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Reason and Belief in the Societies of Knowledge Barcelona, 5th - 6th July 2011 Place Laboratori d’Antropologia Social 1st Floor. Facultat de Geografia i Història. Universitat de Barcelona C. Montalegre, 6 08001 Barcelona Scientific Committee Carles Salazar (University of Lleida) [email protected] Joan Bestard (University of Barcelona) [email protected] Gerard Horta (University of Barcelona) [email protected] Maria Coma (University of Barcelona) [email protected] Participants Michael Blume [email protected] Postdoctoral research fellow in Religious Studies at the Faculty of Philosophy of the Friedrich-SchillerUniversity Jena. Research interests: comparative study of religion; evolutionary approaches to religion. Simon Coleman [email protected] Professor of Religious Studies at the Jackman Humanities Institute of the University of Toronto. Research interests: evangelical and charismatic Christianities; religion in mega-cities; creation science; pilgrimage; chaplaincies and intersections between religious and medical discourses; ritual, language, aesthetics, material culture; intersections and tensions between religious and political discourse. Tom Inglis [email protected] Professor of Sociology at the University College of Dublin. Research interests: globalisation of Irish society, particularly in terms of its influence on everyday life, identity, the realisation of self, and the way in which the local interacts with the global; secularisation in Western society, particularly in terms of developing a new theory, but also in terms of how it applies to contemporary Irish society. Tim Jenkins [email protected] Assistant Director of Research in the Study of Religion at the Faculty of Divinity of the University of Cambridge. Research interests: European, particularly French and British, ethnography; Anthropological Theory; Anthropology of Religion. Reason and Belief in the Societies of Knowledge. Barcelona, 5th-6th July 2011 1 Heonik Kwon [email protected] Professor of Social Anthropology at the London School of Economics. Research interests: global studies; comparative ethnographic knowledge; death rituals and politics of memory; religious norms in political process and development; kinship in political history and theory, and the role of creative cultural practice in conflict resolution. Robert McCauley [email protected] William Rand Kenan Jr. University Professor of Philosophy and Director, Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture of the Emory University. Research interests: naturalistic approach to epistemology, the philosophy of science, and the philosophy of psychology; psychological foundations of cultural forms; cognitive foundations of religion and of religious ritual. Marit Melhuus [email protected] Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Oslo. Research interests: Morality, kinship, religion, personhood, gender; legal anthropology, legislative processes; biopolitics, understandings of nature; social change, anthropological theory and method, comparison, history. João de Pina-Cabral [email protected] Coordinator Researcher at the Institute of Social Sciences of the University of Lisbon. Research interests: the relation between symbolic thought and social power; family and kinship in a comparative perspective; ethnicity in colonial and post-colonial contexts. Roger Sansi-Roca [email protected] Senior Lecturer in Social Anthropology at the Goldsmiths College of London. Research interests: AfroBrazilian religion, art, and cultural policy in Bahia; the notion of the fetish and sorcery in the Black Atlantic; Contemporary art and the politics of cultural production in Barcelona. Jesper Sørensen [email protected] Associate Professor at the Department of the Study of Religion of the Aarhus University, Denmark. Research interests: cognitive science of religion, mainly focusing on ritual behavior in general and magic in particular; cognitive aspects of charisma and religious authority. Program The purpose of this seminar is to reflect upon the possible articulations and/or contradictions between religion and scientific culture that surface in the so-called ‘knowledge societies’. Our hypothesis is that scientific knowledge has become increasingly relevant in the ordinary life of many populations, beyond the institutional public spaces where it traditionally developed. We wish to identify the possible tensions that this new development of scientific knowledge is likely to produce as regards modes of thinking that have historically been hegemonic both in public spaces and individual consciousness, Reason and Belief in the Societies of Knowledge. Barcelona, 5th-6th July 2011 2 specifically, religious beliefs. Thus, our purpose is to flesh out this reflection with theoretical and ethnographic researches on different manifestations of scientific and religious cultures in the contemporary world. Instances of these manifestations would be the persistence of traditional forms of religiosity in the private sphere in contexts wherein the public space has been secularised, the articulation of religious knowledge and new technologies of communication, the relationship between religious morality and new family forms and family ideologies, moral dilemmas that originate from the use of certain techno-scientific knowledges such as biotechnology (genetic engineering, assisted reproduction, etc.), new conceptualisations of the person (birth, death, identity, etc.) that emerge from scientific researches (mapping of the human genome, etc.) and their relationship with traditional religious conceptions. All in all, the object of this seminar is to hammer out a set of theoretical tools that will enable us to rethink the concepts of religiosity, rationality and secularisation in our contemporary world on the basis of concrete researches and the comparison of their results. 1st day: 05.07.2011 9:45-10:15 Presentation Carles Salazar (University of Lleida) 10:15-11:00 Maturationally Natural Cognition Hinders Science and Facilitates Religion Robert N. McCauley (Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture, Emory University) Natural cognition, which operates instantly, intuitively, and (largely) unconsciously, comes in two varieties. Practiced naturalness concerns abilities resulting from extensive experience in some domain. Maturational naturalness concerns cognition that arises spontaneously, that does not depend upon instruction, artifacts, or culturally distinctive inputs, and that addresses fundamental problems for survival. Maturationally natural cognition plays very different roles in science and religion, whether we focus on their cognitive products or the cognitive processes each engages. Science’s cognitive products reliably traffic in representations that are incompatible with maturationally natural cognition. Science requires cognitive tools that are hard to acquire and employ, and maturationally natural predilections persistently intrude in human judgement. By contrast, religious thought and action arise as by-products of opportunistic cuing of maturationally natural dispositions, which motivate and shape religious materials the world over. Thus, maintaining the social arrangements necessary for science is difficult and expensive, and it poses no threat to religion’s persistence. 11:00-11:30 Discussion 11:30-12:00 Coffee break 12:00-12:45 Two realms, one winner? Scientific vs. Religious 'Knowledge' in Evolutionary Perspective Michael Blume (Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena) Throughout the 20th century, evolutionary and religious explanations of life have mostly been discussed as conflicting and exclusive. Even those models that tried to separate these perspectives Reason and Belief in the Societies of Knowledge. Barcelona, 5th-6th July 2011 3 into non-overlapping magisteria frequently indicated that religious lore would lose parts of its functionality. But during the last years, new and interdisciplinary evolutionary studies of religiosity and religions yielded empirical findings supporting a hypothesis first formulated by Friedrich August von Hayek in 1982: Religious beliefs in superempirical agents may be adaptive even if they clearly conflict with modern scientific knowledge. For example, religious demography has been able to explain a central factor in the ongoing struggles between proponents of evolutionary theory and advocates of religious creation mythologies in the US, Israel and other countries: Although Evolutionists emphasizing empirical methodology tended to bring up far more scientific arguments, Creationists believing in a God endorsing community and family life tended to bring up far more children. This holds true even if other variables such as education, income or urbanization are controlled for. And the philosophical weight of these findings is indicated by a central assumption of evolutionary theories of cognition and evolutionary epistemology: All of our senses are assumed to have been evolved by approximating aspects of reality, with “better” informations resulting in higher chances of survival and reproduction. Therefore, recent evolutionary and cognitive studies indicate the need to reassess our established perspectives on the functionality of scientific and religious ‘knowledge’. 12:45-13:15 Discussion 13:15-15:00 Lunch 15:00-15:45 Ritualized practice in an age of science Jesper Sørensen (Aarhus University) Many theories have prophesized the end of ‘religion’ and/or ‘magic’ as scientific progress expand human control of its environment. Secularization hypotheses have claimed that religion in general should decline in modernity, even if some aspects might remain as basic identity markers in globalized world. Others, for instance Stark & Bainbridge, have argued that modernization will not influence religion, as it is a so-called “general compensator” solving non-technological problems such as eternal life. In contrast it was argued that magic, as a “specific compensator” addressing particular pragmatic concerns, should decline as a result of technological control. In this paper I will argue that (a) modernity brings new pragmatic dangers not easily fixed by technology; (b) that this elicit ritual behavior; (c) that magic is therefore not a thing of the past, but a behavioral response grounded in universal cognitive capacities; and (d) that focusing on cognition and concrete behavior will ground competition / interaction between ‘magic’, ‘religion’ and ‘science’ in a institutional and contextual framework related to the creation of knowledge, social status groups and control of human behavior. 15:45-16:15 Discussion 16:15-17:00 Superstition or the margins of belief João de Pina-Cabral (University of Lisbon) The concept of “belief” has always been taken seriously by anthropologists and philosophers; nevertheless, it has led to a long series of perplexities. On the other hand, the concept of “superstition” has simply been discarded as ethnocentric. The first has been pushed aside for its Reason and Belief in the Societies of Knowledge. Barcelona, 5th-6th July 2011 4 logical uncertainty; the second for its ethical uncertainty. Yet, the two concepts seem to be surprisingly resilient in face of the continued exercise of anthropological questioning. Furthermore, their capacity for survival appears to be connected precisely to that which connects them: superstition is unfounded belief but the issue of the foundation of belief is at the centre of the anthropological and philosophical perplexities that have haunted the concept of belief. If we follow the well-trusted method of marginality to examine these concepts in the light of ethnographic research, we might be able both to find new paths for the concept of belief and to find a safer place for superstition at its margins. 17:00-17:30 Dicussion 17:30-18:15 Moral employments of scientific thought Tim Jenkins (Jesus College, Cambridge) Modern sciences share a number of characteristics concerning the kind of knowledge they produce, the communities of scientists who produce such knowledge, and the relation of the motivation to research to the discoveries made. From the social scientific point of view, the interesting question is how the discoveries of science are recaptured by the categories of common sense, and put to work in moral descriptions of the world, mappings that are very selective in which characteristics of scientific practices they choose to notice. These ‘moral’ employments of science fall under two broad heads. First, there are hybrids of various moral authorities – scientific and religious – that allow us to offer a description of the historical development of ‘non-standard’ religious forms (Fundamentalisms, New Religious Movements, New Age…) in the last century. And second, there is a spectrum of literature, from Fantasy and Science Fiction to popular science, which plays on the same materials and issues, again in a strictly time- and context-bound fashion. This latter material (which includes, among others, Dawkins’ discussions of faith and science) may be said to represent an urban folklore, and is both diffuse and influential. 18:15-18:45 Discussion 2nd day: 06.07.2011 10:15-11:00 The Social Life of Concepts: Public and Private ‘Knowledge’ of Scientific Creationism Simon Coleman (University of Toronto) Our understanding of scientific creationism, and of the more recent development of ‘intelligent design’, has been moulded largely by the intense public debates generated by these concepts. Social scientific models of conflict between ‘science’ and ‘religion’ have been developed through observing the resulting antagonism between religious and secular interest groups, particularly in the US. In this paper, I look instead at the UK context, and at the understandings of scientific creationism held by British evangelicals. Rather than focusing on instances of overt conflict between science and religion, I begin my analysis by looking at creationism as an ‘everyday’ concept, integrated into congregational Reason and Belief in the Societies of Knowledge. Barcelona, 5th-6th July 2011 5 life and wider forms of worship, religious narrative and belief. I juxtapose such ‘everyday’ life of creationism with its construction by its opponents, and argue that ironically it is often the secular critics of creationist discourse who are moving it into public realms, indeed making it look more like conventional ‘religion’ than evangelical believers themselves. How, then, as anthropologists are we to analyse such debate, and the ‘social’ life of concepts relating to knowledge and belief? 11:00-11:30 Discussion 11:30-12:00 Coffe Break 12:00-12:45 The human embryo: human life/human being? Marit Melhuus (University of Oslo) While scientists are claiming the human embryo for research into what is presented as one of the most promising fields in modern biomedicine – stem cell research – the embryo is being subjected to philosophical, theological and ethical examination world wide. At issue is what kind of entity the human embryo is – and hence what purposes it can be made to serve. Working at the interface between politics, science and religion, the human embryo brings together opposing views, even belief systems. In the Euro-American worldview, which draws largely on a Christian heritage, there appears to be an exceptional pre-occupation with the embryo. So much so, that within contemporary biomedicine and biopolitics, the embryo represents an especially controversial site. There are many different voices that converge on the embryo and one challenge is to find adequate ways to do justice to these different perspectives, while paying attention to the positions from which they emanate. Another is to isolate relevant instances of convergence that are ethnographically revealing and in some sense productive of meaning. 12:45-13:15 Discussion 13:15-15:00 Lunch 15:00-15:45 Religion, Magic and Practical Reason: Meaning and everyday life in contemporary Ireland Tom Inglis (University College, Dublin) Everyday life is dominated by science and technology that emerges within an instrumental rationality based on an interest in mastery and control of people, objects and the environment. Religion in the West has been steadily removed from public life and has become confined to what is private and individualistic (Hervieu-Leger 1990). And yet everyday life also revolves around a practical reason (Sayer 2011) that emerges from a human need to share, care, and create meaning. They still use language, symbols and icons from their cultural heritage, they still engage in practices, that are outside the realm of logic, science and rationality but which provide meaning, comfort and consolation. I will argue that magical thinking manifests itself in three main ways: (1) in the form of devotional Catholicism, particularly in terms of religious experiences and seeking divine intervention Reason and Belief in the Societies of Knowledge. Barcelona, 5th-6th July 2011 6 through God and the saints, (2) in non-institutional forms of faith-healing beliefs and practices, and (3) in superstitions. 15:45-16:15 Discussion 16:15-17:00 Vietnam War’s Wounds to the Soul Heonik Kwon (London School of Economics) This paper examines the different ways in which the traumas of war are understood and publicly recognized, with reference to the experience of the Vietnam War. In the United States, according to Allen Young, this experience resulted in the rise of a powerful clinical paradigm known today as the PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder). In postwar Vietnamese society, however, the communal and public actions relating to the wounds of war mainly concerned, rather than the somatic symptoms of survivors, the sufferings that the souls of the tragic war dead were believed to endure in their afterlives. This paper will consider these two radically divergent ways to conceptualize the wounds to the human soul caused by modern warfare, asking what issues of comparative historical sociology they raise. 17:00-17:30 Discussion 17:30-18:15 Do the Gods have a "Mind"? Bodies, Persons, and Knowledge in Candomblé. Roger Sansi-Roca (Goldsmiths College, London) In this paper I will address recent cognitive theories of religion, specially in relation to spirit possession in Afro-Brazilian Candomblé. In particular, I will address the contention that a certain theory of the "mind" is at play in the phenomena of spirit possession. My certain argument is not just a criticism the idea that Candomblé people have a theory of the mind. I will argue for an understanding of “possession” not just as a “phenomenon”, but a life process, of which each event of possession is just an instance. This is a process of knowledge (“deep knowledge”) in the mysteries of the religion, but also a process of becoming, in which the person and the spirit are increasingly indistinguishable. In this sense, in Candomblé “knowing” and “being” are two sides of the same coin. 18:15-18:45 Discussion 18:45-19:30 General discussion 21:00 Dinner Reason and Belief in the Societies of Knowledge. Barcelona, 5th-6th July 2011 7