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词条 Anthropology of religion
释义

  1. History

  2. Definition of religion

  3. Specific religious practices and beliefs

  4. See also

  5. Notes

  6. References

     Footnotes  Bibliography 

  7. External links

{{Anthropology of religion}}{{Anthropology|social/cultural}}

Anthropology of religion is the study of religion in relation to other social institutions, and the comparison of religious beliefs and practices across cultures.{{sfnm |1a1=Adams |1y=2017 |2a1=Eller |2y=2007 |2p=2}}

History

In the early 11th century, Abū Rayhān Bīrūnī (973–1048), wrote detailed comparative studies on the anthropology of religions and cultures across the Middle East, Mediterranean and the Indian subcontinent.{{sfn|Walbridge|1998}} He discussed the peoples, customs, and religions of the Indian subcontinent.

Anthropology circa 1940 assumed that religion is in complete continuity with magical thinking,{{efn|In 1944, Ernst Cassirer wrote: {{quote|It seems to be one of the postulates of modern anthropology that there is complete continuity between magic and religion. [note 35: See, for instance, RR Marett, Faith, Hope, and Charity in Primitive Religion, the Gifford Lectures (Macmillan, 1932), Lecture II, pp. 21 ff.] ... We have no empirical evidence at all that there ever was an age of magic that has been followed and superseded by an age of religion.{{sfn|Cassirer|2006|pp=122–123}}}}}}{{sfn|Cassirer|2006|pp=122–123}}{{Dubious |Problems with many claims |reason=Citation does not say anything about modern anthropology and is not a work on the issue |date=April 2015}} and that it is a cultural product.{{efn|T. M. Manickam wrote: {{quote|Religious anthropology suggests that every religion is a product of the cultural evolution, more or less coherent, of one race or people; and this cultural product is further enriched by its interaction and cross-fertilization with other peoples and their cultures, in whose vicinity the former originated and evolved.{{sfn|Manickam|1977|p=6}}}}}}{{sfn|Manickam|1977|p=6}} The complete continuity between magic and religion has been a postulate of modern anthropology at least since early 1930s.{{efn|R. R. Marett wrote: {{quote|In conclusion, a word must be said on a rather trite subject. Many leading anthropologists, including the author of The Golden Bough, would wholly or in the main refuse the title of religion to these almost inarticulate ceremonies of very humble folk. I am afraid, however, that I cannot follow them. Nay, I would not leave out a whole continent from a survey of the religions of mankind in order to humour the most distinguished of my friends. Now clearly if these observances are not to be regarded as religious, like a wedding in church, so neither can they be classed as civil, like its drab equivalent at a registry office. They are mysteries, and are therefore at least generically akin to religion. Moreover, they are held in the highest public esteem as of infinite worth whether in themselves or for their effects. To label them, then, with the opprobrious name of magic as if they were on a par with the mummeries that enable certain knaves to batten on the nerves of fools is quite unscientific; for it mixes up two things which the student of human culture must keep rigidly apart, namely, a normal development of the social life and one of its morbid by-products. Hence for me they belong to religion, but of course to rudimentary religion—to an early phase of the same world-wide institution that we know by that name among ourselves. I am bound to postulate the strictest continuity between these stages of what I have here undertaken to interpret as a natural growth.{{sfn|Marett|1932}}}}}}{{sfnm |1a1=Cassirer |1y=2006 |1pp=122–123 |2a1=Marett |2y=1932}} The perspective of modern anthropology towards religion is the projection idea, a methodological approach which assumes that every religion is created by the human community that worships it, that "creative activity ascribed to God is projected from man."{{sfnm |1a1=Guthrie |1y=2000 |1pp=225–226 |2a1=Harvey |2y=1996 |2p=67 |3a1=Pandian |3y=1997 |p=507}} In 1841, Ludwig Feuerbach was the first to employ this concept as the basis for a systematic critique of religion.{{sfnm |1a1=Feuerbach |1y=1841 |2a1=Harvey |2y=1995 |2p=4 |3a1=Mackey |3y=2000 |pages=41–42 |4a1=Nelson |4y=1990}} A prominent precursor in the formulation of this projection principle was Giambattista Vico,{{sfnm |1a1=Cotrupi |1y=2000 |1p=21 |2a1=Harvey |2y=1995 |2p=4}} and an early formulation of it is found in ancient Greek writer Xenophanes, which observed that "the gods of Ethiopians were inevitably black with flat noses while those of the Thracians were blond with blue eyes."{{sfn|Harvey|1995|p=4}}

In 1912 Émile Durkheim, building on Feuerbach, considered religion "a projection of the social values of society," "a means of making symbolic statements about society," "a symbolic language that makes statements about the social order";{{sfnm |1a1=Durkheim |1y=1912 |2a1=Bowie |2y=1999 |2pp=15, 143}} in short, "religion is society worshiping itself".{{sfn|Nelson|1990}}[1]{{incomplete short citation|date=November 2017}}

In the 19th century, cultural anthropology was dominated by an interest in cultural evolution; most anthropologists assumed that there was a simple distinction between "primitive" and "modern" religion and tried to provide accounts of how the former evolved into the latter.{{citation needed|date=April 2015}} In the 20th century most anthropologists rejected this approach. Today the anthropology of religion reflects the influence of, or an engagement with, such theorists as Karl Marx, Sigmund Freud, Émile Durkheim, and Max Weber.{{sfnm |1a1=Eller |1y=2007 |1p=22 |2a1=Weber |2y=2002}} They are especially concerned with how religious beliefs and practices may reflect political or economic forces; or the social functions of religious beliefs and practices.{{sfn|Eller|2007|p=4}}{{clarify|date=April 2015}}

Definition of religion

One major problem in the anthropology of religion is the definition of religion itself.{{sfn|Eller|2007|p=7}} At one time{{vague|date=April 2015}} anthropologists believed that certain religious practices and beliefs were more or less universal to all cultures at some point in their development, such as a belief in spirits or ghosts, the use of magic as a means of controlling the supernatural, the use of divination as a means of discovering occult knowledge, and the performance of rituals such as prayer and sacrifice as a means of influencing the outcome of various events through a supernatural agency, sometimes taking the form of shamanism or ancestor worship.{{citation needed|date=April 2015}} According to Clifford Geertz, religion is

{{quote|(1) a system of symbols which acts to (2) establish powerful, pervasive, and long-lasting moods and motivations in men by (3) formulating conceptions of a general order of existence and (4) clothing these conceptions with such an aura of factuality that (5) the moods and motivations seem uniquely realistic."{{sfn|Geertz|1966|p=4}}}}

Today, religious anthropologists debate, and reject, the cross-cultural validity of these categories (often viewing them as examples of European primitivism).{{citation needed|date=April 2015}} Anthropologists have considered various criteria for defining religion – such as a belief in the supernatural or the reliance on ritual – but few claim that these criteria are universally valid.{{sfn|Eller|2007|p=7}}

Anthony F. C. Wallace proposes four categories of religion, each subsequent category subsuming the previous. These are, however, synthetic categories and do not necessarily encompass all religions.[2]
  1. Individualistic: most basic; simplest. Example: vision quest.
  2. Shamanistic: part-time religious practitioner, uses religion to heal, to divine, usually on the behalf of a client. The Tillamook have four categories of shaman. Examples of shamans: spiritualists, faith healers, palm readers. Religious authority acquired through one's own means.
  3. Communal: elaborate set of beliefs and practices; group of people arranged in clans by lineage, age group, or some religious societies; people take on roles based on knowledge, and ancestral worship.
  4. Ecclesiastical: dominant in agricultural societies and states; are centrally organized and hierarchical in structure, paralleling the organization of states. Typically deprecates competing individualistic and shamanistic cults.

Specific religious practices and beliefs

{{Div col|colwidth=22em}}
  • Apotheosis
  • Apotropaic magic
  • Amulet
  • Animism
  • Cult (religious practice)
  • Deity
  • Demon
  • Divination
  • Esotericism
  • Exorcism
  • Evil
  • Fertility rite
  • Fetishism
  • Genius (mythology)
  • God
  • Ghost
  • Greco-Roman mysteries
  • Heresy
  • Icon
  • Immortality
  • Intercession
  • Kachina
  • Magic and religion
  • Mana
  • Mask
  • Miracle
  • Medicine
  • Modern paganism
  • Monotheism
  • Mother goddess
  • Mythology
  • Necromancy
  • New Age
  • Occult
  • Omen
  • Poles in mythology
  • Polytheism
  • Prayer
  • Principle of contagion
  • Prophecy
  • Reincarnation
  • Religious ecstasy
  • Ritual
  • Sacred food as offering
  • Sacrifice
  • Shamanism
  • Spell (paranormal)
  • Supernatural
  • Supplication
  • Sympathetic magic
  • Theism
  • Totemism
  • Veneration of the dead
  • Western esotericism
{{div col end}}

See also

{{Portal|Anthropology|Religion}}{{col div|colwidth=20em}}
  • Anthropological Perspectives on Religion
  • Archaeology of religion and ritual
  • Cognitive science of religion
  • Evolutionary origin of religions
  • Magic and religion
  • Religious symbolism
  • Rite of passage
  • Sacred–profane dichotomy
  • Sociology of religion
  • Symbolic anthropology
{{div col end}}

Notes

{{notelist|35em}}

References

Footnotes

1. ^Durkheim, p.266 in the 1963 edition
2. ^{{cite web |last=Rathman |first=Jessica |title=Anthony Francis Clarke Wallace |url=http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/information/biography/uvwxyz/wallace_anthony.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030927142508/http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/information/biography/uvwxyz/wallace_anthony.html |archive-date=27 November 2003 |access-date=22 November 2017}}

Bibliography

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{{cite book


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{{cite book


|last=Geertz
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|title=Anthropological Approaches to the Study of Religion
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{{cite book


|last=Guthrie
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{{cite book


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|chapter=Projection: A Metaphor in Search of a Theory?
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|editor-link=Dewi Zephaniah Phillips
|title=Can Religion Be Explained Away?
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{{cite book


|last=Mackey
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{{cite book


|last=Manickam
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{{cite book


|last=Marett
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|title=Faith, Hope and, Charity in Primitive Religion
|url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.157613
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{{cite book


|last=Nelson
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{{cite book


|last=Pandian
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{{cite journal


|last=Walbridge
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|title=Explaining Away the Greek Gods in Islam
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{{cite book


|last=Weber
|first=Max
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|editor1-last=Baehr
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|editor2-last=Wells
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|title=The Protestant Ethic and the "Spirit" of Capitalism and Other Writings
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External links

  • Homepage of [https://web.archive.org/web/20101110074102/http://www.aaanet.org/sections/sar/sar_newsite/ The Society for the Anthropology of Religion] within American Anthropological Association
  • Anthropology of Religion Page M.D. Murphy, University of Alabama
  • Andrew Lang, Anthropology and Religion, The Making of Religion, (Chapter II), Longmans, Green, and C°, London, New York and Bombay, 1900, pp. 39–64.
{{Socialscience&religion}}{{religion topics}}{{Use British English Oxford spelling|date=November 2017}}{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2017}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Anthropology Of Religion}}

2 : Anthropology of religion|Religious studies

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