Monday, December 4, 2023

What does Jason Isbell have to do with Artificial Intelligence?

 

What does Jason Isbell have to do with Artificial Intelligence?

 

Many fear artificial intelligence; that it will in essence, at the end of the logic, replace us. A fortiori, AI will replace artists. As chatbots and AI grows in power and seemingly to expand the definition of intelligence to the point of replacing us and our aesthetic endeavors, I propose that Jason Isbell puts this idea to rest.

If you haven’t heard, Jason Isbell garnered Grammy nominations for Best Americana Album for “Weathervanes,” Best Americana Performance for “King of Oklahoma” and Best American Roots Song for “Cast Iron Skillet.”

Some background on Isbell is relevant for my purposes. Per the Music Box documentary, the divorce of his parents impacted him greatly. He is a recovering alcoholic, at one point he overdosed while he was in Drive-By Truckers.

What does this have to do with AI?

The driving idea behind AI replacing us and our aesthetic endeavors, is that if we just feed the software enough data and provide enough computing power, AI can produce art.

But I contend that art requires a body. Art can’t be produced with just data and computational power.

I contend that Jason Isbell’s trauma is in his body, and that it feeds his art. His body is a resource for aesthetics. The word I used with my therapist is “incarnate.” Isbell’s experience, interacting with his memory and his skill and craft, honed over decades of practice and performance and listening (which necessitates a body) produce art. Art that moves you and me, and him.

In the Music Box documentary, he gets choked up singing one of his own songs. The power of Cast Iron Skillet isn’t really measurable. Watch CBS’ John Dickerson hold back emotion after Isbell performs Cast Iron Skillet here at 39:45. It took this guy about 2:17.

Art requires emotion, production and reception. Emotions require bodies with hormones and chemicals and electricity in a delicate balance.

The delicate balance of guitar, harmony, and lyrics is what Isbell manipulates in Cast Iron Skillet, and in my humble opinion, Isbell is a master at a level few humans will ever reach.

Reaching requires a body. Art requires a body.

Culture is in his songs.

Tie in George Carlin’s line about “a little secret about the blues. You don’t just need to know which notes to play, you have to know why they need to be played.”

AI doesn’t possess a why. AI isn’t motivated. AI doesn’t feel compelled to write songs.

Jason Isbell does feel compelled.

Be thankful for Jason Isbell, and don’t fear for artists.

Tuesday, November 7, 2023

Wings Of Desire

 I recently watched Wim Wenders' Wings of Desire and the beginning hit me hard.


An angel, pining to be in the world (so Heideggerian), says the following:

Damiel: It's great to live by the spirit, to testify day by day for eternity, only what's spiritual in people's minds. But sometimes I'm fed up with my spiritual existence. Instead of forever hovering above I'd like to feel a weight grow in me to end the infinity and to tie me to earth. I'd like, at each step, each gust of wind, to be able to say "Now." Now and now" and no longer "forever" and "for eternity." To sit at an empty place at a card table and be greeted, even by a nod. Every time we participated, it was a pretense. Wrestling with one, allowing a hip to be put out in pretense, catching a fish in pretense, in pretense sitting at tables, drinking and eating in pretense. Having lambs roasted and wine served in the tents out there in the desert, only in pretense. No, I don't have to beget a child or plant a tree but it would be rather nice coming home after a long day to feed the cat, like Philip Marlowe, to have a fever and blackended fingers from the newspaper, to be excited not only by the mind but, at last, by a meal, by the line of a neck by an ear. To lie! Through one's teeth. As you're walking, to feel your bones moving along.


I thought back to my essay for my Writing for the Public Good course and found this: 

...how are you going to enjoy eternity when you can’t grab anything? What’s even the point if you can’t grab a beer, hold a lover, whack a golf ball, strum a guitar...

"...tie me to the earth...blackened fingers...feel your bones moving along."


The concept is so...shitty. Eternal life. What a horrible seed planted. I can't get over how this wrecks our species; I won't get over it.


Thursday, October 26, 2023

Kitchen Sink Blog

 Love this ad.



I saw the Mrs. Doubtfire play at PPAC in Providence RI and I still can't get over how good it was and how stupendous the lead actor was. 

This from James McBride's latest, The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store really has me thinking about patience and my 11 year old young man:









Monday, September 11, 2023

How To Kill Your New Running Shoes

 Been running for over 20 years and I've never before killed a pair of new running shoes. 

From my pain you shall prosper.

Maybe not prosper, but perhaps you won't suffer as I have, the grief of just a couple of runs from a $100 pair of running shoes. (And with inflation, $100 is on the cheap for a decent pair of running kicks)

As they like to say, "It's not the heat, it's the humidity."

I inaugurated my new shoes on a morning 7 miler down in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. Circa 5am, probably 70 degrees, but about 80% humidity. Yes, 80%...at 5am.

About 5 miles in my shorts are soaked with sweat, and for the next two miles, the sweat from above all proceeds to collect in my shoes. My new shoes. 

I skipped a day and ran a shorter run with less humidity and the shoes, while much looser and, for lack of a better word, squishy, still had enough feel to run. 

Cut to the end of vacation, back in Rhode Island for my long run 10 miler, and you guessed it, humidity. So about 5 miles of sweat collected in my shoes and by the end of the run it felt like running in Army boots. (No disrespect to Marine, Navy, or Air Force boots.)

Shoes = dead. 

No life left. The sweat just took all the stability out, soaked it to death. 

So I got three runs from a new pair of Mizuno Wave Riders. 

My advice? Run when it isn't humid. Or if you must run in the humidity, be prepared to open thy wallet. 




Friday, August 25, 2023

The Atlantic Ocean

I'm one of those a-holes that gets all ponderous every time I get a sense/scale of the Atlantic ocean. We recently visited the Outer Banks, Kitty Hawk to be exact, and the horizon line of that body of blue water always shrinks me. I become nothing, well, at least insignificant. Now trust me, I don't always need to see the vastness of the ocean to feel this way. But this vastness always guarantees this feeling. 

Here's the rub though. I don't see/feel it as necessarily negative. 

Now this ethos that our insignificance, our meaninglessness, our absurdity (if you will, and I know you will) is unabashedly, unaduleratedly (neologism), categorically negative...is well, debatable.  

Wow, hot take to challenge a premise. So bold.

(This body of water goes all the way to Africa)
Hear me out.

Hear me out twice.




"Yeah but, I've gotta find meaning."

(BTW, I think the voice of the alien IS Woody Allen - if you listen close, before the alien says, "Listen, you're not the missionary type..." there is the tongue click Woody does.)


You, yes you, and me, we've got to find meaning. 

BUT we frame it all wrong. We contextualize it WAY out of proportion. Meaning is a math problem. We need meaning during our paltry existence. We need meaning for 70 years, if we're lucky. 

What we don't require is COSMIC meaning. 


Holy fuck I love Woody Allen. 

You, yes you, and me, and Woody, need meaning in Brooklyn, and Barberton, and Akron, and Athens, and Rhode Island. We need meaning with Barb, and Mom, and Dad, and Jr. and the cat, and the dog. We need meaning "while we're here."

I know, trust me, it is tempting to seek the cosmic. Like a moth to the flame it is. 

But reign it in. Bring it back. Finitude my friends. 

What Woody Allen has done, and what I'm trying to do, is create my meaning, create my purpose, create my significance...HERE and NOW. 

The existentialists hammered this home, we are responsible for our choices...even though, cosmically, they are pointless. 

Just recently I saw this here: https://www.npr.org/2023/08/20/1194628971/religion-atheism-chaplin

But I think that the absence of God can be really beautiful. It means it's our responsibility to take care of each other on this earth. And everything courageous and beautiful that we do is on us. And so I see my atheism very much as an act of optimism, that it is our job to make this world as good of a place as possible for as many people as possible.

God = cosmic.

God is a context problem. God is a scale problem. God is a ratio problem. 

So I shrink on the shore of the Atlantic. So I'm insignificant under the moon. So I'm pointless in an expanding universe.

But what is that my business!?

I'm not going to stop doing my homework...and neither is Alvy Singer. I'm going to get up, participate, and be responsible for my meaning, finite though it be.

Will you join me?

I could use the company.

Thursday, August 10, 2023

New Album is out: Eclectic Electric

 

Wednesday, May 31, 2023

Objectification

 I can't recall the connecting of dots that led me here:


https://www.mit.edu/~shaslang/mprg/nussbaumO.pdf


But, upon reading, I am left with some thoughts:

I never could have been an academic philosopher. Nussbaum's thoroughness on just this one topic... I flit and flit from this to that, following the most recent shiny object to fall in my line of vision. The way she structures this and digs deep with her analysis - beautiful, powerful, masterful.

The mention of Trump in this is, well, something. This was published in 1995. He won the popular vote...for president. If that doesn't depress you, congratulations I guess. 

Friday, March 10, 2023

Not Himself

 

Some days are better than others.

Someone can’t tell me from another.

Another poor, poverty incarnate client, not my equal but too dumb to be silent

I can’t be bothered and I can’t be smothered

Nor can I be loved or your lover

You can’t be pleased you can’t be sated

You know nothing the likes of which for a second you have waited

The forest for the trees the spoiled entitled sass under the guise of distinguished class

Demographics are destiny, didn’t you know?

Genes are passed down, nothing fails to grow, or show, there’s no secret we can stow

Away, go away, they can’t bring themselves to say, just go away

We’re better off without you; you have nothing, no thing, of value

It’s true

As much as it can be

For you, for them, certainly for me

Long minus the be, I do not

Where is man? If nowhere, what has he got?

Not himself

Wednesday, March 8, 2023

Last Week Tonight - Desantis...and Sin

I watched this



and of course the christian near the end, talking about the two male (homosexual) penguins and how the bible says, “sin no more,” got me thinking about sin.


Well, specifically, sin in light of god’s omnipotence, omniscience, and benevolence. It’s essentially a theodicy of sorts, because nothing imperfect can flow from a perfect being, by definition. 


How does human sinning, especially a priori sin, certainly an imperfection, come into being from a perfect being? Remember, nothing imperfect can flow from a perfect being.


How does an all powerful, all knowing god, all good god, permit sin? Notice I did not ask why, but ‘how’. What are the mechanics of sin’s placement into the world, from a perfect being?


Now consider, what if our presidential candidates had to be questioned thusly about sin.


Why is homosexuality wrong? Why is homosexuality sinful? will elicit pat answers with biblical citations, but how, how, how does sin (an imperfection) come into the world from the perfect creator?


Or if this is the best of all possible worlds, per Leibniz, why all the hubbub, Bub?


Thursday, March 2, 2023

Love Letters

I was listening to stuff on youtube today as I worked, and meandered onto this video of guitar phenom Josh Smith.

And while it is certainly a guitarist oriented video, it hit me, it is also a love letter. 

Listen to his language: "Changed my life...without question, ...proceed to have my life changed...in a second...I'd never heard anything like it...took my breath away...I learned every song, every solo..."

This is nothing short of a love letter.

Think of those early days when you were in love, you likely used similar language; after all the ethos of the video is What hooked you

What made you fall in love?





Thursday, February 9, 2023

The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life BY Sheldon Solomon, Jeff Greenberg, and Tom Pyszczynski

 Your Kindle Notes For:

The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life

Sheldon Solomon, Jeff Greenberg, and Tom Pyszczynski

Last accessed on Monday May 24, 2021

174 Highlight(s) | 43 Note(s)

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First, we human beings are driven to protect our self-esteem. Second, we humans strongly desire to assert the superiority of our own group over other groups.

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Becker explained how the fear of death guides human behavior.

Note:Is it the fear or realization of death that guides behavior?


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we dubbed terror management theory in order to build on Becker’s claim that people strive for meaningful and significant lives largely to manage the fear of death.

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The awareness that we humans will die has a profound and pervasive effect on our thoughts, feelings, and behaviors in almost every domain of human life—whether we are conscious of it or not.

Note:Ok here it is "awareness" not "fear"


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it drives us so much that any effort to address the question “What makes people act the way they do?” is profoundly inadequate if it doesn’t include the awareness of death as a central factor.

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coping with the reality of death.

Note:Reality, not fear


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Such stories reflect the fact that all living beings are born with biological systems oriented toward self-preservation.

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Unlike bats and worms, however, we humans know that no matter what we do, sooner or later we will lose the battle against death. This is a profoundly unnerving thought.

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particularly important human intellectual capacities: a high degree of self-awareness, and the capacity to think in terms of past, present, and future. Only we humans are, as far as anyone knows, aware of ourselves as existing in a particular time and place.

Note:An ode to time and place: spatiotemporality


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We can ponder alternative responses to situations and their potential consequences and imagine new possibilities.

Note:Imagine = abstraction = counterfactual = subjunctive


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However, because we humans are aware that we exist, we also know that someday we will no longer exist.

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We pay a heavy price for being self-conscious.

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Terror is the natural and generally adaptive response to the imminent threat of death.

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the really tragic part of our condition: only we humans, due to our enlarged and sophisticated neocortex, can experience this terror in the absence of looming danger.

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To manage this terror of death, we must defend ourselves.

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Once our intelligence had evolved to the point that this ultimate existential crisis dawned on us,

Note:Why are we assuming crises?


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Since the dawn of humankind, cultural worldviews have offered immense comfort to death-fearing humans.

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the vast majority of people, past and present, have been led by their religions to believe that their existence literally continues in some form beyond the point of physical death.

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In all these cases, we believe that we are, one way or another, literally immortal.

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These cultural modes of transcending death allow us to feel that we are significant contributors to a permanent world. They protect us from the notion that we are merely purposeless animals that no longer exist upon death. Our beliefs in literal and symbolic immortality help us manage the potential for terror that comes from knowing that our physical death is inevitable.

Note:Is this, collectively or individually, healthy?


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two basic psychological resources. First, we need to sustain faith in our cultural worldview, which imbues our sense of reality with order, meaning, and permanence.

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the second vital resource for managing terror is a feeling of personal significance, commonly known as self-esteem.

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The desire for self-esteem drives us all, and drives us hard. Self-esteem shields us against the rumblings of dread that lie beneath the surface of our everyday experience.

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after being reminded of death, we react generously to anyone or anything that reinforces our cherished beliefs, and reject anyone or anything that calls those beliefs into question.

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five hundred studies and counting have demonstrated the many ways that cultural worldviews protect us from the terror that the knowledge of the inevitability of death might otherwise arouse. When confronted with reminders of death, we react by criticizing and punishing those who oppose or violate our beliefs, and praising and rewarding those who support or uphold our beliefs.

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Because of their helplessness and vulnerability, fledgling humans are especially prone to anxiety, and separation from attachment figures, literally or figuratively, is the ultimate threat to them. Hence, he observed, it was vitally important for infants to develop “basic trust,” the sense that they are safe and sound, in the first year of life. And they could do this only through the seemingly omnipresent and omnipotent help of people who cared about them.

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we all need self-esteem—to feel that we are good and valued—and

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Most children are thoroughly ensconced in their worldviews by age five,

Note:? Religion, politics, etc by age 5?


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in command of himself,

Note:Autonomous


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children are much more troubled about death, and at a much earlier age, than most of us realize.

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A complementary death-denying strategy is the belief in a personal and personified savior.

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cultural beliefs would be fleeting and unsustainable without visible symbols and tangible icons that are imbued with extraordinary significance.

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inducing doubt about a central tenet of their worldviews brought the worm at the core closer to consciousness.

Note:How does this, or its reverse (denying deah) impact public health?


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cultural beliefs, values, and ideals would be hard to sustain unless they were physically reinforced by signs and symbols everywhere, from crucifixes and flags on public buildings to movies in which masked heroes vanquish planet-threatening bad guys.

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What time is it now for you, the reader? What does it mean that it’s some day of the week, some month, some year? Isn’t that all an illusory structuring of your conscious experiences provided for you by your culture to help you impose order and permanence on something chaotic and fleeting?

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We humans feel fully secure only if we consider ourselves valuable contributors to that world we believe in.

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Your understanding of what the “right” things to do are, what social roles are of value, and how to properly fulfill your own role depends on your worldview.

Note:RELATIVISM!


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self-esteem is the feeling that one is a valuable participant in a meaningful universe.

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How others react to our behavior tells us how well we are meeting the standards of our culture and, ultimately, whether we really are the valued people we want to be.

Note:Looking-glass self


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Living up to cultural roles and values—whether we are called “doctor,” “lawyer,” “architect,” “artist,” or “beloved mother”—embeds us safely in a symbolic reality in which our identity helps us transcend the limits of our fleeting biological existence. Self-esteem is thus the foundation of psychological fortitude for us all.

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strong evidence that self-esteem keeps the physiological arousal associated with anxiety in check.

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Self-esteem takes the edge off our hostile reactions to people and ideas that conflict with our beliefs and values.

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self-esteem protects us from deeply rooted physical and existential fears.

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we combat mortality by striving for significance.

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Research has borne out the fact that we strive for higher self-esteem in the face of mortality.

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When people lose confidence in their core beliefs, they become literally “dis-illusioned” because they lack a functional blueprint of reality.

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Falling short, whether due to your ascribed place in society, your own failings, or unrealistic cultural expectations, is the second cause of struggles with self-worth.

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self-esteem plummets when cultures embrace standards of value that are unattainable for the average citizen.

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American society, in particular, puts great value on attributes and achievements that are unreachable for most individuals.

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Given such unrealistic standards of value, it’s no wonder that shaky self-esteem is the norm in the United States.

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Navigating through the ups and downs of life requires a delicate balance between self-deception and honest objectivity.

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research confirms that low self-esteem is associated with delinquency and violent antisocial behaviors.

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Some people, however, never develop a secure sense of self-worth in childhood and come to rely on excessive boasting and extreme defensive distortions to try to dampen existential dread. This leads to an inflated but fragile self-image that provides momentary security but requires constant reassurance and is vulnerable to the slightest challenge.

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self-esteem is our symbolic protection against death.

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By placing our psychological eggs in many different baskets, we increase the odds that we’ll have durable ways to feel good about ourselves.

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And as their ability to communicate through language improved, our ancestors became more self-aware. “The human being inventing [symbols],” Nietzsche contended, “is at the same time the human being who becomes ever more keenly conscious of himself.” This stimulated the development of even more sophisticated language, and so a dynamic cycle of language and increasing self-consciousness was born.

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fear of death, argues biologist Ajit Varki (working in collaboration with the late geneticist Danny Brower), would “be a deadend evolutionary barrier, curbing activities and cognitive functions necessary for survival and reproductive fitness.”

Note:What if we were too busy living to fear death?


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People terrified by the prospect of their own demise would be less likely to take risks in hunting to increase the odds of landing big game, to compete effectively for mates, or to provide good care for their offspring. So our ancestors made a supremely adaptive, ingenious, and imaginative leap: they created a supernatural world, one in which death was not inevitable or irrevocable.

Note:Important hypothesis here!


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Pascal Boyer and Paul Bloom propose that supernatural beliefs originated because humans are predisposed to attribute mind and intention to living things.

Note:Seems more like anthropomorphism


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Upper Paleolithic Revolution, or the Creative Explosion. This era was marked by the simultaneous appearance of art, body adornments, burials, and elaborate grave goods in many different societies.

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Rituals, art, myth, and religion—features of every known culture—together made it possible for people to construct, maintain, and concretize their supernatural conceptions of reality. By making the incredible credible, Becker explained, humans “imagined that they took firm control of the material world,” which “raised them over and above material decay and death.”

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in the face of nature’s indifference, our ancestors had to do something to enhance their chances for survival.

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Some combination of dance and song in turn likely formed the earliest rituals.

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the essence of ritual is wishful thinking in action.

Note:Subjunctive - contrary to fact


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by holding up their end of the deal with the gods through ritual sacrifices, humans gained a sense of control over life and death,

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RITUALS ARE THE BEHAVIORAL bedrock of human culture.

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Rituals, then, help manage existential terror by superseding natural processes and fostering the illusion that we control them.

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supernatural escapades serve to manage existential terror.

Note:Again, is this healthy management?


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“Without art,” mused George Bernard Shaw, “the crudeness of reality would make the world unbearable.”

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Living in and around monuments constructed for ritual and religious purposes may have encouraged people to learn to farm, which would not have occurred as readily if they continued to maintain a more nomadic lifestyle.

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Wonder what Harari would say.


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Burying the best grains (along with other grave goods) with the corpses was the first planting of seeds; the decaying flesh may incidentally have provided fertilizing nutrients for the seeds.

Note:Walt Whitman: Leaves of Grass


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What happens after I die?

Note:Cant language create a concept for which there is no "after"?A square-circle is as much a logical contradiction as "afterlife"


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all human societies, even the most primitive and technologically impoverished ones, have sophisticated creation myths, ideas about the structure of the universe, and explanations for what happens after death.

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Myths provide the narrative justification for rituals and, embellished by art, form religion, which serves to regulate all aspects of social behavior.

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Religions delineate how we should interact with and treat each other by providing a purposeful, moral conception of a life in which individuals’ souls can exist beyond their physical death.

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religion gave our ancestors—as it gives us—a sense of community and shared reality, a worldview, without which coordinated and cooperative activities in large groups of humans would be difficult, if not impossible, to sustain.

Note:Maybe then, but now i can ask if religion is helpful got the species


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Emile Durkheim and evolutionary biologist David Sloan Wilson argue that the only reason religion originated and flourished was that it fostered social cohesion and coordination.

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spiritual belief systems thrived because they quell existential terror (and we will present evidence in support of this claim in the next chapter).

Note:What if some are busy living and not terrified of death


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products of human ingenuity and imagination were essential for early humans to cope with a uniquely human problem: the awareness of death.

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humans do not have agriculture, technology, and science despite ritual, art, myth, and religion; rather, humans developed agriculture, technology, and science because of them.

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psychoanalyst Susan Isaacs, “reality-thinking cannot operate without concurrent and supporting…phantasies.”

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They deployed them to develop the belief systems, technology, and science that ultimately propelled us into the modern world.

Note:When?


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When it comes to efforts to transcend death, not much has changed in the last forty thousand years.

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Historically, people have aspired to become immortal in two often overlapping ways. One path is literal immortality, which is the promise either that one will never physically die, or that some vital aspect of the self will survive death.

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A second means of achieving immortality is to assure that some aspect of one’s identity, or some legacy of one’s existence, will live on after death. This symbolic immortality promises that we will still be part of something eternal after our last breath, that some symbolic vestige of the self will persist in perpetuity.

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As Rank’s translators put it, “the soul was created in the big bang of an irresistible psychological force—our will to live forever—colliding with the immutable biological fact of death.”

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Regardless of the differences, all soul concepts render the prospect of immortality feasible because souls are

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in fact, people believe that a plane is less likely to crash if a

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famous person is among the passengers, because proximity to a famous person confers upon you some magical sense of your own immortality.

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From this perspective, all economic activity, and human behavior in general, results from considering the costs and benefits (although not always consciously) of existing options and choosing the best—that is, the most useful—alternative.

Note:Ideal rational being theory


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money originated in religious rituals as consecrated tokens with immortal connotations.

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Originally, then, people didn’t want money to buy stuff. They wanted stuff to exchange for money. Money was a tangible repository of supernatural clout. It still is.

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The Bible explicitly linked work to both sin and death.

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Adam Smith observed that people pursue wealth not to “supply the necessities of nature” so much as to procure “superfluities” that satisfy the fundamental psychological imperative to be thought well of by others: “It is not wealth that men desire, but the consideration and good opinion that wait upon riches.”

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for many people the connection between fortune and immortality is fundamentally anchored in religious belief.

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the early Protestants, especially the Calvinists, sought wealth as a sign of God’s benevolent intentions toward them. Those who were not Chosen were (and still are, in many Calvinist minds) condemned to poverty.

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studies have shown that people who view death most negatively are most attracted to high-status material possessions, especially if they have shaky self-esteem.

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expanding consciousness gave rise to potentially debilitating and demoralizing terror. Such fear would have rendered our ancestors quivering piles of biological protoplasm on the fast track to oblivion save for their ingenious construction of a supernatural dimension of reality in which death was literally and symbolically averted.

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However, the supernatural cultural scheme of things that we humans embrace to manage existential terror is nevertheless ultimately a defensive distortion and obfuscation of reality to blot out the inevitability of death.

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this “necessary lie” about the nature of reality invariably sows interpersonal strife and undermines our physical and psychological well-being. Next

Note:Its not healthy


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Cultural worldviews and self-esteem help manage this terror by convincing us that we are special beings with souls and identities that will persist, literally and/or symbolically, long past our own physical death. We are thus pervasively preoccupied with maintaining confidence in our cultural scheme of things and satisfying the standards of value associated with it.

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Only humans, however, hate and kill other humans with righteous exuberance for symbolic affronts:

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Our longing to transcend death inflames violence toward each other. While our cultural scheme of things keeps a lid on our mortal dread, others cling to very different sets of beliefs to manage theirs. Acknowledging their “truths” inevitably calls ours into question.

Note:Would it benefit public health to embrace relativism?


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“One culture is always a potential menace to another,” Becker observed, “because it is a living example that life can go on heroically within a value framework totally alien to one’s own.”

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It is deeply disturbing to have one’s fundamental beliefs called into question. Take our meanings and purposes away, characterize them as juvenile, useless, or evil, and all we have left are the vulnerable physical creatures that we are. Because cultural conceptions of reality keep a lid on mortal dread, acknowledging the legitimacy of beliefs contrary to our own unleashes the very terror those beliefs serve to quell. So we must parry the threat by derogating and dehumanizing those with alternative views of life, by forcing them to adopt our beliefs and co-opting aspects of their cultures into our own, or by obliterating them entirely.

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no symbol is sufficiently commanding to completely overcome the terror of death.

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“others,”

Note:Paul Beatty in Slumberland: I hate you, the jews, and all the other others.


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This tendency to belittle others is particularly pronounced in the wake of death reminders.

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And death reminders cause us to see members of such out-groups as less human and more animalistic.

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cultural worldviews gain strength in numbers. For beliefs to serve as effective bulwarks against existential terror, people must be absolutely certain of their validity.

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the more people who share our beliefs, the more sure we feel that they are correct. If just one person believed that God spoke to Moses in the form of a burning bush, antipsychotic medication would be sought to relieve this poor soul of his florid delusion.

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Since our sense of being more than mortal animals is dependent on these unassailable truths, our desire to have them validated is especially strong when death is close to mind.

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studies show that proselytizing is prophylactic: if I learn that you have adopted my beliefs, I feel more confident of their validity and consequently don’t worry so much about my own death.

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Consider the counterculture movement in the United States in the 1960s, when young people began to “tune in, turn on, drop out.” Sparked by support for the civil rights movement and opposition to the escalating war in Vietnam, the “hippies” railed against the militaryindustrial complex and the greed, materialism, sexism, racism, and sexual repression that went with it.

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When existential terror is aroused, we fortify our cultural scheme of things by encouraging others to conform to socially sanctioned cookie-cutter molds.

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People in the ancient world often used animals as a tangible locus of their death anxiety. For example, on the ancient Hebrew Day of Atonement, two goats were chosen by lot: “the Lord’s Goat” was offered as the blood sacrifice for the sins of Israel, and the second, “Azazel,” or scapegoat, was cast out into the wilderness bearing the sins of God’s people.

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FINDING EVIL OTHERS provides a focus for disposing of residual death anxiety, this strategy usually backfires by increasing the actual threat posed by the others.

Note:A public health issue then?


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How can people maintain their sense of being significant contributors to a meaningful world while having their homeland appropriated and being forced to relinquish traditional beliefs and adopt an alien way of life?

Note:#beliefsmatter


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Death fears inflame violence toward others with different beliefs, especially those whom we designate as evil.

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This was the first direct evidence that fear of death magnifies the desire to physically harm those who challenge and insult our beliefs,

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We have now seen how “man’s inhumanity to man” stems from humankind’s fundamental intolerance of, and propensity to humiliate, those who subscribe to different cultural worldviews. This is compounded by the need to dispose of residual death anxiety by projecting it onto “evil” others.

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the “natural and inevitable urge to deny mortality and achieve a heroic self-image are the root causes of human evil.”

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Confidence in a cultural scheme of things and our own self-worth banish the dread. But when someone “different” challenges our core beliefs or sense of significance, we want to derogate, dehumanize, assimilate, demonize, humiliate, and destroy them.

Note:Public health


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Perhaps, once we fully recognize the central role that mortal terror plays in persistent strife, human ingenuity can also find ways of counteracting the destructive potential our fears can, and do, unleash.

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Our bodies and animality are threatening reminders that we are physical creatures who will die.

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We human beings often hold spiritual beliefs that enable us to view ourselves as different from, and superior to, all other forms of life. The best-known example of this outlook comes from the Judeo-Christian tradition:

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All human cultures have obscured their kinship with animals by disguising themselves; in so doing, they show that they belong to the world of culture, not the world of nature.

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In short, when we are cropped, depilated, pierced, tattooed, and enhanced, we’re not animals anymore.

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Why be ambivalent about something so pleasurable? According to Ernest Becker, it is because “sex is of the body, and the body is of death.” That is, sex is a potent signification of our creaturely, corporeal, and ephemeral condition. Sex is first and foremost a glaring reminder that we are animals; next to urination and defecation, it is the closest human beings come to acting like beasts.

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BEING AN EMBODIED ANIMAL aware of death is difficult indeed. We simply cannot bear the thought that we are biological creatures, no different from dogs, cats, fish, or worms.

Note:We CAN be a different kind/sort of animal...like one who reads this book and reflects on their knowledge and memory, PRIOR to or WHEN behaving!


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human beings use two distinct kinds of psychological defenses to cope with thoughts of death. When we are conscious of death, our proximal defenses are activated. These are rational (or rationalizing) efforts to get rid of such thoughts. We either repress these uncomfortable thoughts, try to distract ourselves, or push the problem of death into the distant future. In contrast, unconscious thoughts of death instigate our distal defenses. These defenses have no logical or semantic relation to the problem of death. Prescribing harsher punishment for criminals, derogating others who repudiate our cultural values, or attempting to boost our self-esteem has little or no direct bearing on the brute fact that we will someday die.

Note:One assumes these defenes run along a continuum of healthy and not


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proximal defenses enable us to depose death thoughts from the forefront of our mind, and distal defenses keep unconscious death thoughts from becoming conscious.

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distal defenses keep death thoughts from flooding consciousness. Throughout our lives, proximal defenses help us deal with occasions when death stands at the front and center of our minds.

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unconscious death thoughts instigate distal defenses.

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while some proximal and distal reactions are good for you, others foster sickness and even death.

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Research confirms the potentially beneficial effects

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In situations like these, proximal reactions to banish death thoughts from consciousness also serve to enhance physical well-being.

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So, vowing to slow down on the way home just after watching gory traffic accidents in a driving safety class is an effective proximal ploy to push conscious death thoughts into the unconscious. That’s good. A few stiff drinks to muffle self-awareness before hitting the road would serve the same proximal function. That’s not good.

Note:What about believing you are eternal, bound for everlasting wish fulfillment? Healthy or nah?


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Being “comfortably numb” from drugs and alcohol is a great way to banish death thoughts from consciousness, but not so great for staying healthy and alive.

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Once those thoughts of death have faded from consciousness, your reactions depend on the values from which you derive self-esteem, and on your core cultural beliefs.

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research shows that unconscious death thoughts tend to boost ideologically driven medical noncompliance.

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UNDERSTANDING THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN proximal and distal defenses will hopefully help psychologists and health-care practitioners develop more effective strategies to promote physical well-being.

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The best way to go, then, for health campaigns that make people think about death is to capitalize on both healthy proximal and distal reactions. This can be accomplished by fortifying a sense of personal efficacy of desired behavior, such as getting tested for AIDS, while also appealing to the self-esteem-enhancing implications of responsible behavior, such as emphasizing that people generally frown on indiscriminate sexual promiscuity and value engaging in safe sex.

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according to the World Health Organization, health “is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.”

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phobias often entail projecting fears of big, uncontrollable concerns, like death, onto smaller, more manageable problems, like spiders.

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PTSD victims often enter a protracted dissociated state that clinicians call psychic numbing

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Although almost everyone experiences some anxiety in response to life-threatening traumas, most people don’t dissociate to a maladaptive extent or develop PTSD.

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regardless of the cause, depressed people no longer confidently subscribe to their cultural scheme of things or believe themselves to be valuable members of their culture.

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Clinical studies find suicidal children are more likely than nonsuicidal children to view death as a continuation of life in which long-standing wishes may be fulfilled.

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Early Christianity had an annual commemoration of eager and willing martyrs to celebrate their “birthday to immortality.”

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once individuals relinquish their intellectualized galactic view of existence, there are virtually always aspects of life that do matter to them.

Note:Framing...perspective...Heidegger


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Love doesn’t eliminate all divides between people, but it allows one to value and be valued, and to feel connected to another person who is in the same existential boat that you are in,

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self-esteem buffers anxiety in general and anxiety about death in particular.

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development of the human neocortex spawned symbolic thought, self-awareness, the capacity to reflect on the past and anticipate the future, and the knowledge of our mortality.

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Epicureans argued, bad things can only happen to those capable of sensation. Dead people are devoid of all sensations, just as we all were before we were conceived. Being dead is thus no different from never having existed.

Note:Nice little modus ponens


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This, Epicurus proposed, will in turn make “the mortality of life more enjoyable.”

Note:Imagine a football game that never ended


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Indeed, looked at in a certain way, our awareness of death yields a keener appreciation for life.

Note:And publically healthier?


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“It is from some obscure recognition of the fact of death,” wrote Scottish essayist Alexander Smith in 1863, “that life draws its final sweetness.”

Note:A jigsaw puzzle with no edge pieces is bitter


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Epicurean efforts to eliminate death anxiety on rational grounds have been spectacularly unsuccessful to date.

Note:See Baldwin


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We are animals, and like all living creatures, we are biologically predisposed to resist premature termination. Any life-form that readily acquiesced to death would be eradicated from the gene pool in exceedingly short order. We have a variety of bodily systems that keep us going, including a limbic system that generates terror when our existence is threatened. And we need this fear to survive in a dangerous world. At the same time, our cerebral cortex makes us aware of our perpetual vulnerability and inevitable mortality. We must therefore continually manage the potential to experience that terror.

Note:Hold your breath for five minutes!


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Ironically, then, death anxiety might not be eliminated, and could even be heightened, in a world where death was not inevitable.

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people of each generation must grapple with them in light of current knowledge, historical conditions, and personal experiences.

Note:Zeitgeist


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“Why not depart from life as a sated guest from a feast?”

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Martin Heidegger argued that every individual must recognize that she or he is a “being toward death,” and because everyone dies his or her own death, authentic living by courageous awareness and acceptance of death is of necessity a personal undertaking.

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Making peace with one’s death is surely a worthy goal with many psychological and social benefits.

Note:And public health benefits?


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Biosocial transcendence is derived from the literal connection to future generations by passing on one’s genes, history, values, and possessions, or by identification with an ancestral line or ethnic or national identity that perseveres indefinitely.

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the possibility of literal immortality; it can also be a more symbolic sense of spiritual connection to an ongoing life force.

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Creative transcendence is obtained by contributing to future generations through innovations and teaching in art, science, and technology.

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Natural transcendence is identifying with all life, nature, or even the universe.

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experiential transcendence is characterized by a sense of timelessness accompanied by a heightened sense of awe and wonder.

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The rock is a black-and-white scheme of things, with explicit prescriptions for attaining literal and symbolic immortality. Unfortunately, many people who subscribe to rock views fervently proclaim their beliefs to be absolute truth, and they insist that they can unambiguously differentiate between good and evil. “Isms”—fundamentalism, fascism, communism, and some forms of free-market capitalism—are rock views.

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the rock-type worldview tends to foster an us vs. them tribal mentality that, as we have seen, breeds hatred and inflames intergroup conflicts.

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conceptions of life that accept ambiguity and acknowledge that all beliefs are held with some measure of uncertainty.

Note:Lakoff relativism


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The hard place means accepting that meaning and values are human creations.

The Evolution of the Idea of God: An Inquiry Into the Origins of Religions by Grant Allen

 

Your Kindle Notes For:

The Evolution of the Idea of God: An Inquiry Into the Origins of Religions

Grant Allen

Last accessed on Wednesday August 11, 2021

197 Highlight(s) | 20 Note(s)

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“By what successive steps did men come to frame for themselves the conception of a deity?”—or, if the reader so prefers it, “How did we arrive at our knowledge of God?”

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It does not concern itself at all with the validity or invalidity of the ideas in themselves;

Note: What is validity, if truth is relative?

 

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first, how did men come to believe in many gods—the origin of polytheism; second, how, by elimination of most of these gods, did certain races of men come to believe in one single supreme and omnipotent God—the origin of monotheism; third how, having arrived at that concept, did the most advanced races and civilisations come to conceive of that God as Triune, and to identify one of his Persons with a particular divine and

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human incarnation—the origin of Christianity.

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have here accepted the theory which traces the origin of the belief in gods to primeval ancestor-worship, or rather corpse-worship,

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Why from polytheism have the most advanced nations proceeded to monotheism?

Note: Why focus on "nations?"

 

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To analyse the origin of a concept is not to attack the validity of the belief it encloses.

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truths. A Deified Man is the central figure in the faith of Christendom.

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Christianity gave up its strict monotheism almost at the first start by admitting the existence of three persons in the godhead, whom it vainly endeavoured to unify by its mystic but confessedly incomprehensible Athanasian dogma.

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will be obvious at once to every intelligent reader that Christianity cannot possibly throw for us any direct or immediate light on the problem of the evolution of the idea of God.

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‘And the goal towards which I shall move will be the one already foreshadowed in this introductory chapter—the proof that in its origin the concept of a god is nothing more than that of a Dead Man, regarded as a still surviving ghost or spirit, and endowed with increased or supernatural powers, and qualities.

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A god, as I understand the word, and as the vast mass of mankind has always understood it, is a supernatural being to be revered and worshipped.

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I contend that religion, as such, is essentially practical: theology or mythology, as such, is essentially theoretical.

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into clearer relief this view of religion as essentially practical—a set of observances, rendered inevitable by the primitive data of human psychology.

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It is here that we find the great centre of the native religion. The spirits of the dead are the gods of the living.

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In the presents brought to the dead man’s grave to appease the ghost, we have the

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central element of all worship, the practical key of all cults, past or present.

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I want to bring into strong relief the fact that we have here going on under our very eyes, from day to day, de novo, the entire genesis of new gods and goddesses, and of all that is most central and essential to religion—worship, prayer, the temple, the altar, priesthood, sacrifice.

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I maintain that religion is not mainly, as the mistaken analogy of Christian usage makes us erroneously call it, Faith or Creed, but simply and solely Ceremony, Custom, or Practice.

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Its core is worship. Its centre is the God—that is to say, the Dead Ancestor or Relative.

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The entire Roman Catholic ritual is a ritual derived from the earlier sacerdotal ideas of ministry at an altar, and its connection with the primitive form is still kept up by the necessary presence of human remains in its holy places.

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The earliest dome-covered churches were attempts, as it were, to construct a catacomb above ground for the reception of the altar-tomb of a saint or martyr.

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none of these gods, so far as we can judge, could ever have come to exist at all if the ghost-theory and ancestor-worship had not already made familiar to the human mind the principles and practice of religion generally. The very idea of a god could not otherwise have been evolved; though, when once evolved, any number of new beings could readily be affiliated upon it by the human imagination.

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the true question narrows itself down at last to two prime factors—worship and sacrifice.

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Religion is practice, mythology is story-telling.

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Every religion has myths that accompany it: but the myths do not give rise to the religion: on the contrary, the religion gives rise to the myths.

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Religion, however, has one element within it still older, more fundamental, and more persistent than any mere belief in a god or gods—nay,

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nay, even than the custom or practice of supplicating and appeasing ghosts or gods by gifts and observances. That element is the conception of the Life of the Dead. On the primitive belief in such life, all religion ultimately bases itself. The belief is in fact the earliest thing to appear in religion, for there are savage tribes who have nothing worth calling gods, but have still a religion or cult of their dead relatives.

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form:

Note: But "form" requires matter

 

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To us, the conception of human life as a relatively short period, bounded by a known duration, and naturally terminating at a relatively fixed end, is a common and familiar one.

Note: It may be known but it isnt believed, per PEW

 

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where deaths are rare,

Note: The savage doesnt recognize the death of other animals?

 

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death has been a rare and startling occurrence.

Note: ????

 

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In point of fact, during these earlier stages, the idea of Death as we know it did not and does not occur in any form. There are still savages who do not seem to recognise the universality and necessity of death—who regard it on the contrary as something strange and unatural, something due to the machination of enemies or of witchcraft.

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they could not form any other concept without far more extended knowledge than they have the means of possessing.

Note: But they certainly knew the death of animals. No analogy to themselves?

 

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In other words, from the very earliest beginning of the neolithic age men buried their dead; and they continued to bury them, in caves or tumuli, down to the end of neolithic culture.

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It is only when bronze and other metals are introduced that races advance to the third stage, the stage of cremation.

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general conclusion that burial is the oldest, most universal, and most savage mode of disposing of the remains of the dead among

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humanity after the general recognition of death as a positive condition.

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Burial, then, I take it, is simply by origin a means adopted by the living to protect themselves against the vagrant tendencies of the actual dead.

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Hence, I believe, with the introduction of cremation the conception of the ghost merely suffered an airy change. He grew more shadowy, more immaterial, more light, more spiritual. In one word, he became, strictly speaking, a ghost as we now understand the word, not a returning dead man. This conception of the ghost as essentially a shade or shadow belongs peculiarly, it seems to me, to the cremating peoples.

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when people take to burning their dead, it is clear they will no longer be able to believe in the Resurrection of the Body. Indeed, if I am right in the theory here set forth, it is just in order to prevent the Resurrection of the Body at inconvenient moments that they take to burning.

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Naturally, therefore, among cremating peoples, the doctrine of the Resurrection of the Body tended to go out, and what replaced it was the doctrine of the Immortality of the Soul.

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A god, in fact, is in the beginning at least an exceptionally powerful and friendly ghost—a ghost able to help, and from whose help great things may reasonably be expected.

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the supposed power of the gods in each pantheon has regularly increased in proportion to the increased power of kings or emperors.

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They grow greater in proportion to the rise of temples and hierarchies.

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The gods are thought of as more and more aerial and immaterial, less definitely human in form and nature; they are clothed with mighty attributes;

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But they are never quite omnipotent during the polytheistic stage, because in a pantheon they are necessarily mutually limiting.

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But kingship supplies us with the missing link.

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terror of the revenant seems to prevent the usual forms of homage at the tomb of the deceased. Moreover, the ghost being now conceived as

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more or less freely separable from the corpse, it will be possible to worship it in some place remote from the dreaded cemetery.

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Beginning with such natural caves or such humble huts, the Temple assumes larger proportions and more beautiful decorations with the increase of art and the growth of kingdoms.

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Thus in Egypt the tomb was often more carefully built and splendidly decorated than the house; because the house was inhabited for a short time only, but the tomb for eternity.

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The earliest Idols, if I may be allowed the contradictory expression, are not idols at all—not images or representations of the dead person, but actual bodies, preserved and mummified.

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The eyes, again, are often replaced, as in Peru, by some other imitative object, so as to keep up the lifelike appearance. Cases like these lead on to others, where the image or idol gradually supersedes altogether the corpse or mummy.

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“The bodies of those who die in war or by a violent death are buried,” he says; “and if the head has been captured [by the enemy], a cocoanut is placed in the grave to represent the missing member, and to deceive and satisfy his spirit.”

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There is abundant evidence that such makeshift limbs or bodies amply suffice for the use of the soul, when the actual corpse has been destroyed or mutilated.

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priests are a class whose direct interest it is to make the most of the greatness and majesty of the deities they tend or worship.

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such priesthoods were generally made hereditary, so as to ensure their continuance throughout all time: and so successful were they that in many cases worship continued to be performed for several hundred years at the tomb; so that a person who died under the Early Empire was still being made the recipient of funeral dues under kings of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Dynasties.

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The temple attendants, endowed for the purpose of performing sacred rites for the ghost or god, have grown into priests, who knew the habits of the unseen denizen of the shrine. Bit by bit, prescriptions have arisen; customs and rituals have developed; and the priests have become the depositaries of the divine traditions.

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Thus, by convergence of all these streams, the primitive mummy or ghost or spirit passes gradually into a deity of unbounded glory and greatness and sanctity. The bodiless soul, released from necessary limits of space and time, envisaged as a god, is pictured as ever more and more superhuman, till all memory of its origin is entirely forgotten.

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But to the last, observe this curious point: all new gods or saints or divine persons are, each as they crop up first, of demonstrably human origin. Whenever we find a new god added from known sources to a familiar pantheon, we find without exception that he turns out to be—a human being.

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Whenever we go back to very primitive religions, we find all men’s gods are the corpses or ghosts of their ancestors.

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It will be our task in the succeeding chapters of this work to do even more than this—to show that the apparently unresolvable element in later religions, including the Hebrew god Jahweh himself, can be similarly affiliated by no uncertain evidence upon the primitive conception of a ghost or ancestor.

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But whenever on earth interment is practised, there stones of some sort, solitary or in heaps, almost invariably mark the place of burial.

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just in proportion as the ghost evolves into the god, so does the tombstone begin to evolve into the fetish or idol.

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votaries.

Note: Members of a religious community

 

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wherever we find the common worship of “stocks and stones,” all the analogies lead us to believe the stocks and stones either actually mark the graves of ancestors or else are accepted as their representatives and embodiments.

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I have already stated that the idol is probably in many cases derived from the gravestone or other sacred stone. I believe that in an immense number of cases it is simply the original pillar, more or less rudely carved into the semblance of a human figure.

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a similar Christianisation of holy wells, holy stones, and holy places has been managed by connecting them with legends of saints, or by the still simpler device of marking a cross upon them.

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the altar as a piece of sacrificial apparatus, and the pillar as a visible symbol or embodiment of the presence of the deity, which in process of time comes to be fashioned and carved in various ways, till ultimately it becomes a statue or anthropomorphic idol of stone, just as the sacred tree or post was ultimately developed into an image of wood.”

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the sacred stone at Semitic sanctuaries was from the first an object of worship, a sort of rude idol in which the divinity was somehow supposed to be present.”

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we can still see clearly in many places that Jahweh himself was at first personally present in the ark that covered him. And though the scribes (evidently ashamed of the early worship they had outlived) protest somewhat vehemently more than once, “There was nothing in the ark save the two tables of stone which Moses put there at Horeb, when Jahweh made a covenant with the children of Israel, when they came out of the land of Egypt,” yet this much at least even they admit—that the object or objects concealed in the ark consisted of a sculptured stone or stones; and that to dance or sing before this stone or these stones was equivalent to dancing or singing before the face of Jahweh.

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this much is fairly certain. The children of Israel in early times carried about with them a tribal god, Jahweh, whose presence in their midst was intimately connected with a certain ark or chest, containing a stone object or objects.

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god of the Hebrews, who later became sublimated and etherealised into the God of Christianity, was in his origin nothing more nor less than the ancestral sacred stone of the people of Israel, however sculptured, and perhaps, in the very last resort of all, the unhewn monumental pillar of some early Semitic sheikh or chieftain.

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In the first place, a stake or post most often marks the interment of a person of little social consideration; chiefs and great men have usually stone monuments erected in their honour;

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In the second place, the stone monument is far more lasting and permanent than the wooden one.

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For both these reasons, then, the stake is less critical than the stone in the history of religion.

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From such little images, obviously substituted for the dead body which used once to be preserved and affectionately tended, are derived, I believe, most of the household gods of the world—the Lares and Penates of the Romans, the huacas of the Peruvians, the teraphim of the Semites.

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all wooden idols or images are directly or indirectly descended from the wooden headpost or still more primitive sepulchral pole.

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all the main objects of worship together leads us back unanimously to the Cult of the Dead as their common starting-point.

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Whatever grows or stands upon the grave is sure to share the honours paid to the spirit that dwells within it.

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family gods, as we saw in a previous chapter, are really family ghosts, promoted to be deities.

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whatever comes up on or out of a grave is counted as representative of the ghost within it.

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though I believe the temple to have been developed out of the tomb or its covering, I do not deny that churches are now built apart from tombs, though always dedicated to the worship of a

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God who is demonstrably a particular deified personage.

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Thus, in ultimate analysis, we see that all the sacred objects of the world are either dead men themselves, as corpse, mummy, ghost, or god; or else the tomb where such men are buried; or else the temple, shrine, or hut which covers the tomb; or else the tombstone, altar, image, or statue, standing over it and representing the ghost; or else the stake, idol, or household god which is fashioned as their deputy; or else the tree which grows above the barrow; or else the well, or tank, or spring, natural or artificial, by whose side the dead man has been laid to rest.

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“the Worship of Death,” as the basis and root of all human religion.

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the mummy is everywhere the central object of worship—that the entire practical religion of the people was based upon this all-pervading sense of the continuity of life beyond the grave, and upon the necessity for paying due reverence and funereal offerings to the manes of ancestors.

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Egyptian history and religion, we shall, I think, see that this mystic god, so often explained away by elemental symbolism into the sun or the home of the dead, was in his first beginnings nothing more or less than what all his pictures and statues show him to be—a revered and worshipped Mummy, a very ancient chief or king of the town or little district of This by Abydos.

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in time, when this worship had assumed national importance, the local god became the chief figure in the common pantheon.

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I conclude, therefore, that a large part of the greater Egyptian gods—the national or local gods, as opposed to those worshipped by each family in its own necropolis—were early kings, whose myths were later expanded into legends, rationalised into nature-worship, and adorned by priestly care with endless symbolical or esoteric fancies.

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to the Egyptian mind the gulf between humanity and divinity was very narrow,

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THE only people who ever invented or evolved a pure monotheism at first hand were the Jews.

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It is the peculiar glory of Israel to have evolved God.

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I propose to do in the present volume is to reconsider the subject from our broader anthropological standpoint, and show how in the great Jewish god himself we may still discern, as in a glass, darkly, the vague but constant lineaments of an ancestral ghost-deity.

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if we put these indications side by side with those of family cults elsewhere, we may conclude that the Jewish religion, like all others, was based upon an ultimate foundation of general ancestor-worship.

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We are fairly entitled to conclude, then, I believe, that a domestic cult of the manes or lares, the family dead, formed the general substratum of early Hebrew religion,

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jealous Jahweh

Note: Anthropomorphism

 

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Jahweh is represented especially as a god of increase, of generation, of populousness, of fertility.

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In many other passages we get the self-same trait: Jahweh is regarded above everything as a god of increase and a giver of offspring.

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The earlier Israelites,

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To them, their god Jahweh was simply the object—stone pillar

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The character of the Hebrew worship, however, apparently underwent some slight modification in Egypt; or at any rate, Egyptian influences led to the preference of certain gods over others at the period of the Exodus.

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The Sons of Israel, at least from the date of the Exodus onward, carried this god or his rude image with them in an ark or box

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through all their wanderings.

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Jahweh was originally but a single one, a tribal ancestor-god, worshipped in the form of a cylindrical stone, perhaps at first a grave-stone, and regarded as essentially a god of increase, a special object of veneration by childless women.

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sacred pillar of a barbarous tribe, was gradually developed the Lord God of later Judaism and of Christianity—a power, eternal, omniscient, almighty, holy; the most ethereal, the most sublime, the most superhuman deity that the brain of man has ever conceived.

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Hebrew monotheism was to some extent the result of a syncretic treatment of all the gods, in the course of which the attributes and characters of each became merged in the other, only the names (if anything) remaining distinct; and to some extent the result of the intense national patriotism, of which the ethnical god Jahweh was at once the outcome, the expression, and the fondest hope.

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The syncretism thus brought about in the Hebrew religion by the superposition of nature-worship on the primitive cult must have paved the way for the later recognition of monotheism, exactly as we know it did in the esoteric creed of Egypt, by making all the gods so much alike that worshippers had only to change the name of their deity, not the attributes of the essential conception.

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But now that the material Jahweh itself, which clogged and cramped their ideas, had disappeared for ever, this spiritual conception

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of a great Unseen God widened and deepened amazingly.

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the Hebrews in Babylonia gradually evolved for themselves the notion of a Supreme Ruler wholly freed from material bonds, to be worshipped without image, representative, or symbol;

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a dweller in the heavens, invisible to men, too high and pure for human eyes to look upon. The conical stone in the ark gave place almost at once to an incorporeal, inscrutable, and almighty Being.

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How did this purely local and national Hebrew deity advance to the conquest of the civilised world?

Note: Monotheism that is

 

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At the moment when the empire was cosmopolitanising the world, Christianity began to cosmopolitanise religion, by taking into itself whatever was central, common, and universal in the worship of the peoples among whom it originated.

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strange as it sounds to us, the human gods were frequently or almost habitually put to death by their votaries.

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apotheosis.

Note: Deification

 

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Since the god is a man, it would obviously be quite wrong to let him grow old and weak; since thereby the whole course of nature might be permanently enfeebled; rain would but dribble; crops would grow thin; rivers would trickle away; and the race he ruled would dwindle to nothing. Hence senility must never overcome the sacred man-god; he must be killed in the fulness of his strength and health (say, about his thirtieth year), so that the indwelling spirit, yet young and fresh, may migrate unimpaired into the body of some newer and abler representative.

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Every purpose, therefore, was answered, and all dangers averted by thus killing the man-god and transferring his soul, while yet at its prime, to a vigorous successor.”

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In all these cases the divine king or priest is suffered by his people to retain office, or rather to house the godhead, till by some outward defect, or some visible warning of age or illness, he shows them that he is no longer equal to the proper performance of his divine functions.

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it is now certain that the putting to death of a public man-god was a common incident of many religions.

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It is likewise clear that many rites, commonly interpreted as human sacrifices to a god, are really god-slayings;

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Christianity apparently took its rise among a group of irregular northern Israelites, the

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Galilæans, separated from the mass of their coreligionists, the Jews, by the intervention of a heretical and doubtfully Israelitish wedge, the Samaritans. The earliest believers in Jesus were thus intermediate between Jews and Syrians.

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Christianity, as we shall see hereafter, may be regarded historically as a magma of the most fundamental religious ideas of the Mediterranean basin, and especially of the eastern Mediterranean, grafted on to the Jewish cult and the Jewish scriptures, and clustering round the personality of the man-god, Jesus.

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Normally and originally, I believe, all gods grow spontaneously. They evolve by degrees out of dead and deified ancestors or chieftains. The household gods are the dead of the family; the greater gods are the dead chiefs of the state or town or village.

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All these examples combine to show us two things: first, that the other life is very real and close to the people who behave so;

Note: To behave is to believe and vice versa

 

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sentiment. The further back we go in time or culture, the stronger does the sentiment in question become; it is only the civilised and sceptical thinker who hesitates to exchange the solid comforts of this world for the shadowy and uncertain delights of the next.

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The best known instances of such deliberate godmaking are those which refer to the foundation of cities, city walls, and houses. In such cases, a human victim is often sacrificed in order that his blood may be used as cement, and his soul be built in to the very stones of the fabric.

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that the offering is really a piece of deliberate god-making.

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in Welsh legend, Vortigern could not finish his tower till the foundation-stone was wetted with “the blood of a child born of a mother without a father”—this episode of the virgin-born infant being a common element in the generation of man-gods,

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Here once more we have the sacred-chance victim.

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cultivation and the sowing of seeds for crops had their beginning as an adjunct of the primitive burial system.

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It is clear from their accounts that graves do often give rise to crops of foodstuffs, accidentally springing from the food laid upon them.

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the manufactured or artificial god of the corn-field or other cultivated plot really dates back to the very origin of cultivation.

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the flesh and ashes of the victim were believed to be endowed with a magical or physical power of fertilising the land.”

Note: A manufactured god

 

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Cultivation probably began with the accidental

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sowing of grains upon the tumuli of the dead.

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Gradually it was found that by extending the dug or tilled area and sowing it all over, a crop would grow upon it, provided always a corpse was buried in the centre. In process of time divine corpses were annually provided for the purpose, and buried with great ceremony in each field. By-and-bye it was found sufficient to offer up a single victim for a whole tribe or village, and to divide his body piecemeal among the fields of the community. But the crops that grew in such fields were still regarded as the direct gifts of the dead and deified victims, whose soul was supposed to animate and fertilize them. As cultivation spread, men became familiarised at last with the conception of the seed and the ploughing as the really essential elements in the process; but they still continued to attach to the victim a religious importance, and to believe in the necessity of his presence for good luck in the harvest.

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I maintain that in his origin the Dionysus was nothing more than the annual corn-victim, afterwards extended into the tree and vine victim, from whose grave sprang the pomegranate, that blood-red fruit, and whose life-juice was expressed as the god-giving wine.

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What is certain is the fact that among the Aztecs, as among the Phrygians, the priest who sacrificed, the victim he slew, and the image or great god to whom he slew him, were all identified; the killer, the killed, and the being in whose honor the killing took place were all one single indivisible deity.

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It is a common early belief that to eat of any particular animal gives you the qualities of that animal.

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In short, the dead were eaten sacramentally or, as one writer even phrases it, “eucharistically.”

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By eating the body of a god, you absorb his divinity; he and you become one; he is in you and inspires you. This is the root-idea of sacramental practice; you eat your god by way of complete union; you subsume him in yourself; you and he are one being.

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victim—the animal which stands for a man and a god—as

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as a rule, each tribe has its own sacred beast, which is employed as a regular substitute for a man-god.

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the visitors believed they were eating the body and blood of the god to their own salvation.

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whoever eat bread and drank wine from the beginning must have known it was the body and blood of a god he was eating and drinking.

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“Without shedding of blood,” says the author of one of the earliest Christian tractates, “there is no remission of sin.” This is a common theory in all advanced religions; the sacrifice is regarded, not merely as the self-immolation of a willing divine victim or incarnate god, but also as an expiation for crimes committed.

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Sacrifice is then chiefly conceived of as a piacular offering to a justly offended or estranged deity;

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“The accumulated misfortunes and sins of the whole people,” says Mr. Frazer, “are sometimes laid upon the dying god, who is supposed to bear them away for ever, leaving the people innocent and happy.”

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Putting these two cardinal ideas together, we arrive at the compound conception of the scapegoat. A scapegoat is a human or animal victim, chosen to carry off, at first the misfortunes or diseases, later the sin and guilt of the community.

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the human scapegoat was the last term of a god, condemned to death, upon whose head the transgression or misfortunes of the community were laid as substitute. He was the vicarious offering who died for the people.

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“the fundamental idea of sacrifice is not that of a sacred tribute, but of joint communion between the god and his worshippers, by joint participation in the living flesh and blood of a sacred victim.”

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It must be obvious that many sacrifices at least are sacra-mentally-piacular god-slaying ceremonies, and that in most of them the god is slain, himself to himself, in human or animal form, as an expiation of crimes against his own majesty. Nor need I point out how this complex concept lies at the very root of Pauline theology.

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two cardinal points: first, that a dying god, human or animal, is usually selected as a convenient vehicle for the sins of the people; and second, that “without shedding of blood there is no remission of sin.”

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It based itself above all on sacrament, sacrifice, atonement, and resurrection.

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Its very name of Christian was given to it first in the crowded and cosmopolitan city of Antioch.

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Christianity was chiefly a plant of home growth. The native soil contained already every essential element that was needed to feed it—the doctrine of the Incarnation, the death of the Man-God, the atoning power of his Blood, the Resurrection and Ascension.

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Man makes his heaven in the image of earth; his

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god-slaying ceremonies, more or less attenuated, have lingered on everywhere in obscure forms among the folk-rites and folk-customs of the most civilised peoples.

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ever there was really a personal Christ, and if his followers began by vaguely believing in his resurrection, the legend, as we get it, is obviously made up of collected fragments from all the godslaying customs and beliefs we have been considering in detail through the last six or seven chapters.

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temporary king, slain on a cross as a piacular atonement, and raised again from the dead after three days, in the manner common to all corn and wine gods.

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the story on the whole exhibits the Christ to us entirely in the character of a temporary king, slain with piacular

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rites as a corn and wine god.

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doctrinal Christian theology. Its cardinal points are four—incarnation, death, resurrection, atonement.

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do not think there is an element in the Gospel story which does not bear out the parallel here suggested.

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On Easter Sunday, he rises again from the dead, and every good Catholic is bound to communicate—to eat the body of his slaughtered god on the annual spring festival of reviving vegetation.

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in our last chapter we shall find that this universal tendency to worship the dead has ever since persisted as fully as ever, and is in fact the central element in the entire religious instinct of humanity.

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The main emotional chord upon which Christianity played in its early days—and indeed the main chord upon which it still plays—is just, I believe, the universal feeling in favour of the deification or beatification of the dead, with the desire for immortality on the part of the individual believer himself in person.

Note: Eternity is the goal!

 

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The deities of the time were too coarse, too childish, too gross for their worshippers. The common philosophic attitude of cultivated Rome and cultivated Alexandria might be compared to some extent to that of our own Unitarians, who are not indeed hostile to the conception of theology in its own nature, but who demur to the most miraculous and supernatural part of the popular doctrine.

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If Constantine or any other shrewd military chief had happened to adopt the symbols of Mithra or Abraxas instead of the name of Christ, it is quite conceivable that all the civilised world might now be adoring the mystic divinity of the three hundred and sixty-five emanations, as sedulously as it actually adores

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the final theological outcome of the old Hebrew Jahweh.

Note: Facticity!!

 

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We must remember, too, that in all religious crises, while faith in the actual gods and creeds declines rapidly, no corresponding weakening occurs in the underlying sentiments on which all religions ultimately base themselves.

Note: Why?

 

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The fact is, the average man cares but little, after all, for his gods and his goddesses, viewed as individuals. They are but an outlet for his own emotions. He appeals to them for help, as long as he continues to believe in their effective helpfulness: he is ready to cajole them with offerings of blood or to flatter them with homage of praise and prayer, as long as he expects to gain some present or future benefit, bodily or spiritual, in return for his assiduous adulation. But as soon as his faith in their existence and power begins to break down, he puts up with the loss of their godhead, so far as they themselves are concerned, without one qualm of disappointment or inconvenience. It is something far other than that that touches him in religion: it is his hopes for his own eternal welfare, and the welfare after death of those that love him.

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necromancy,

Note: Communication with the dead

 

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Christianity, while from one point of view, as a monotheistic or quasi-monotheistic religion, an immense advance upon the aesthetic paganism of Greece and Italy, was from another point of view, as a religion of resurrection rather than a religion of immortality, a step backward for all Western Europe.

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Instead of Israel converting the world, the world seemed likely to convert Israel.

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all other and elder human gods, was specifically asserted afresh in a newer case about the man Christ Jesus. The idea fitted in with the needs of the time, and the doctrine of the Resurrection of Jesus the Christ became the corner-stone of the new-born Christian religion.

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It was the resurrection that converted the world of western Europe.

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three great motors of primitive Christianity: one dogmatic, the resurrection of Jesus: one selfish, the salvation of the individual soul: one altruistic, the desire for reunion with the dead among one’s beloved.

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At the period when Christianity first begins to emerge from the primitive obscurity of its formative nisus, however, we find it practically compounded of the following elements—which represent the common union of a younger god offered up to an older one with whom he is identified.

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Gradually, the conception of a personal Holy Ghost took form and definiteness: an Alexandrian monk insisted on the necessity for a Triad of gods who were yet one God: and by the time the first creeds of the nascent church were

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committed to writing, the Spirit had come to rank with the Father and the Son as the Third Person in the ever-blessed Trinity.

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sacerdotalism

Note: Priest as mediary, broker

 

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I shall strive to show, however, in my concluding chapters, how even to the very end the worship of the dead is still the central force in modern Christianity:

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the vast majority of places of worship all the world over are still erected, as at the very beginning, above the body of a dead man or woman;

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conclusions at which we previously arrived as to a belief in immortality or continued life of the dead being in fact the core and basis of worship and of deity.

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Islam, in practice, is a religion of pilgrimages to the tombs of the dead.

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hagiology.

Note: Biography of saints

 

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In short, from first to last, religion never gets far away from these its earliest and profoundest associations. “God and immortality,”—those two are its key-notes. And those two are one; for the god in the last resort is nothing more than the immortal ghost, etherealised and extended.

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Ah cartesion extension...

 

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Thus the Cult of the Dead, which is the earliest origin of all religion, in the sense of worship, is also the last relic of the religious spirit which survives the gradual decay of faith due to modern scepticism. To this cause I refer on the whole the spiritualistic utterances of so many among our leaders of modern science. They have rejected religion, but they cannot reject the inherited and ingrained religious emotions.

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set forth in as short a form as was consistent with clearness my conception of the steps by which mankind arrived at its idea of its God.

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Ancestor-Worship and the Cult of the Dead God have played a far larger and deeper part than he has hitherto been willing to admit in the genesis of the religious emotions.

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the vast mass of existing gods or divine persons, when we come to analyse them, do actually turn out to be dead and deified human beings. In short, it is my hope that I have rehabilitated Euhemerism.

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It is abundantly clear that no distinction of name or rite habitually demarcates these ubiquitous and uncertain spirits at large from those domestic gods whose origin is perfectly well remembered in the family circle.

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word, I believe that corpse-worship is the protoplasm of religion,

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