The Origins of Religion in the Paleolithic

The Origins of Religion in the Paleolithic

by Gregory J. Wightman
The Origins of Religion in the Paleolithic

The Origins of Religion in the Paleolithic

by Gregory J. Wightman

Hardcover

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Overview

How did religion emerge—and why? What are the links between behavior, environment, and religiosity? Diving millions of years into the past, to a time when human ancestors began grappling with issues of safety, worth, identity, loss, power, and meaning in complex and difficult environments, Gregory J. Wightman explores the significance of goal-directed action and the rise of material culture for the advent of religiosity and ritual.

The book opens by tackling questions of cognitive evolution and group psychology, and how these ideas can integrate with archaeological evidence such as stone tools, shell beads, and graves. In turn, it focuses on how human ancestors engaged with their environments, how those engagements became routine, and how, eventually, certain routines took on a recognizably ritualistic flavor. Wightman also critically examines the very real constraints on drawing inferences about prehistoric belief systems solely from limited material residues. Nevertheless, Wightman argues that symbolic objects are not merely illustrative of religion, but also constitutive of it; in the continual dance between brain and behavior, between internal and external environments, lie the seeds of ritual and religion.

Weaving together insights from archaeology; anthropology; cognitive and cultural neuroscience; history and philosophy of religions; and evolutionary, social, and developmental psychology, Wightman provides an intricate, evidence-based understanding of religion’s earliest origins.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442242890
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 12/18/2014
Pages: 306
Product dimensions: 8.90(w) x 6.10(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Gregory J. Wightman is an Australian archaeologist who specializes in the cognitive archaeology of religion and ritual. His publications include SacredSpaces: Religious Architecture in the Ancient World and The Walls of Jerusalem: From the Canaanites to the Mamluks.

Table of Contents

List of Figures
Maps
1: Introduction
Part I: The Embodied Brain: Neuropsychology and Religious Ritual
2: Mirroring and Empathy
3: Acting in Concert
Synchrony and Joint Action
Synchrony, Mirroring, and Ritual
4: The Malleable Brain
5: Ritualizing Sound and Movement
Notes
6: Projecting the Self
Sensed Presences
Anthropomorphism
7: External Agents
Ultimate Sources of Power
Ethics, Morality, and Compliance
Supernatural Agents
8: Language, Ritual, and Religion
Notes
9: Dynamic Fields of Consciousness
10: Private and Corporate Ritual
Part II: The Embedded Body: From Routines to Rituals through Material Engagements
11: First Stirrings
Antecedents, 6.0–3.5 mya
Archaic Hominins, 3.5–1.7 mya
Notes
12: Negotiating Land
Moving through Land
Stopping Places
Fire
Monumentalizing the Landscape
13: Tools, Minds, and Rituals
14: Making a Mark
Emergence of Marking
Object Curation and Anthropomorphism
Manipulation of Colored Pigments
Marking the Living Body
15: Death and Beyond
Death Awareness
Neanderthal Burials
Animal Burials and Bone Caching
Notes
16: African Sapients, 200–50 kya
Monuments and Landscape Marking
Materials as “Symbols”
Burial Rituals
Notes
17: The Emergence of Religious Ritual
Before the Paleolithic
The Lower Paleolithic
The Middle Paleolithic
Looking Forward
References
Index
About the Author
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