Affiliation:
1. Departamento de Filosofia, Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Santa Maria 97105-340, RS, Brazil
2. Fleming Medicina, Porto Alegre 90035-006, RS, Brazil
Abstract
In this paper, we take our cue from Kevin Schilbrack’s admonishment that the philosophy of religion needs to take religious practices seriously as an object of investigation. We do so by offering Afro-Brazilian traditions as an example of the methodological poverty of current philosophical engagement with religions that are not text-based, belief-focused, and institutionalized. Anthropologists have studied these primarily orally transmitted traditions for nearly a century. Still, they involve practices, such as offering and sacrifice as well as spirit possession and mediumship, that have yet to receive attention from philosophers. We argue that this is not an accident: philosophers have had a highly restricted diet of examples, have not looked at ethnography as source material, and thus still need to put together a methodology to tackle such practices. After elucidating Schilbrack’s suggestions to adopt an embodiment paradigm and apply conceptual metaphor theory and the extended mind thesis to consider religious practices as thoughtful, we offer criticism of the specifics of his threefold solution. First, it assumes language is linear; second, it takes a problematic view of the body; and third, it abides by a misleading view of the “levels” of cognition. We conclude that the philosophy of religion should adopt enactivism to understand religious practices as cognitive enterprises.
Funder
John Templeton Foundation
Reference60 articles.
1. Ataria, Yochai, Tanaka, Shogo, and Gallagher, Shaun (2021). Body Schema and Body Image: New Directions, Oxford University Press.
2. Bastide, Roger (1945). Imagens do Nordeste Místico em Branco e Preto, Cruzeiro.
3. Ingredients of ‘rituals’ and their cognitive underpinnings;Boyer;Philosophical Transaction of the Royal Society B,2020
4. Review Essay Roundtable: Philosophy and the Study of Religions: A Manifesto;Burley;Journal of the American Academy of Religion,2015
5. Burley, Mikel (2020). A Radical Pluralist Philosophy of Religion: Cross-Cultural, Multireligious, Interdisciplinary, Bloomsbury.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献