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SOC1016A-Lecture

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Title: SOC1016A-Lecture


1
SOC1016A-Lecture
  • Religion and cosmologies

2
Last time
  • How can we make sense of the acts and emotions of
    distant peoples (in space, in time)? Is it
    possible? Is it right?

3
Why exploring distant ways of feeling, thinking,
doing?
  • Because they can be enlightening about what is
    most characteristic of human societies culture

4
Culture
  • Culture is at the same time what is common to all
    human beings who live in societies and what
    distinguishes societies from one another.
  • It is at the same time about ways of thinking AND
    about ways of doing about ideas and about
    action, about what we think and what we do.
  • A culture is a whole, something that integrates
    parts (beliefs, rules, norms, patterns of
    behaviour, the place everything/one has in a
    society and in the world).
  • A culture is shared and exists within a group, it
    pre-exists the individual and is transmitted to
    him/her, it is learned.

5
  • Edward B. Tylor on culture (1871)
  • That complex whole which includes knowledge,
    beliefs, arts, morals, law, custom and any other
    capabilities and habits acquired by man as a
    member of society.
  • Ruth Benedict (1929) that complex whole which
    includes all the habits acquired by man as a
    member of society

6
  1. Culture universal human phenomenon studied by
    anthropology. A defining characteristic of human
    condition (what all humans share).
  2. Particular cultural phenomena studied by
    anthropologists as they explore cultural
    processes (ritual, symbol, kinship structure,
    etc.).
  3. Traits, ideas, values, behaviours that
    characterise specific human groups (i.e. Japanese
    culture).

7
Religion
  • Why focus on religion?
  • It is a way of studying culture

8
  • We will explore this topic with Emile Durkheims
    The Elementary Forms of Religious Life (1912).
  • Why Durkheim? He is known as one of the founding
    fathers of sociology.

9
Durkheim studied social facts as things What
are social facts? Ways of thinking and of doing
which are not psychological nor purely
biological, they are external to the individual,
and can have upon the individual consciousness a
certain coercive influence. Why are they
things? Cannot be studied, known, understood
via introspection, but by observation. We wont
find the answer inside us, they correspond to a
reality that is external to each individual the
social.
10
  • Why using Durkheim in anthropology?
  • Because his approach is anthropological
  • Relativism
  • Universalism
  • Studying particular and distant cultures will
    tell us something about the human. The particular
    here are the totemic religions of Australia,
    which he identifies as the simplest religious
    systems which should give us the keys to
    understand religion as a universal phenomenon we
    find in all human societies.

11
What is religion?
  • Durkheim criticises previous studies on religion
    (Spencer, Tylor) where religion was seen either
    as originating in
  • a psychological need of the individual to
    understand a duality of the self the man who
    dreams thinks he is body soul he travels and
    sees the dead in his dreams for instance.
  • from a need to explain the natural world. Here
    religion was seen as an attempt to reflect the
    natural world.
  • These approaches lead to see religious systems as
    irrational and not reflecting reality as
    delirium.
  • Durkheim it cannot be, the primitive is not
    stupid. Religions are universal, they reflect
    something different, their function must be
    another one.
  • RELIGIONS DIVIDE THE WORLD INTO TWO DISTINCT
    CATEGORIES THE SACRED AND THE PROFANE
  • Is religion the same as magic then?

12
Religion is different from magic
RELIGION MAGIC
Common beliefs that bound believers of a defined collectivity A church which foundation is always a defined group a church is a moral body Believers and priests participate to religious acts The violation of a religious prohibition is sacrilege, it is a sin, that who violates religious prohibitions puts herself in physical/psychological danger BUT ALSO at social risk for he has broken the order of society Can be spread among large population but no bond between followers into a single group living same life no moral body A magician has a clientele made of unrelated individuals who may even be unaware of each others existence Only the magicians make the magic, clients are not included The violation of a magical prohibition makes the violator run personal risks, but there is no notion of sin. It is like the patient who does not follow the treatment that has been given to him by a doctor.
13
Totemic systems and religion
  • Religion is a symbolic representation of society
    the totem is a sacred symbol which stands for the
    clan, the phratrie is what links different clans.
  • Religion is a symbolic representation of a force
    that is outside the individual, that pre-exists
    him.
  • This force is real and individuals feel it
  • when they are together and follow rituals
    society is only felt as a collective
  • when they feel its coercive power individuals
    feel respect for society and this is expressed
    through their respect for moral obligations.
  • The sacredness is this force individuals feel as
    members of a group, a force that makes them
    capable of more.
  • But this implies a discipline controlling
    instincts, immediate desires, being driven by
    purely individualistic needs.
  • Society does the same as religion here living in
    society, participating of its sacredness, imposes
    upon each of us a discipline, the control of our
    instincts, impulses, immediate desires.

14
  • Gods, religion, are the symbolic expression not
    of nature or of the world as an abstract entity,
    but of society.
  • ANYTHING CAN BE SACRED
  • ANYTHING CAN BE MADE SACRED
  • ANYTHING CAN CEASE TO BE SACRED

15
  • This is the universal, anthropological conclusion
    of Durkheim after having studied a case study,
    he gets to this general conclusion
  • Religious life answers everywhere to the same
    need and derives form the same state of mind. In
    all its forms its purpose is to raise man above
    himself and to make him live a superior life to
    the one he would lead if he were only to obey his
    individual impulses. Beliefs express this life in
    terms of representations, rites organise it and
    regulate its functioning. (309)
  • How is this possible? Individuals are born into
    existing societies, the force of society is felt
    by individuals. They are educated, introduced to
    the ways of thinking and doing of a specific
    society, that is, to culture. And they are
    introduced to what is sacred in this culture.

16
  • Remember
  • Cultures are integrated systems including ways of
    thinking and ways of doing.
  • Religion is what is sacred, holy.

17
Cosmologies
Cosmologies are part of culture and are reflected
in religion as systems of beliefs. A cosmology is
a system of broad ideas and explanations people
have about the world in which they live and their
place in that world.
18
  • Mary Douglas and the fiction of the speleology
    mission
  • (Douglas, How Institutions Think, 1986 4-8)
  • Douglas argument is inspired from an article by
    Lon Fuller, a philosopher of law (The case of
    the Speluncean Explorers, Harvard Law Review,
    1949, 62 614-645).

19
  • 5 speleologist in a cave
  • Rescue team
  • They are told they do not have enough food to
    survive until the cave is open
  • Eating one of them would keep them alive until
    rescued
  • What will they do?
  • Original story they decide to throw a dice that
    would designate one of them as the one who will
    be eaten for the sake of the others.
  • They are judged by a Court when freed.

20
  • Douglas imagines 3 possibilities depending on the
    kind of society the speleologists were originally
    from, depending on their cosmology
  • They come from a hierarchical/tightly structured
    society (the chief, the youngest or the eldest
    may be sacrificed)
  • They come from a religious sect (they will
    celebrate and wait for death as deliverance)
  • They come from our society (they may choose
    arbitrary one to be sacrificed cannibalism with
    guilt they would be judged when freed).

21
  • Only the individualists, bound by no ties to one
    another and imbued by no principles of solidarity
    would hit upon the cannibal gamble as the proper
    course. (Douglas, 1986 8)

22
Conclusion
  • It is this principle of solidarity, at the origin
    of the social bond that members of a society feel
    exists outside and inside themselves, that is at
    the core of religion, of the idea of the sacred
    in all societies.
  • Anything can be (made) sacred an object (ie a
    flag), a person, an idea, an institution.
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