Submitted to Program Units |
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1: Philosophy of Religion Unit |
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)
There is a growing recognition that most religious communities do not write out explicit doctrines, they do not ask their members to publicly recite a confession of faith, and they do not police orthodoxy. To describe a religion as “a set of beliefs” is therefore misleading. Perhaps some religions consist of cultic practices without belief; perhaps the category of belief can be dropped altogether. Jacob Mackey’s Belief and Cult addresses exactly this question. With an eye to the theoretical question about the role of belief in religions in general, Mackey draws on cognitive science to argue that one cannot understand practice-centered religions like ancient Roman cults without the category of belief. This panel responds to Mackey’s defense of belief from four perspectives: the practice turn in social theory, pragmatist philosophy, the Ontological Turn in anthropology, and philosophy of mind and cognitive neurosciences.
Papers
- Pragmatism, Critical Realism, and the Study of Religious Belief