AbstractAccording to data from Oxford encyclopedias, 84% of the world population belongs to an organized religion, which, at the end of 2009 represented 5.7 billion people belong to about 10,000 distinct religions. What happens in these circumstances at the meeting of the two types of thinking (informational/logical and religious) and how this combination influences the human beings? A number of paradoxes occur within human feelings and activities, one of which being represented by the contradiction between cognition and emotion, namely irrational thinking
Religion is not an evolutionary adaptation per se, but a recurring by-product of the complex evoluti...
The authors present an evolutionary model for the biological emergence of religious capacity as an a...
What explains the ubiquity and diversity of religions around the world? Widespread cognitive tendenc...
AbstractAccording to data from Oxford encyclopedias, 84% of the world population belongs to an organ...
This volume addresses the problem of change and continuity in religious traditions from the perspect...
In this article is summarized the theory of “modes of religiosity”, the doctrinal mode and the imagi...
Why have humans, throughout history and across cultures, shown a strong tendency to believe in the e...
Religions are seen everywhere in the world. Two main theories are competing to explain this phenomen...
Cognition is the set of processes by which we come to know the world. Cognitive science is the set o...
Science and religion are two common ways of acquiring knowledge. Despite their prevalence, these two...
A new cognitive approach to religion is bringing fresh insights to our understanding of how religiou...
Religion and Cognition. Considering the very limited results obtained by cognitive science in its at...
This paper explores dimensions of culture and practice that shape the cognitive pathways leading to ...
Cognitive science of religion brings theories from the cognitive sciences to bear on why religious t...
Cognitive approaches to religious phenomena have attracted considerable interdisciplinary attention ...
Religion is not an evolutionary adaptation per se, but a recurring by-product of the complex evoluti...
The authors present an evolutionary model for the biological emergence of religious capacity as an a...
What explains the ubiquity and diversity of religions around the world? Widespread cognitive tendenc...
AbstractAccording to data from Oxford encyclopedias, 84% of the world population belongs to an organ...
This volume addresses the problem of change and continuity in religious traditions from the perspect...
In this article is summarized the theory of “modes of religiosity”, the doctrinal mode and the imagi...
Why have humans, throughout history and across cultures, shown a strong tendency to believe in the e...
Religions are seen everywhere in the world. Two main theories are competing to explain this phenomen...
Cognition is the set of processes by which we come to know the world. Cognitive science is the set o...
Science and religion are two common ways of acquiring knowledge. Despite their prevalence, these two...
A new cognitive approach to religion is bringing fresh insights to our understanding of how religiou...
Religion and Cognition. Considering the very limited results obtained by cognitive science in its at...
This paper explores dimensions of culture and practice that shape the cognitive pathways leading to ...
Cognitive science of religion brings theories from the cognitive sciences to bear on why religious t...
Cognitive approaches to religious phenomena have attracted considerable interdisciplinary attention ...
Religion is not an evolutionary adaptation per se, but a recurring by-product of the complex evoluti...
The authors present an evolutionary model for the biological emergence of religious capacity as an a...
What explains the ubiquity and diversity of religions around the world? Widespread cognitive tendenc...