Myths, models, and metaphors: Religion as model and the philosophy of science |
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Authors: | Bryan Rennie[Author vitae] |
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Affiliation: | Department of Religion, History, Philosophy, and Classics, Westminster College, New Wilmington, PA 16172, USA |
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Abstract: | Clifford Geertz's widely-used paper ‘Religion as a Cultural System’, makes the claim that ‘the importance of religion lies in its capacity to serve … as a source of general, yet distinctive conceptions of the world, the self and the relations between them …—its model of aspect—and of rooted, no less distinctive “mental” dispositions—its model for aspect’. However, apart from a highly critical article by Nancy Frankenberry and Hans Penner (1999) little attempt has been made to investigate this understanding of religion as model. This paper briefly considers the validity of Frankenberry and Penner's criticism and investigates possible applications of the elaborate analysis of models and metaphors in the philosophy of science since the time of Mary Hesse to the analysis of religious phenomena. |
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Keywords: | Philosophy of science and the study of religion Religion as model Models of and models for |
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