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The Psychology of Religious Dogma

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 February 2009

Extract

The psychologist finds himself in disagreement with a method of treating religious dogma current amongst many philosophers and theologians who regard it as a purely intellectual matter with an entirely intellectual history. This tradition belongs not only to philosophers and theologians; students of comparative religions have, in the past, erred in the same way. Tylor, for example, lays it down as the first condition for research into primitive religions that “the religious doctrines and practices examined … are treated as belonging to theological systems devised by human reason, without supernatural aid or revelation.” Elsewhere he says that the student will “search for the reasonable thought which once gave life to observances now become in seeming or reality the most abject and superstitious folly.”

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1930

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References

page 568 note 1 Primitive Culture, Tylor, E. B., vol. i, London, 1871.Google Scholar

page 568 note 2 Ibid.

page 568 note 3 Dogme et Critique, Roy, É. Le, Paris, 1907.Google Scholar

page 569 note 1 A History of Indian Philosophy, Dasgupta, S., vol. i, Cambridge, 1922.Google Scholar

page 569 note 2 The Todas, Rivers, W. H. R., London, 1906.Google Scholar

page 571 note 1 Queen Victoria, Strachey, Lytton, London, 1921.Google Scholar