Edited by Armin W. Geertz with Leonardo Ambasciano, Esther Eidinow, Luther H. Martin, Kristoffer L. Nielbo, Nickolas P. Roubekas, Valerie van Mulukom, and Dimitris Xygalatas.
Extent: 520
ISBN (hbk): 9781800501607
ISBN (pbk): 9781800501614
ISBN eBook: 9781800501621
Imprint: Equinox
Series: Advances in the Cognitive Science of Religion
Dimensions: 234 x 156 mm
Studying the Religious Mind (2022)
The cognitive science of religion (CSR) does not have its own methodology, and yet from the very beginnings of the discipline, methodology has defined it not only in relation to the general study of religion in the humanities but also to the sciences interested in the mind. CSR scholars are using a wide range of methodologies, borrowing mostly from the cognitive sciences and experimental psychology, but also from biology, archaeology, history, philosophy, linguistics, the social and statistical sciences, neurosciences, and anthropology. This multi-disciplinarity, in fact, defines the cognitive science of religion. Such multi-disciplinarity requires hard work and truly interdisciplinary teams, but also continual reflections on and debates about the methodologies being used. In fact, no CSR study worth its name can rely on only one methodology. Triangulation is standard, but often even more approaches are used.
This book consists of selected papers from the Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion and the Journal of Cognitive Historiography. Each chapter demonstrates a particular method or group of methods and how those methods advance our knowledge of the religious mind from the ancient past up to today.
Reviews & Citations
“[T]he shadow of the eighteenth-century Enlightenment lies across this book.”
– Roger Trigg (Ian Ramsey Centre, University of Oxford), in Theology 126(1) 2023: 69. https://doi.org/10.1177/0040571X221146279o