Title: Civilizations and world religions
1Civilizations and world religions
- 3. Lecture.
- The religious freedom
2The elements of evolutionary theory of religion
- 1. The interpretation of the origins of religion
by the help of basic catherogies of evolution,
(such as inheritance, mutation, selection,
adaptation, etc.) - 2a. The interpretation of religion as a social,
gadgeteered construction, as an adaptation, (a
function that helps the survival). - 2b. The presentation of such functions, which
helps the individuals and the group to solve
certain problems in the actual situation, or in
the actual level of evolution. (So, due to which
function it is an adaptation, and not a
by-product or a bug). - 3. The understanding of why is the unfolding of
evolutionary story that lead to the present,
(just so story). In evolution the answer to a
question is always a story.
3What is religion? In the prespective of
evolutionary theory
- 1. Religion is a cultural universal it could
be found in every known present and past (after
its material mementos known) societies. - Concerning sociologists (Durkheim, Murdock,
Lévi-Strauss, Donald Brown, etc.) a cultural
universal is an element, pattern, trait, or
institution that is common to all human cultures
worldwide.
4The sacred and the profane.Initial remarks
- Every particular religion has religious texts and
documents, rituals, festivals, holy items,
sacred places. Has a sacred account about the
totality of the world and being. - This means, that every particular religion has
its institutionalized, canonized form of
religious experience. At the core of religious
experience lie the distinctions between sacred
and profane, this-world and other-world. The
positive religions give an institutionally
articulated form to these basic distinctions. - The conception of transcendence or the sacred is
always embedded into a special cultural context.
This could be a source of conflicts between
different cultures. What one culture considers
sacred, is not sacred for another cultural
community, or even the antagonistic opposition of
holy the unholy. Some religions regard other as
counter-religions, and fanatics sometimes
desecrate the counter-religions holy symbols. - Conflict American soldiers burnt Korans in
Afghanistan a few days ago, which caused a huge
wave of protestation there.
5Mircea Eliade.Life and work
- Mircea Eliade born Bucharest, 1907 deceased
Chicago, 1986. Romanian theorist and historian of
religion, father of modern religious studies. - Most essential works The Sacred and the Profane
The Nature of Religion (1956), History of
Religious Ideas I-III (1968), The Myth of Eternal
Return Cosmos and History (1969). - Other important works Yoga Immortality and
Freedom, Shamanism Archaic Techniques of
Ecstasy, Occultism, Witchcraft, and Cultural
Fashions, Images and Symbols Studies in
Religious Symbolism. - Was a supporter and an ideologist of the romanian
Iron Guard, in the 1930es. For this reason he had
to spend three weeks in prison, in 1938. - Because of his earlier radical rightist views he
had to go to exile on September 16,1945 he moved
with his daughter to France. Due to his
friendship with Georges Dumézil he got a position
of a lecturer in Paris, (École pratique des
hautes études). - In October 1956, he moved to the United States,
settling in Chicago, and became the professor of
Chicago University. There has been organised a
school of researchers around Eliade.
6Main ideas.Basic structures of religious
experience
- According to Eliade the idea of a homogeneous
space and time of the modern man is a result of a
long cultural development. - The space and time of the modern man is
homogeneous, every point of it is equal to the
other. - On the contrary the archaic, premodern,
religious man had an inhomogeneous space and
time. This means that the space and time of
archaic man had special points. - For the archaic /premodern/religious man it meant
a difference of sacred space and time as opposed
to profane space and time. - Sacred space the holy place, the sacred ground
where the religious man had a special connection
with transcendence. Sacred time the holy time,
the religious fest, when a special event of the
religions mythical history returned.
7The sacred and the profane
- In Eliades opinion the most fundamental
structure of religious experience is the
experience of the sacred. The sacred is the
manifestation of the transcendence. The
difference of sacred and profane could be found
in every known religion. - According to Eliade this structure of experience
could be found even at modern, secular,
non-religious man. The cult of politicians,
political leaders in totalitarian regimes, and
pop-stars in modern popular culture is a
reminiscence of this experience, (the sacred
person). In Eliades interpretation this is a
sign that religious experience is in a way
inherent to the human being, it is a necessary
structure of human existence. - The differentiation of sacred and profane comes
originally from Émile Durkheim, (The elementary
forms of religious life, 1912) who used this
distinction in his descriptions of totem and
taboo of natural, primitive religions. - But it was Eliade who worked out an overall
conception on the basis of this distinction, to
characterize religion in its essence, in general.
8Hierophany, epiphany, theophany.
- Eliade used mostly the term hierophany to
characterize the phenomenon of the sacred. The
term hierophany signifies the manifestation of
the sacred. Hierophany is a greek expression
hieros sacred, phainein to reveal. - A strongly correlative term for hierophany is
epiphany. Epiphany means in ancient greek
language epiphaneia, manifestation, striking
appearance. The epiphany is insight or
illumination through the divine or the
supernatural. - Theophany is a more restrictive term for
hierophany. Theophany means the appearance of a
god. So it is a more concrete understanding of
hierophany, as it refers to a concrete form of
transcendence, namely to a godly or divine
transcendence.
9The sacred place
- For the ancient man there were sacred places in
space, which were considered by them as central
points in the world. - Usually there were several central sacred places,
and a hierarchy of these points. So there was a
centre of centres or a highest centre for a
certain religious community. - E.g. three very favoured places of pilgrimage in
Medieval Christianity were 3. the Purgatory of
Saint Patrick (Ireland), 2. Santiago de
Compostella (Spain, the tomb of Apostle Saint
James), 1. Rome, (Italy). But there was a centre
of centres Jerusalem, (Israel). Jerusalem was
also the highest centre for Judaic (Jewish) and
Muslim religions. - But over and above these major and highest
centre, there were, so to say minor centers
the church and temple for every single religious
community. In medieval communities the church
counted as the centre of the particular community.
10Axis mundi
- This symbolism of the centre, or of the centres,
according to Eliade, goes back to a fundamental
structure of religious experience, which he
called axis mundi (axis of world). - For the proper religious community axis mundi was
the centre of the entire world, and also a
channel between the region of mortals and the
region of deities, of divine transcendence. - The religious leaders of the group in question
(shamans, witch-doctors, clerics, priests etc.),
those who know the proper rituals, could easily
communicate with the divine forces at these
world-centres. - All known religions knew centers of this kind.
The more archaic religions had these highest
centre in a very concrete form the mountain
Olympus for the Greeks, or the Yggdrasil, the
World Tree for the old Nordic, German, Viking
tribes. - The more developed a religion was, the more
abstract the idea of this centre became. In
monotheistic world-religions (on a certain degree
of development) these centers gained a merely
symbolic meaning.
11Sacred time. The festival
- The more important points (points of
articulation, of orientation) of time for
religious person were religious holidays or
festivals. - Eliade criticized Carl Gustav Jung, who claimed
that the religious person commemorated the
important events of the mythical history of the
particular religion in question. - According to Eliade religious festivals were
something much more stronger than mere
commemorations. In his opinion festivals were a
sort of Eternal Return. - The ancient, premodern person did not only
commemorate the fundamental events of his or her
religions mythical pre-history. For him or her
those events returned and repeated during the
sacred time of festivals, in quite a literal way. - As the sacred places, the sacred times too meant
a channel through the world into the transcendent
domain.
12Eternal Return and the Terror of History
- In Eliades interpretation the archaic/premodern
man lived in a rather cyclic world. For him/her
the world was an Eternal Return or repetition of
days, seasons, years and mythical events. The
born and death of Sun God, the born and death of
barley (Eleusinian Mysteries!), the born and
death of entire generations. - The New Year ceremonies amongst Mesopotamians,
Egyptians, and other Near Eastern peoples
re-enacted their cosmogonic myths. Each and every
New Year ceremony was the beginning of the World
in real. - According to Eliade, the linear view of history
and time is a modern construction, which is based
on the Eschatology of major monotheistic
religions, (Judaism, Islam, Christianity). - Eliade refers with the term The Terror of
History to the modern, secularized conception of
historical time, which was entirely empty of the
sacred. In Eliades interpretation the ancient
man had a living connection with transcendence,
due to its contact with the mythical age through
the Eternal Return. Therefore the ancient people
were in a way safe of the Terror of History.
13Myths of origin. The origin of time
- According to Eliade in ancient man lived a strong
nostalgia for origins, (Eliade, Myths, Dreams
and Mysteries, 1967 44 ). The ancient man made a
difference between his time and the mythical
time, between his age and the mythical age. In
the ancient mans view of world the mythical time
was the origin of time itself. - The mythical time was the time of the Beginnings,
the time of myths of origins. In traditional
societies, Eliade says, myths represented the
absolute truth about primordial time, (Eliade,
1967 23). - The myth of origins, as he states, is always an
account of a creation, (Eliade, 1967 6). The
mythical time was the time when Sacred first
appeared and established the structure of the
world. The myth of origin is an account about the
origin of Sacred itself.
14Coincidentia oppositorumThe coincidence of
oppositions
- According to Eliade the Sacred often united
antagonistic oppositions in itself. Eliade called
the unity of opposition in one concrete form of
the Sacred as coincidentia oppositorum or the
coincidence of oppositions. - Yahweh is both kind and wrathful the God of the
Christian mystics and theologians is terrible and
gentle at once, (Eliade, 1967 450). - Coincidentia oppositorum represented, according
to him, a strong union or unity of oppositions.
It is a mythic pattern that could be found again
also in almost every religions so in Far East,
Oriental and ancient religions also. - E.g. for the ancient Greeks Zeus is terrible and
noble at the same time. In Buddhism the Karma
(which is the engine which drives the wheel of
uncontrolled rebirth) could be gentle and
terrible at the same time. (But in Buddhism the
opposites appear only on the relative level of
sensuous phenomena, and they disappear in the
absolute space of enlightened consciousness).
15The Sky Father.The pattern of High God
- According to Eliade in most archaic religions one
could find a central divine figure, around which
the community of other gods is organized. - Eliade criticizes both the "evolutionistic"
theory of Edward Burnett Tylor (1832-1917) and
others, and Wilhelm Schmidts (1868-1954) theory
of a primal monotheism (Urmonotheismus). - According to Tylers evolutionist theory of
religion, there was a natural progress from
animism to polytheism, and from polytheism to
monotheism. But in Eliades opinion this strict
schema does not hold in the reality, and the
figure of Sky Father could be found in almost
every tribal, primitive religion. The most
popular prayer in the world is addressed to 'Our
Father who art in heaven.' It is possible that
man's earliest prayers were addressed to the same
heavenly father. said Eliade, (Eliade,
Patterns in Comparative Religion, 1958 38). - But he also criticized Schmidts conception about
a strict primordial monotheism. This theory, as
Eliade thought, was rigid and unworkable.
Though archaic, tribal cults had a central
figure, they were nonetheless polytheistic, and
their High God was very different from the One
God of more developed monotheistic religions.
(E.g. the High God could manifest himself as an
animal, without losing his status as a celestial
Supreme Being).
16Cosmos and chaos. Fundamental structure of the
actual world
- The distinction of cosmos and chaos referred
again to further fundamental feature of the
ancient mans view of world at Eliade, (The
Sacred and the Profane). - These words came from the ancient Greek language.
Cosmos signified world and order at the
same time. For the ancient man world meant an
articulated world, with laws and order. Chaos
was for him/her the counter-concept of cosmos
the lack of any order and law. Chaos was a
rupture in the texture of cosmos, of the world. - Cosmos signified at Eliade the home-world of
ancient man the world of laws, customs, habits,
rituals which were familiar and accustomed for
the premodern person. Cosmos was the world of
mortals and immortals the pantheon of the
concrete cultural community belonged to the
home-world of this community also. - The chaos meant the opposite of the world, it
meant counter-world, the lack of the world.
Outside the particular world of the community,
its laws do not hold anymore. Beyond the borders
of the home-world of the particular group there
is the other-world.
17Criticism of Eliades ideas
- The main points of criticism concerning Eliades
scholarship aimed at Eliades overgeneralizations.
- Eliades critics claimed that he tended to use
his classifications and conceptions even in those
cases in which he was actually had no
satisfactory evidence. He tended to elide the
principal differences between different
religions. - According to these scholars (e.g. Dougles Allen,
Geoffrey Kirk, Wendy Doniger) even Eliades
speculations about the fundamental features of
religions implied to rigid categories, and every
religion has such particular moments which cannot
be described with Eliades own system of
categories. - The complexity of particular religions cannot be
so easily grasped with such as system of
categories that Eliade worked out.