The Cognitive Science of Religion

Wherefrom, Whereto?

Authors

  • Armin W. Geertz Aarhus University
  • Valerie van Mulukom Coventry University
  • Kristoffer Laigaard Nielbo Aarhus University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jcsr.40479

Keywords:

cognitive science of religion

Author Biographies

  • Armin W. Geertz, Aarhus University

    Armin W. Geertz is Professor in the History of Religions at the Department of Culture and Society, Section for the Study of Religion, and Chair of the Religion, Cognition and Culture Research Unit (RCC), Aarhus University, Denmark.

  • Valerie van Mulukom, Coventry University

    Valerie van Mulukom completed her doctoral studies at the School of Psychology, the University of Auckland, New Zealand in 2014. There, she did work on the cognitive neuroscience of episodic memory and future event imagination. After her PhD, she completed a postdoctoral project at Aarhus University, Denmark, where she investigated the intersection between religious ritual and episodic memory. She then joined the Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology, University of Oxford, where she worked on religion, memory, and group processes as part of the Ritual, Community, and Conflict project. Valerie joined the Brain, Belief, and Behaviour group at CABS, Coventry University, as Research Associate at the beginning of 2016. Research Interests: Belief; Cognitive science of religion; Imagination; Episodic memory; Creativity; Unbelief.

References

Ambasciano, Leonardo. 2015. "Mapping Pluto's Republic: Cognitive and Epistemological Reflections on Philosophy of Pseudoscience: Reconsidering the Demarcation Problem." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 3: 183-205.

---. 2016. "Wine, Brains, and Snakes: An Ancient Roman Cult between Gendered Contaminants, Sexuality, and Pollution Beliefs." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 4: 123-154.

Bulbulia, Joseph. 2013. "The Arts Transform the Cognitive Science of Religion." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 1: 141-160.

Chilcott, Travis. 2015. "Reappraising Objects of Desire through Practices of Devotion: A Cognitive Historiographical Approach to Religious Claims in Medieval India." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 3: 155-81.

Gardiner, Mark Q. and Steven Engler. 2015. "The Philosophy and Semantics of the Cognitive Science of Religion." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 3: 7-35.

Halemba, Agnieszka. 2016. "Response to Konrad Talmont-Kaminski's Review: Embracing Apparitions for Unity." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 4: 197-209.

Jensen, Jeppe Sinding. 2013. "Normative Cognition in Culture and Religion." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 1: 47-70.

Jong, Jonathan. 2013. "On Faith and the Fear of Fatality: A Review of Recent Research on Deities and Death." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 1: 193-214.

Lane, Justin E. 2013. "Method, Theory, and Multi-Agent Artificial Intelligence: Creating Computer Models of Complex Social Interaction." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 1: 161-180.

Martin, Luther H. and Donald Wiebe. 2014. "Pro- and Assortative-Sociality in the Formation and Maintenance of Religious Groups." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 2: 5-16.

Nielbo, Kristoffer L., Uffe Schjoedt and Jesper Sørensen. 2013. "Hierarchical Organization of Segmentation in Non-Functional Action Sequences." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 1: 71-97.

Nieuwboer, Wieteke, Hein T. van Schie and Daniël Wigboldus. 2014. "Priming with Religion and Supernatural Agency Enhances the Attribution of Intentionality to Natural Phenomena." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 2: 97-119.

Nordin, Andreas. 2015. "Indirect Reciprocity and Reputation Management in Religious Morality Relating to Concepts of Supernatural Agents." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 3: 125-153.

O'Lone, Katherine and Ryan McKay. 2016. "Divine Forgiveness and Human Support for State-Sanctioned Punishment." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 4: 155-184.

Porubanova-Norquist, Michaela, Daniel Joel Shaw and Dimitris Xygalatas. 2013. "Minimal-Counterintuitiveness Revisited: Effects of Cultural and Ontological Violations on Concept Memorability." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 1: 181-192.

Purzycki, Benjamin Grant. 2013. "Toward a Cognitive Ecology of Religious Concepts: An Example from the Tyva Republic." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 1: 99-120.

Pyysiäinen, Ilkka. 2013. "Cognitive Science of Religion: State-of-the-Art." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 1: 5-28.

Sibley, Chris G. and Joseph Bulbulia. 2013. "Healing Those Who Need Healing: How Religious Practice Interacts with Personality to Affect Social Belonging." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 1: 29-45.

Sørensen, Jesper and Kristoffer L. Nielbo. 2013. "The Experimental Study of Religion: Or There and Back Again." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 1: 215-232.

Talbot, Elizabeth and Colin Arthur Wastell. 2015. "Corrected by Reflection: The De-Anthropomorphized Mindset of Atheism." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 3: 113-124.

Talmont-Kaminski, Konrad. 2016. "Embracing Apparitions for Unity: Agnieszka Halemba on a Marian Apparition Site." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 4: 185-196.

Turner, Jonathan H. 2016. "Using Neurosociology and Evolutionary Sociology to Explain the Origin and Evolution of Religions." In Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion, 2018 4: 7-29.

van Elk, Michiel. 2014. "An EEG Study on the Effects of Induced Spiritual Experiences on Somatosensory Processing and Sensory Suppression." Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion 2: 121-157.

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Published

2020-01-30

Issue

Section

Editorial

How to Cite

Geertz, A. W., van Mulukom, V., & Nielbo, K. L. (2020). The Cognitive Science of Religion: Wherefrom, Whereto?. Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion, 5(1), 1-4. https://doi.org/10.1558/jcsr.40479

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