情感纽带:弥合宗教信仰的进化论和人文主义解释之间的差距

IF 0.8 3区 哲学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
L. Turner
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引用次数: 1

摘要

近年来,宗教进化认知科学(ECSR)越来越愿意采用一种包容性的、理论上多元化的方法,并围绕一些关键主题形成了广泛的共识,这些主题共同构成了该领域的核心理论核心。然而,ECSR仍然给一些人文学科带来了严重的问题。在探索人文主义和认知进化方法之间冲突的原因时,我认为,ECSR对宗教起源的默认解释和宗教在社会纽带中的作用都依赖于文化无中介的普遍认知机制的概念,这排除了其他人文主义解释。我随后提出,人文主义方法和更广泛的宗教进化研究之间的差距可以通过进一步扩大ECSR来缩小,包括最近对社会依恋的脑阿片理论(BOTSA)的研究,该理论强调宗教社会联系功能的情感基础而不是认知基础。最后,我概述了最早形式的宗教思想和实践的可能的进化解释,它将宗教的起源与专业认知机制的进化分离开来,人文主义者可能会发现这比主流的ECSR更容易接受。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Emotional bonds: Bridging the gap between evolutionary and humanistic accounts of religious belief
Recent years have seen a growing willingness in the evolutionary cognitive science of religion (ECSR) to embrace an inclusive, theoretically pluralistic approach and the emergence of a broad consensus around some key themes that collectively constitute a central theoretical core of the field. Nevertheless, ECSR still raises serious problems for some in the humanities. In exploring the reasons for the perception of conflict between humanistic and cognitive evolutionary approaches to religion, I suggest that both ECSR’s default account of the origins of religion and religion’s role in social bonding rely upon notions of culturally unmediated universal cognitive mechanisms that preclude alternative humanistic explanations. I subsequently suggest that the gap between humanistic approaches and the evolutionary study of religion more broadly conceived may be narrowed by further expanding ECSR to include recent research into the brain opioid theory of social attachment (BOTSA), which emphasises the emotional rather than cognitive basis of religion’s social bonding functions. Finally, I outline a possible evolutionary account of the earliest forms of religious ideas and practices, which decouples the origins of religion from the evolution of specialised cognitive machinery and which humanists are likely to find more amenable than mainstream ECSR.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
期刊介绍: The international, peer-reviewed journal Archive for the Psychology of Religion/Archiv für Religionspsychologie is the oldest periodical that publishes research in the psychology of religion. It is the organ of the International Association for the Psychology of Religion (IAPR), founded in 1914. The Archive for the Psychology of Religion/Archiv für Religionspsychologie is open to all scientific methodologies, both quantitative and qualitative.
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