Religion as Make-Believe

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A01=Neil Van Leeuwen
anthropology of religion
attitude
Author_Neil Van Leeuwen
belief and imagination
Category=GTK
Category=QDTK
Category=QDTM
Category=QRAB
christianity
church
cognitive governance
cognitive psychology
compartmentalization
conversion
creativity
delusion
doubt
epistemology
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
evangelicalism
evidential vulnerability
group identity
identity signalling
ideology
inference
involuntariness
make-believe play
mormonism
philosophy of religion
rationality
reason
religious belief vs factual belief
religious credence
ritual
ritual practice
sacred
sacred values
self-deception
supernatural significance

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674290334
  • Weight: 567g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Nov 2023
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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To understand the nature of religious belief, we must look at how our minds process the world of imagination and make-believe.

We often assume that religious beliefs are no different in kind from ordinary factual beliefs—that believing in the existence of God or of supernatural entities that hear our prayers is akin to believing that May comes before June. Neil Van Leeuwen shows that, in fact, these two forms of belief are strikingly different. Our brains do not process religious beliefs like they do beliefs concerning mundane reality; instead, empirical findings show that religious beliefs function like the imaginings that guide make-believe play.

Van Leeuwen argues that religious belief—which he terms religious “credence”—is best understood as a form of imagination that people use to define the identity of their group and express the values they hold sacred. When a person pretends, they navigate the world by consulting two maps: the first represents mundane reality, and the second superimposes the features of the imagined world atop the first. Drawing on psychological, linguistic, and anthropological evidence, Van Leeuwen posits that religious communities operate in much the same way, consulting a factual-belief map that represents ordinary objects and events and a religious-credence map that accords these objects and events imagined sacred and supernatural significance.

It is hardly controversial to suggest that religion has a social function, but Religion as Make-Believe breaks new ground by theorizing the underlying cognitive mechanisms. Once we recognize that our minds process factual and religious beliefs in fundamentally different ways, we can gain deeper understanding of the complex individual and group psychology of religious faith.

Neil Van Leeuwen is Professor of Philosophy at Florida State University and a recipient of the European Commission’s Marie Curie Fellowship. His research has been featured in the New York Times and The Atlantic as well as on NPR.

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