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RELIGION

Religion

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Religion. What is religion?. Any set of attitudes, beliefs, and practices pertaining to supernatural power, e.g. forces, gods, spirits, ghosts, or demons The supernatural elements are outside the observable world Non-empirical Accepted on faith - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Religion

RELIGION

Page 2: Religion

WHAT IS RELIGION? Any set of attitudes, beliefs, and

practices pertaining to supernatural power, e.g. forces, gods, spirits, ghosts, or demonsThe supernatural elements are outside the

observable world Non-empirical Accepted on faith

The supernatural elements differ within and between societies

Page 3: Religion

THE ETIC APPROACH Anthropology’s concern is not which

religion is superior Its concern is WHY religions exists and

HOW and WHY it varies from culture to culture

Page 4: Religion

ORIGINS AND REASONS FOR RELIGION Neandertal & early Homo sapiens

Burial of the dead, art, decoration

Page 5: Religion

REASON #1: THE NEED TO UNDERSTAND Edward Tylor & R.R. Marett Religion was born as people tried to

understand conditions and events that normal experience could not explainDual existence: physical/visible and

psychic/invisible Animism: the belief in souls Animatism: the belief in the impersonal

supernatural forces Preceded the creation of spirits

Page 6: Religion

REASON #2: REVERSION TO CHILDHOOD FEELINGS Freud Totems and taboos represent projected

oedipal desires

Page 7: Religion

REASON #3: COPING WITH ANXIETY AND UNCERTAINTY Bronislaw Malinowski Religion helps us deal with death, stress, and

anxiety Can be a very therapeutic, positive aspect

Jung, James, Maslow

Page 8: Religion

REASON #4: THE NEED FOR COMMUNITY Emile DurkheimCommunitas Religion is social It helps us feel part of a

communityAffirms our place in societyEnhances feelings of

communityGives people confidenceFights alienation

Page 9: Religion

REASON #5: SOCIAL CONTROL Religion mobilizes

people and their emotionsCrusades JihadThe TalibanWitch crazes

Page 10: Religion

ELEMENTS AND VARIATION IN RELIGION Supernatural forces

Mana: a sacred, impersonal force (i.e., luck, karma)

Taboo: things not to be touched, places not to be entered, animals not to be killed, etc.

Gods: named personalities, often anthropomorphic

Spirits: beneath gods, closer to humans

Ghosts: beings that were once human (ancestors)

Page 11: Religion

MONOTHEISTIC VS. POLYTHEISTIC Monotheistic Religion: One supreme god Polytheistic Religion: Many gods, none

supreme over all others

Page 12: Religion

RITUALS AND RITES OF PASSAGE Rituals

Convey information about the participants and their traditions

Generally very formal

Rites of PassageCustoms associated

with transition from one stage of life to another

Page 13: Religion

INTERACTING WITH THE SUPERNATURAL Prayer Physiological Experience Simulation/Divination

Getting the supernatural to provide guidance

Ouija boards, fortune tellers Feasts Sacrifices Magic

The belief that a person’s action can compel the supernatural to act in some particular way

Page 14: Religion

WITCHCRAFT Witchcraft: using thought and emotion

to evoke supernatural malevolence Sorcery: using materials and objects to

evoke supernatural malevolence i.e., voodoo doll

Page 15: Religion

RELIGIOUS PRACTITIONERS Priests: full-time, usually male

Highly educated and specializedHigh standing in societyCan communicate with the supernatural

Shamans: part-time specialist, generally a healerOften enters into trances to communicate

with gods or spirits Mediums: generally female, thought to

heal while possessed or in a trance Sorcerers and Witches: low economic

or social status, generally feared in society

Page 16: Religion

RELIGION AND ADAPTATION Syncretisms: cultural

mixesCargo Cults

Fundamentalism (or anti-modernism) i.e., the Taliban

Revitalization i.e., early Christianity,

the Protestant Reformation

Page 17: Religion

RELIGIONS OF THE WORLD

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