Description
Book SynopsisWhy did many religious leadersMoses, Old Testament prophets, Zoroasterclaim they heard divine voices? Why do ancient civilizations exhibit key similarities, e.g., the living dead (treating the dead as if they were still alive); speaking idols (care and feeding of effigies); monumental mortuary architecture and houses of gods (pyramids, ziggurats, temples)? How do we explain strange behaviour such as spirit possession, speaking in tongues, channelling, hypnosis, and schizophrenic hallucinations? Are these lingering vestiges of an older mentality?
Brian J. McVeigh answers these riddles by updating bicameralism. First proposed by the psychologist Julian Jaynes, this theory postulates that an earlier mentality existed: a human (the brain''s left hemisphere) heard voices of gods or ancestors (the brain''s right hemisphere). Therefore, ancient religious texts reporting divine voices were recounting of audio-visual hallucinationsa method of social control when early populations expan
Table of Contents
Contents
Foreword by Marcel Kuijsten
Acknowledgments
Prologue: Chasing Ghosts in Tokyo
Part I: The World According to the Gods
1 The Failure of Science to Explain Religion
2 Why the Gods Began to Speak
3 Divine Voices and Visions as Social Adaptation
Part II: When the Gods Spoke and Walked among Us
4 The Living Dead: Explaining Entombment and Ancestor Worship
5 Towns as the Domain of the Gods
6 Temples as Relay Stations: Transmitting Divine Commands
7 Talking Idols: Tools of Divine Control
8 Mortuary Monuments: How the Gods Awed Their Followers
9 Heavenly Ambassadors: God–Kings and Sacred Rulers
10 Ancient Civilizations as God-Governed
11 Mesoamerica: Theocentric Civilizations of the New World
12 Trimming the Theological Tree: Monotheism as Adaptation
13 Angels, Divine Messengers, and Swarms of Demons
Part III: When the Gods Fell Silent
14 Prayers, Possessions, and Prophecies: Conjuring Up the Missing Gods
15 The Gods Depart: The Late-Bronze-Period Dark Ages
16 A Change of Mind in the Ancient World
17 The Axial Age: The World Reborn without Gods
18 Imagining the Transcendent: A New Cognitive Ability
19 Introcosm: A New World of Space and Time
20 The Self Replaces the Gods
21 From Revelation to Reasoning
22 When the Gods Still Whisper: Strange Behaviors Explained
Epilogue: Science and Politics as Neo-Religion
Appendices and Supplementary Charts
A How to Chase Ghosts
B Explaining Religion versus Explaining Religion Away
C Gods on the Brain: Neurotheology
D The Problem with "Cultural Evolution"
E Six Hypotheses of Jaynesian Psychology
F The Limitations of Evolutionary Psychology
G Prehistoric and Historic Mentalities in Perspective
H Predictable Objections, Rebuttals, and Qualifications
I Verification and Applications of Jaynes's Theories
J Primitive Psychopolitics and Neurocultural Adaptation
K A History of Mentalities
L Population Size of Ancient Towns and Cities
M Dreams: A Form of Conscious Interiority
N Pre-Axial and Axial Ages Compared
O Solving the Mystery of Hallucinations
P Autoscopy: Seeing One's Double
Q What the Gods Can Teach Us: A New Understanding of the Mind
Timelines of Mentalities
Explanation
1 Three Major Shifts in Human Mentality
2 Prehistoric Mentalities
3 Middle East
4 Africa
5 Europe
6 South Asia
7 East Asia
8 Southeast Asia
9 Oceania
10 North America
11 South America
12 Mesoamerica
Glossary
References
Index