • God as a transcendental being above the finite
    world of humans and nature

10
Hegel (III)
  • Christianity
  • the separation between God and finite world is
    both annulled and preserved
  • aufgehoben

11
Engels (I)
  • Anti-Dühring (1878)
  • All religion is nothing but the fantastic
    reflection in mens minds of those external
    forces which control their daily life
  • 1) Personification of the forces of nature
  • 2) Personification of social forces
  • 3) One almighty god monotheism

12
Engels (II)
  • links religion to social conditions
  • E.g. Christianity
  • originally a movement of oppressed people
  • arose in the subjected communities of the Roman
    Empire
  • religion will disappear when social conditions
    that give rise to it have ceased to exist ( when
    communism is achieved).

13
Evolutionary approach to religion
  • Second half of the 19th century
  • Are there peoples without religion?
  • Sir Samuel Baker (1866)
  • the Nilotic peoples
  • Religion often treated as
  • an illusion
  • an absurd
  • an intellectual aberration
  • used against Christianity

14
Friedrich Max Müller (1823-1900)
15
Müller (I)
  • Regarded as the father of comparative religion
  • a linguist and a leading Sanskrit scholar
  • famous for his translations of the Vedic
    scriptures
  • the Sacred Books of the East (fifty volumes)
  • Introduction to the Science of Religion (1873)

16
Müller (II)
  • belief in divinity is universal
  • there is truth in all religions, even in the
    lowest.
  • Heathen religion - not the work of the devil
    but rather undeveloped conceptions of god
  • However childish a religion may be, it always
    places the human soul in the presence of god
  • Müllers views were taken up in a modified former
    by later Catholic anthropologists of the
    Kulturkreis school
  • argued that the earlier forms of religion were
    monotheistic

17
Müller (III)
  • focus on religion of the Vedic scriptures - the
    earliest form
  • We see in the Vedic hymns the first revelation
    of Deity, the first expressions of surprise and
    suspicion, the first discovery that behind this
    visible and perishable world there must be
    something invisible, eternal or divine. No one
    who has read the hymns of the Rig-Veda can doubt
    any longer as to what was the origin of the
    earliest Aryan religion and mythologyThe
    deities very names tell us that they were all
    in the beginning names of the great phenomenon of
    nature, of fire, water, rain and storm, of sun
    and moon, of heaven and earth.
  • The idea of the divine the infinite is
    derived from sensory experience
  • experience of awe in the face of mighty forces of
    nature
  • first religious conceptions were derived from the
    personification of natural phenomena.
  • naturism

18
Müller (IV)
  • Criticised by many (eg. folklorist Andrew Lang
    and Durkheim)
  • never had the influence comparable to Spencers
    and Tylors

19
Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)
20
Spencer (I)
  • Principles of Sociology (1876-96)
  • A large section devoted to a discussion of
    religion and religious beliefs of preliterate
    people
  • assumption of the cultural and intellectual
    inferiority of preliterate people
  • essential arguments
  • primitive people are not irrational
  • they make inferences that are in their own
    context valid and reasonable

21
Spencer (II)
  • the genesis of supernatural beliefs
  • Observation of the phenomena of nature, e.g.
  • death and dream experiences
  • temporary insensibility
  • ecstatic states
  • reflections in the water
  • Led to the idea of duality - distinction between
    the body and the soul or spirit

22
Spencer (III)
  • belief in ghosts the basis of the earliest
    supernatural ideas.
  • The idea of ghosts developed into that of gods
  • the ghosts of important ancestors divinities
  • ancestor worship is the root of every religion.
  • a belief in the spirit of the dead was universal
  • totemic beliefs are an aberrant form of ancestor
    worship.
  • polytheism monotheism

23
Sir Edward B. Tylor (1832-1917)
24
Tylor (I)
  • Müller and Spencer armchair scholars
  • Tylor traveled, especially in Mexico
  • a Quaker by religion, and deeply anti-Catholic

25
Tylor (II)
  • Primitive Culture (1872)
  • minimal definition of religion
  • belief in spiritual beings animism
  • ancient savage philosophers - impressed by two
    groups of biological problems
  • 1) what is it that makes the difference between
    a living body and a dead one and what causes
    sleep, trance, disease, death?
  • 2) what are these human shapes which appear in
    dreams and visions?
  • the notion of a human soul or spirit is universal
  • frequent linguistic connection between certain
    ideas - for example, shadow, life, breath and
    the religious concepts of soul and spirit

26
Tylor (III)
  • Evolutionary scheme
  • 1) animism
  • in preliterate cultures - animals, plants, and
    inanimate objects are endowed with souls
  • 2) polytheism
  • the idea of multiple spiritual beings to explain
    natural events and phenomena
  • 3) monotheism
  • animism of civilized man

27
Tylor (IV) - conclusions
  • primitive man was a rationalist and a scientific
    philosopher
  • the notion of spirits was not the outcome of
    irrational thinking
  • preliterate religious beliefs and practices were
    not ridiculous or a rubbish heap of
    miscellaneous folly
  • they were essentially consistent and logical,
    based on rational thinking and empirical
    knowledge.

28
Tylor (V) - criticism
  • The idea of primitive monotheism
  • Andrew Lang
  • the conception of high God evident in many
    tribal communities.
  • Father Wilhelm Schmidt
  • The Origin and Growth of Religion (1912)
  • Urmonotheismus argument
  • monotheism evident among the most archaic
    peoples (the Tasmanian and the Andaman Islanders)
  • such beliefs had later become overlaid with
    polytheistic conceptions

29
Tylor (VI) - criticism
  • Robert Marett
  • the notion of animism was not the most basic
    religious conception
  • the origins of religion were to be found in the
    idea of an impersonal supernatural force or a
    magico-religious conception of sacred power
  • orenda among the Iroquois
  • mana in Melanesia
  • preanimistic stage of religion.

30
Sir James Frazer (1854-1951)
31
Frazer
  • Magic religion science
  • Magic is logically more primitive than religion
    because
  • the conception of personal agents (religion) is
    more complex than the similarity or contiguity of
    ideas (magic).
  • Australian aborigines the most primitive - only
    magic
  • This view is wrong according to many contemporary
    anthropologists)

32
Rationalism vs functionalism in debates on origin
  • Müller, Spencer, Tylor and Frazer rationalistic
    explanation of the origins of religion
  • the idea of religion sprang from rational
    inferences based on individual human experiences
    of oneself or the world
  • Durkheim functionalist explanation of the
    origins of religion

33
Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)
34
Durkheim general (I)
  • evolutionary approach to social life in general
  • dichotomy between mechanical and organic
    solidarity
  • i.e. Traditional and modern societies
  • traditional societies
  • low division of labor,
  • the social structure consisted of a system of
    homogeneous segments
  • integration achieved by a common value system
    (identical beliefs and sentiments)
  • collective norms maintained by repressive
    sanctions

35
Durkheim general (II)
  • Modern societies
  • high division of labor
  • social groups and institutions are heterogeneous
  • solidarity is the outcome not of shared beliefs
    but of mutual interdependence
  • legal sanctions are restitutive rather than
    repressive

36
Durkheim general (III)
  • In his theory of religion, Durkheim influenced by
  • Fustel de Coulanges
  • W. Robertson Smith

37
Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges (1830-1889)
38
Fustel de Coulanges
  • French historian
  • The Ancient City
  • on the relationship between religion and social
    life in classical antiquity
  • Early ancient society
  • organized around the joint family or patrilineage
  • Held together by ancestral cult
  • head of the family acted as a priest
  • ancient city, rather than the family, became the
    primary social institution Deification of
    nature

39
William Robertson Smith (1846-1894)
40
W. Robertson Smith (I)
  • The Religion of the Semites (1889)
  • Semitic societies of ancient Arabia
  • consisted of matrilineal clans
  • each had a relationship to a species of animal
    (totem)
  • clan totemism - the earliest form of religion
  • act of sacrifice as the main ritual
  • an attempt to establish communion with the deity
  • communication between the god and his worshipers
    by joint participation in eating sacramental meal
    expression of unity and solidarity, binding
    clan members to each other and to their god.

41
W. Robertson Smith (II)
  • Important conclusions for Durkheim
  • Emphasis on religion in terms of the social group
    rather than as a form of speculative thought
  • In primitive religion, ritual has primacy over
    beliefs
  • Interpretation of rituals primarily with respect
    to their social function in binding people
    together in the community.
  • religion did not exist for saving of souls but
    for the preservation and welfare of society.

42
Durkheim (I)
  • The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life (1912)
  • It is necessary to study religion in its most
    primitive and simple form
  • followed McLennan and Robertson-Smith -
    totemism as the earliest form of religion.
  • although an atheist, unwilling to believe that so
    widespread human institution as religion was
    based on pure illusion.
  • felt that even the most barbaric and fantastic
    religious rites and myths must be based on some
    human need.

43
Durkheim (II)
  • focused on the religion of the Australian
    aborigines (totemism)
  • the studies by Baldwin Spencer and F.J. Gillin.
  • unwilling to define religion specifically in
    terms of the supernatural or the extraordinary
  • dissatisfied with Tylors minimal definition of
    religion as a belief in spiritual beings.
  • E.g. Buddhism a religion, but the idea of gods
    and spirits are absent.
  • There is a need for a broader definition of
    religion

44
Durkheim (III)
  • the sacred is essential to religion
  • All known religious beliefs, whether simple or
    complex, present one common characteristic they
    presuppose a classification of all the things,
    real or ideal, of which men think into two
    classes generally designated by two distinct
    terms which are translated well enough by the
    words profane and sacred.
  • Sacred ? divine
  • Not just gods and spirits but also rocks, trees
    etc.
  • What makes something sacred is not connection to
    the divine but prohibitions setting it apart
    from the profane

45
Durkheim (IV)
  • Durkheims classic definition of religion
  • a unified set of beliefs and practices relative
    to sacred things, that is to say, things set
    apart and forbidden, - beliefs and practices
    which unite one single moral community all
    those who adhere to them.
  • religion is essentially a collective thing,
  • religion is inseparable from the idea of cult or
    moral community
  • Contrary to magic that is an individualistic
    enterprise

46
Durkheim (V)
  • criticizes the two leading theories of religion
  • animism of Spencer and Tylor
  • naturism of Müller
  • both attempt to derive the idea of the sacred out
    of sensations aroused by natural phenomena,
    either physical or biological.
  • animists - the origin of religion is derived from
    dream experiences
  • naturists - experience of awe in the face of
    mighty forces of nature
  • Durkheim is highly critical of such empiricism
  • gives religious notions an illusory status.
  • ancestral cults take a developed form only in
    China, Egypt and the Greek and Latin cities
  • the elementary form of religous life is
    totemism

47
Durkheim (VI)
  • totemism among the aborigines a complex of
    beliefs, taboos and rituals with certain
    underlying features
  • cult groups (initiated men), that meet to perform
    rituals at totemic sites that are deemed sacred
    (associated with certain ancestral spirits or
    mythical beings).
  • Each group is associated with a specific totem
    (usually an animal species)
  • there are dietary restrictions associated with
    such species
  • Each totemic group has a collection of ritual
    objects (eg. churingas)

48
Durkheim (VII)
  • sources of the sacred
  • 1) totemic emblem essential to totemic belief
  • a design that represents the clans totemic
    entity
  • confers sacredness to whatever it is marked on
  • marks the sacred away from the profane (cannot be
    touched etc)
  • 2) totemic entity animal or plant species
  • dietary prohibitions
  • 3) human clan members
  • use of blood and bodily parts in the rituals

49
Durkheim (IX)
  • totemism not essentially about the totemic entity
    or the emblem but about the clan itself
  • the experience of the social group alone can
    generate in people intense feelings that sustain
    religion
  • totemic religion arose from collective tribal
    life style

50
Durkheim (X)
  • Discussion of ritual / mass gatherings
  • ritual events - generate a heightened emotional
    state - delirium or collective effervescence
  • The function of rituals
  • to strengthen the bonds attaching the believer to
    god
  • to strengthen the bonds attaching the individual
    to the social group
  • Through ritual, the group becomes conscious of
    itself.

51
Durkheim (XI)
  • Some major critical objections to Durkheim
  • Too rigid separation between the sacred and the
    profane
  • many hunter-gatheres like the Andamanese lack
    corporate kin groups and totems but do have
    religion (Goldenweiser)
  • religion establishes and reaffirms group
    solidarity and has symbolic significance for a
    society.
  • But society is not a homogeneous entity but
    divided into social categories based on sex,
    class, ethnic affiliation etc.
  • religious beliefs may have an ideological
    function legitimating the domination of one group
    or class over another (Giddens)

52
Weber
  • A unifying theme of Webers sociology is the
    notion of the progressive rationalization of life
    as the main directional trend of Western society.
    Like Marx, Spencer and Durkheim, Weber was
    essentially an evolutionary thinker and was
    preoccupied with the dissolution of traditional
    European culture and society, the rise of modern
    science and industrial capitalism, and the
    increasing bureaucratization and political
    centralization.

53
Weber
  • Webers writings on the sociology of religion,
    leaving aside the essays on the Protestant ethic,
    fall into two categories
  • First there are Collected Essays in the Sociology
    of Religion which, includes Webers most
    important discussions of the religions of China,
    India and ancient Palestine
  • Second there is an important section entitled The
    Sociology of Religion that forms a part of
    Webers vast systematic treatise Economy and
    Society.

54
Weber
  • Unlike Durkheim, Weber refused to define
    religion. Definition of such a complex phenomenon
    as religion can be attempted, Weber suggests,
    only at the conclusion of a study. But he implies
    that a belief in the supernatural is universal
    and found in all early forms of society. Tribal
    religion, however, although relatively rational
    Weber considered to be essentially magical and
    ritualistic and oriented toward this world.
    Elementary forms of religion, he suggests are
    focused on mundane, worldly concerns health,
    rain making, prosperity. Thus, he writes
  • religious or magical behavior or thinking must
    not be set apart from the range of everyday
    purposive conduct, particularly since even the
    ends of religious and magical acts are
    predominately economic.
  • The distinction, therefore, between natural
    causation and magic is a modern one that is not
    applicable to preliterate thought, which implies
    a different kind of distinction, namely the
    degree to which objects and persons are endowed
    with extraordinary powers. Weber used the term
    charisma to refer to such powers. Folk concepts
    such as orenda and mana refer to this
    natural endowment. Weber suggests, then that
    preliterate thought is essentially naturalistic
    and preanimistic.

55
Weber
  • The oldest of all vocations, therefore, Weber
    suggests, is that of the diviner, the magician or
    shaman who is permanently endowed with charisma
    and who, though the induction of narcotics and
    other procedures, is able to experience ecstatic
    states. The concept of soul, Weber argues, is by
    no means universal and is denied even by
    religions of salvation like Buddhism. Rather, the
    ideas such as the soul and spiritual concepts
    such as gods and demons develop as part of a
    process whereby magic is transformed from a
    direct manipulation of forces into a symbolic
    activity.

56
Weber
  • Weber therefore saw a preanimistic naturalism
    as being transformed into mythological
    thinking, a pattern of thought that is the
    basis of the fully developed circle of symbolic
    concepts. The importance of analogy is stressed
    in this substantive evolution of culture, which
    implies an unalterable cosmic order. Analogical
    thinking originated in the region of magic, which
    is based completely on analogy, rationalized into
    symbolism.
  • With the development of culture, this implied, as
    in Roman religion, that each spirit had a
    specialized function, although Weber did not see
    any simple relationship between religious
    concepts and social patterns. It could not be
    argued, he suggests, that the development of
    Mother Earth as a goddess simply reflects the
    development of a matriarchal clan organization.
    But he notes that the belief that earth
    divinities are inferior to celestial personal
    gods often follows the development of feudalism
    and that there is a close relationship between
    ancestral cults and the patriarchal structure of
    the economy.

57
Weber
  • Like Durkheim, Weber argues that religion acts as
    a cohesive force, unifying members of a
    household, clan, or tribal confederation. The
    primary bond of the household or kin group in
    tribal societies is the relationship to the
    spirits of the ancestors. Likewise the Greek
    polis, as well as decentralized patrimonial
    states and such early theocratic sates as Egypt
    and China were essentially religious and cult
    associations. In China, for example, the emperor
    was also the high priest who monopolized the cult
    of the spirits of nature.
  • With the development of religion, the primacy of
    local deities or even of a simple transcendental
    god come crystallized, but this in no way
    eliminated the ancient magical notions. Instead
    it produced a dual relationship between humans
    and the supernatural domain. Thus a dichotomy
    arises between the shaman/magician ad the priest,
    and between magic and religion.

58
Weber
  • The unity of the primitive image of the world, in
    which everything was concrete magic, tends to
    split, Weber writes, into rational cognition and
    mastery of nature, on the one hand, and into
    mystic experiences, on the other. Whereas
    magical rites have an essentially manipulative or
    coercive character, religious development implies
    an increasing predominance of non-magical
    motives. Weber uses the terms magic and religion
    as ideal types, noting that religion, practically
    everywhere, contains numerous magical components.

59
Weber
  • With respect to this systematization of sacred
    ordinances, particularly as indicated in the
    religious systems of India, Egypt, China, and
    Babylonia, Weber writes
  • The process of rationalization favored the
    primacy of universal gods and every consistent
    crystallization of a pantheon followed systematic
    rational principles to some degree, since it was
    always influenced by professional sacerdotal
    rationalism or by the rational striving for order
    on the part of secular individuals.
  • Weber thus saw such rational cosmological systems
    as intrinsically linked with bureaucratic states
    and the stability of their social orders. The
    development of large empires and the need for
    orderly legislation is seen as parallel to the
    increasing scope pf a rational comprehension of
    an eternal, enduring and orderly cosmos.
  • Taboos are also seen as the first and the most
    general instance of harnessing religion to
    extra-religious purposes economic and social
    interests. It is of interest here to note that
    Weber denied the universality of totemism,
    suggesting that the derivation of all groups and
    all religion from totemism was an exaggeration.
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