From this article. Now if we can only interpret trance states postmetaphysically. The religions that formed
around trance states in the article, though evolutionarily adaptive at
the time, have solidified into metaphysical dogma and are no longer
adaptive to our world today. It though does beckon
us to create postmetaphysical rituals with music, dance, invocation,
incense etc. so that we can bond together via embodiment instead of just
intellectually.
"So there is a need for a new idea, and coming to the fore now is an old
one revisited, revised and rendered more testable. It reaches back a
century to the French sociologist Émile Durkheim who observed that
social activities create a kind of buzz that he called effervescence.
Effervescence is generated when humans come together to make music or
perform rituals, an experience that lingers when the ceremonies are
over. The suggestion, therefore, is that collective experiences that are
religious or religious-like unify groups and create the energy to
sustain them."
"The explanation is resurfacing in what can be called the trance theory
of religious origins, which proposes that our palaeolithic ancestors hit
on effervescence upon finding that they could induce altered
states of consciousness. Research to test and develop this idea is
underway in a multidisciplinary team led by Dunbar at the University of
Oxford. The approach appeals to him, in part, because it seems to
capture a crucial aspect of religious phenomena missing in suggestions
about punishing gods or dangerous spirits. ‘It is not about the fine
details of theology,’ Dunbar told me, ‘but is about the raw feelings of
experience, and that this raw-feelings element has a transcendental
mystical component – something that is only fully experienced in trance
states.'"
"Dunbar believes that a few hundred thousand years ago, archaic humans
took a step that ramped up this capacity. They started deliberately to
make music, dance and sing. When the synchronised and collective nature
of these practices became sufficiently intense, individuals likely
entered trance states in which they experienced not only this-worldly
splendour but otherworldly intrigue. They encountered ancestors, spirits
and fantastic beasts, now known as therianthropes. These immersive
journeys were extraordinarily compelling. What you might call
religiosity was born. It stuck partly because it also helped to ease
tensions and bond groups, via the endorphin surges produced in trance
states. In other words, altered states proved evolutionarily
advantageous: the awoken human desire for ecstasy simultaneously
prompted a social revolution because it meant that social groups could
grow to much larger sizes via the shared intensity of heightened
experiences."
"Meaning-making, the transcendent, and openness to revelation and
discovery are core parts of the human niche and central to our
evolutionary success. [...] The trance hypothesis is neutral about the truth claims of
religions whether you believe or don’t, though it does suggest that
transcendent states of mind are meaningful to human beings and can
evolve into religious systems of belief."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.