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- 08/02/2008: To the students - S4 Cognitive Anthropology Course
- 08/02/2008: S4 Cognitive Anthropology - Lecture 3 - 8 February 2008
- 07/02/2008: Link to a cognitive science glossary
- 01/02/2008: Links to Institutes of Anthropology and Cognitive Science
- 01/02/2008: S4 Cognitive Anthropology - Lecture 2 - 1 February 2008
- 30/01/2008: Dan Sperber interview on cognitive anthropology - video
- 25/01/2008: Dan Sperber's Website
- 25/01/2008: Welcome
- 25/01/2008: S4 Cognitive Anthropology - Lecture 1 - 25 January 2008
- 25/01/2008: S4 Cognitive Anthropology - Reading Lists
Anth Links
- Centre for Anthropology and Mind (Oxford)
- Dan Sperber's Website
- Department of Social Anthropology, Cambridge University
- Institute of Cognition and Culture (Queen's University, Belfast)
- Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology (Oxford)
- Mongolia and Inner Asia Studies Unit, Cambridge University
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Archive for 08/02/2008
To the students - S4 Cognitive Anthropology Course
08/02/2008 by Jon.
All the materials for the cognitive anthropology course are now available from this site - see the posts below. Please do use this site to post comments and especially to ask questions if you have any — I will do my best to respond. I will also continue to add posts if I come across anything relevant. If you want to be informed of new posts and comments, you can register and subscribe using the link in the menu bar (bottom left).
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S4 Cognitive Anthropology - Lecture 3 - 8 February 2008
08/02/2008 by Jon.
Download lecture files:
Lecture 3 - Cognitive anthropology of religion - PP presentation
Lecture 3 - Cognitive anthropology of religion - handout
We began this lecture by noting that contemporary cognitive anthropologists mostly deal with questions of religion. We mentioned five key theories in the cognitive anthropology of religion:
- Minimally Counter-Intuitive (MCI) concepts (Boyer);
- Hypersensitive Agency Detection Device (HADD) and Theory of Mind Module (ToMM) (Barrett, Guthrie);
- The Hazard-Precaution System (Boyer and Lienard);
- The ritual forms hypothesis (MacCauley and Lawson);
- the Divergent Modes Theory (Whitehouse).
In order to understand some of these theories, we looked at the modular theory of mind as it has been developed in the fields of cognitive science and evolutionary psychology. The following quotation from Pinker’s How the mind works sums this up nicely:
The mind is a system of organs of computation, designed by natural selection to solve the kinds of problems our ancestors faced in their foraging way of life, in particular, understanding and out manoeuvring objects, animals, plants, and other people. This summary can be unpacked into several claims. The mind is what the brain does; specifically, the brain processes information, and thinking is a kind of computation. The mind is organised into modules all mental organs, each with a specialised design that makes it an expert in one arena of interaction with the world. The modules basic logic is specified by our genetic program. Their operation was shaped by natural selection to solve the problems of hunting and gathering life led by our ancestors in most of our evolutionary history. The various problems for our ancestors were sub tasks of one big problem for their genes, maximizing the number of copies that made it into the next generation. (Pinker 1997:21)
We then looked in detail at Pascal Boyer’s attempt to explain the universal distribution of supernatural concepts and anthropomorphism using the cognitive science model and ‘minimally counter-intuitive’ ideas…and at its extension by writers such as Guthrie and Barrett who attempted to explain the predominance of agent concepts among supernatural concepts in terms of the operation of the Hypersensitive Agency Detection Device and the Theory of Mind Module.
Finally, we briefly noted the main categories of criticism that are levelled at this kind of work:
- Is it good? - various moral or political objections to the cognitive anthropology/cognitive science project;
- Is it good biology/psychology - methodological objections to the biological and psychological principles on which the subdiscipline is based.
- Is it good anthropology? Anthropologists have objected that this project is simply irrelevant to many traditional anthropological lines of enquiry, and that it need not — as some of its practitioners suggest it will — supplant those concerns. See Laidlaw’s paper in Whitehouse and Laidlaw 2007 for a sustained critique along these lines.
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