Issue | Title | |
Vol 4, No 2 (2017) | Robert N. McCauley with E. Thomas Lawson, Philosophical Foundations of the Cognitive Science of Religion: A Head Start | Abstract PDF |
Konrad Talmont-Kaminski | ||
Vol 4, No 1 (2017): Book Review Symposium: Jennifer Larson’s ‘Understanding Greek Religion’, 2016 | Same, Same, But Different? A Cognitive Analysis of an Early Christian Apotropaic Amulet | Abstract |
Nils Hallvard Korsvoll | ||
Vol 5, No 1-2 (2018) | Science Wars, Scientism, and Think Tanks: A Précis of Nonsense on Stilts: How to Tell Science from Bunk (2nd edition) (Pigliucci 2018) | Abstract |
Massimo Pigliucci | ||
Vol 4, No 2 (2017) | Shadows in the New Testament: Cognitive Approaches to Early Christian Literature | Abstract PDF |
Paul Robertson | ||
Vol 4, No 1 (2017): Book Review Symposium: Jennifer Larson’s ‘Understanding Greek Religion’, 2016 | Should We Define Our Categories? On Jennifer Larson’s Understanding Greek Religion | Abstract |
Nickolas P. Roubekas | ||
Vol 4, No 1 (2017): Book Review Symposium: Jennifer Larson’s ‘Understanding Greek Religion’, 2016 | Strangers in a Strange Land No More: Introducing the Book Review Symposium Section and Jennifer Larson’s Understanding Greek Religion (2016) | Abstract |
Leonardo Ambasciano, Panayotis Pachis | ||
Vol 5, No 1-2 (2018) | Systematic Cognitive Bias in the History of Philosophy and its Cultural Transmission: A Case Study of Thomas Reid, Religion, and Science | Abstract |
Ryan Nichols | ||
Vol 1, No 1 (2014) | The Asklepios Cult: Where Brains, Minds, and Bodies Interact With the World, Creating New Realities | Abstract |
Olympia Panagiotidou | ||
Vol 2, No 2 (2015) | The Besieged Mind: Demonically-Induced Obsession in Late Antique Monastic Psychology | Abstract |
Inbar Graiver | ||
Vol 3, No 1-2 (2016): Special Issue: Digital Humanities, Cognitive Historiography, and the Study of Religion | The Database of Religious History and the Study of Ancient Mediterranean Religiosity | Abstract |
Frederick S. Tappenden | ||
Vol 3, No 1-2 (2016): Special Issue: Digital Humanities, Cognitive Historiography, and the Study of Religion | The Gendered Deep History of the Bona Dea Cult | Abstract |
Leonardo Ambasciano | ||
Vol 5, No 1-2 (2018) | The Rites of the Day of Blood (dies sanguinis) in the Graeco-Roman Cult of Cybele and Attis: A Cognitive Historiographical Approach | Abstract |
Panayotis Pachis | ||
Vol 4, No 2 (2017) | The Tangled Cultural History of the Axial Age: A Review of Jan Assman’s Achsenzeit (2018) | Abstract PDF |
Anders Klostergaard Petersen | ||
Vol 4, No 2 (2017) | The “What is…?” Issue: Explaining Culture(s) through History and Science | Abstract PDF |
Leonardo Ambasciano, Nickolas P. Roubekas | ||
Vol 5, No 1-2 (2018) | T.J. KasT. J. Kasperbauer, Subhuman: The Moral Psychology of Human Attitudes to Animals | Abstract |
Mauro Mandrioli | ||
Vol 2, No 1 (2015): Religious Experience in Mediterranean Antiquity | Tours of Heaven in Light of the Neuroscientific Study of Religious Experience | Abstract |
István Czachesz | ||
Vol 1, No 1 (2014) | Toward a Second Wave of Consilience in the Cognitive Scientific Study of Religion | Abstract |
Edward Slingerland | ||
Vol 5, No 1-2 (2018) | Toxic Theisms? New Strategies for Prebunking Religious Belief-Behaviour Complexes | Abstract |
F. LeRon Shults | ||
Vol 3, No 1-2 (2016): Special Issue: Digital Humanities, Cognitive Historiography, and the Study of Religion | Utilizing Complex Systems Statistics for Historical and Archaeological Data | Abstract |
Justin E. Lane, Michael J. Gantley | ||
Vol 4, No 2 (2017) | Walter Scheidel, ed., The Science of Roman History: Biology, Climate, and the Future of the Past | Abstract PDF |
Tomáš Glomb | ||
Vol 4, No 2 (2017) | What is Cognitive Historiography, Anyway? Method, Theory, and a Cross-Disciplinary Decalogue | Abstract PDF |
Leonardo Ambasciano | ||
Vol 5, No 1-2 (2018) | Why Alex Rosenberg — and a Number of Other Philosophers — Are Wrong Just about Everything: A Commentary on Scientistic Reductionism | Abstract |
Massimo Pigliucci | ||
Vol 4, No 1 (2017): Book Review Symposium: Jennifer Larson’s ‘Understanding Greek Religion’, 2016 | William E. Paden, New Patterns for Comparative Religion: Passages to an Evolutionary Perspective | Abstract |
Jeppe Sinding Jensen | ||
Vol 1, No 2 (2014) | “Magical thinking” and the Emergence of New Social Movements: Cognitive Aspects of Reformation Era Debates over Ritual Efficacy | Abstract |
Ann Taves | ||
Vol 1, No 1 (2014) | “Star-Talk”: A Gateway to Mind in the Ancient World | Abstract |
Roger Beck | ||
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