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  • Religion, Language, and the Human Mind

    Religion, Language, and the Human Mind by Chilton, Paul; Kopytowska, Monika;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 10 May 2018

    • ISBN 9780190636647
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages536 pages
    • Size 236x165x40 mm
    • Weight 1202 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    Religion is a multi-faceted and complex human phenomenon, combining many different mental and social characteristics. Among these, language plays a crucial though often neglected role. This volume brings together groundbreaking work from linguistics, cognitive science and neuroscience, as well as from religious studies, in order to illuminate the origins and centrality of religion in human life.

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    Long description:

    What is religion? How does it work? Many natural abilities of the human mind are involved, and crucial among them is the ability to use language. This volume brings together research from linguistics, cognitive science and neuroscience, as well as from religious studies, to understand the phenomena of religion as a distinctly human enterprise.
    The book is divided into three parts, each part preceded by a full introductory chapter by the editors that discusses modern scientific approaches to religion and the application of modern linguistics, particularly cognitive linguistics and pragmatics. Part I surveys the development of modern studies of religious language and the diverse disciplinary strands that have emerged. Beginning with descriptive approaches to religious language and the problem of describing religious concepts across languages, chapters introduce the turn to cognition in linguistics and also in theology, and explore the brain's contrasting capacities, in particular its capacity for language and metaphor.
    Part II continues the discussion of metaphor - the natural ability by which humans draw on basic knowledge of the world in order to explore abstractions and intangibles. Specialists in particular religions apply conceptual metaphor theory in various ways, covering several major religious traditions-Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam and Judaism.
    Part III seeks to open up new horizons for cognitive-linguistic research on religion, looking beyond written texts to the ways in which language is integrated with other modalities, including ritual, religious art, and religious electronic media. Chapters in Part III introduce readers to a range of technical instruments that have been developed within cognitive linguistics and discourse analysis in recent years. What unfolds ultimately is the idea that the embodied cognition of humans is the basis not only of their languages, but also of their religions.

    This is a book highly recommended to researchers from various disciplinary backgrounds, theologians and priests but also lay people from different cultural and religious backgrounds. Most chapters can be consid-ered independently. But in any case, do not miss the splendid and informative introduction and overview.

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    Table of Contents:

    PREFACE
    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
    CONTRIBUTORS
    INTRODUCTION Religion as a Cognitive and Linguistic Phenomenon
    Paul Chilton and Monika Kopytowska
    PART I RELIGIOUS LANGUAGE, MIND AND BRAIN
    CHAPTER 1 Whatever Happened to Theolinguistics?
    David Crystal
    CHAPTER 2 Speaking about God in Universal Words, Thinking about God
    outside English
    Anna Wierzbicka
    CHAPTER 3 Religious Metaphors at the Crossroads between Apophatical
    Theology and Cognitive Linguistics: an Interdisciplinary Study
    Kurt Feyaerts and Lieven Boeve
    CHAPTER 4 Linguistics and the Scientific Study of Religion: Prayer as a
    Cognitive Register
    William Downes
    CHAPTER 5 Cognitive Neuroscience and Religious Language: A Working
    Hypothesis
    Patrick McNamara and Magda Giordano
    CHAPTER 6 God, Metaphor and the Language of the Hemispheres
    Iain McGilchrist
    PART II INVESTIGATING METAPHOR IN RELIGIOUS TEXTS
    CHAPTER 7 A Composite Countenance: The Divine Face as Mixed Metaphor
    in Jewish Mysticism
    Ellen Haskell
    CHAPTER 8 The Guru's Tongue: Metaphor, Imagery, and Vernacular
    Language in Vai??ava Sahajiy? Hindu Traditions
    Glen Alexander Hayes
    CHAPTER 9 Snakes, Leaves and Poisoned Arrows:
    Metaphors of Emotion in Early Buddhism
    Hubert Kowalewski
    CHAPTER 10 Buddhist Metaphors in the Diamond Sutra and the Heart Sutra: A Cognitive Perspective
    Xiuping Gao and Chun Lan
    CHAPTER 11 The Muslim Prophetic Tradition: Spatial Source Domains for
    Metaphorical Expressions
    Ahmad El-Sharif
    CHAPTER 12 Metaphor in Religious Transformation: 'Circumcision of the Heart' in Paul of Tarsus
    Ralph Bisschops
    PART III NEW PERSPECTIVES
    CHAPTER 13 Cognitive Pragmatics and Multi-layered Communication: Allegory in Christian Religious Discourse
    Christoph Unger
    CHAPTER 14 Metaphor and Metonymy in Language and Art: the Dogma of the Holy Trinity and its Artistic Representation
    Antonio Barcelona
    CHAPTER 15 Waging a War against Oneself: a Conceptual Blend at the Heart of Christian Ascetic Practice
    Mihailo Antovi?
    CHAPTER 16 Hoc est corpus: Deixis and the Integration of Ritual Space
    Paul Chilton and David Cram
    CHAPTER 17 The Televisualization of Ritual: Spirituality, Spatiality
    and Co-presence in Religious Broadcasting
    Monika Kopytowska

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