Religion Explained
****/***** Religion/Science
Religion Explained-The Human Instincts
That Fashion Gods, Spirits & Ancestors
Pascal Boyer
Religion in some form is ubiquitous. Religious concepts across
different cultures have similar broad framework, like the common skeletal
architecture of all vertebrates. These facts prompt one to look for those peculiar
propensities of human mind which favour provenance of religion in human society.
Pascal Boyer, an anthropologist, investigates the phenomenon of
religion in this vastly interesting book. He looks for evidence in psychology,
evolutionary biology, and anthropology, to advance his theories. He asserts
that religion was not invented by mankind to answer the deep mysteries of human
existence on earth: the origin of universe and life, the seemingly
insurmountable human grief, the unending vicissitudes of earthly existence, the
horrendous inequities afflicting mankind, consequences of our actions, human
will or the lack of it, etc. Anthropologists have found that across majority of
human societies, people do not look up to religion to answer these questions.
Their religion is largely confined to the rituals surrounding ceremonies of
birth, death and marriages; evil and good brought about by ancestors and
spirits; spell and evil eye cast by enemies; and such concerns affecting
everyday life. Boyer also believes that neither was religion necessitated by
the need for enforcing morality in society. He convincingly proves that
religion is a natural inhabitant of human mind. In considerable details he
explains the process of knowledge acquisition by human beings and how religion
parasitizes these mechanisms to home-in our minds. Circuits in brain which
evolved and gave humans the unique ability to assimilate knowledge -a faculty
not found in any other species- are the same which are used for perpetuation of
religious belief. He discusses the concepts of gods and spirits; the
preoccupation of all religions with death and rituals; and attempts to
interpret these in the light of new knowledge of the working of mind that has
emerged from cognitive and evolutionary psychology. In the last chapter, which
is the best in the book, he discusses the reason why we ‘believe’.
Unlike most books of this genre, Pascal Boyer is not judgmental. He
has not written a critique on religion but his is a critical study of the
phenomenon of religion. He offers a deeply convincing psychological basis for
the religious belief. Book is one more step in the direction of self-knowledge,
an attempt to learn why we are the way we are. And like all such honest
endeavours it brings unalloyed joy and freedom to one who attempts to
understand its assertions. This book should be read by all who are interested
in working of human mind, psychology and religion. For me reading this was a
vastly rewarding experience that I will cherish for long.
After finishing your review sir, I have just ordered the book. It looks so tempting.
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