Religion and Science as Forms of Life
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                Edited by:
            
            
        Carles Salazar
        
About this book
The relationships between science and religion are about to enter a new phase in our contemporary world. This volume analyzes the relationships between religion and science as forms of life: ways of engaging human experience that originate in particular social and cultural formations.
Author / Editor information
Carles Salazar is Professor of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Lleida. He received his PhD from the University of Cambridge and has carried out ethnographic fieldwork on cooperation, religion and kinship. His publications include Anthropology and Sexual Morality. A Theoretical Investigation (Berghahn, 2006) and European Kinship in the Age of Biotechnology, co-edited with Jeanette Edwards (Berghahn, 2009).
Joan Bestard is Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Barcelona, where he is also director of the research center on Kinship and Family. He has done research on kinship and religion and is currently conducting research on religion in Southeast Poland. His recent publication is Familias (Madrid, 2012).
Carles Salazar is Professor of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Lleida. He received his PhD from the University of Cambridge and has carried out ethnographic fieldwork on cooperation, religion and kinship. His publications include Anthropology and Sexual Morality. A Theoretical Investigation (Berghahn, 2006) and European Kinship in the Age of Biotechnology, co-edited with Jeanette Edwards (Berghahn, 2009).
Reviews
“The publication of this volume marks a rich addition to long-established anthropological fields of magic, religion, and science. More importantly, however, the book is an important, much-needed injection to arguably sidelined anthropological fields of belief, disbelief, and, relatedly, unresolved contradiction.” • Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (JRAI)
“The contributors accomplished what they set out to do. They crossed disciplinary lines, exchanging and cross-referencing essays, while maintaining functionality in their own areas of expertise. The book produces an enlightening and fruitful conversation about religion and science as forms of life. It is especially recommended for academic classrooms to encourage critical reasoning and debate.” • International Social Science Review
“Religion and Science as Forms of Life: Anthropological Insights into Reason and Unreason brings together various theoretical positions from which to consider how forms of knowledge are articulated, opposed or mingled together, and their impact in different social settings. It is of special interest for academics in the field of anthropology and sociology of religion, but it can also be of particular relevance to anyone interested in analyses that explore the categories of ‘superstition’ and ‘belief’.” • Anthropological Forum
“Drawing on an eclectic range of ethnographic, empirical and theoretical sources, this book is a fascinating and timely contribution to contemporary scholarly debates about that most troubled of interfaces, between religion and science.” • Alexander Smith, The University of Warwick
“The conceptualization of the volume in terms of science, religion and forms of life (although public life might also work) is original and compelling as a means of exploring the complex terrains and scales at which religion and science meet, are received and transform one another.” • Paul-François Tremlett, The Open University
Topics
| Publicly Available Download PDF | i | 
| Publicly Available Download PDF | v | 
| Carles Salazar Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 1 | 
| Part I Cognition | |
| Robert N. McCauley Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 25 | 
| Michael Blume Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 49 | 
| Jesper Sørensen Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 62 | 
| Part II Beyond Science | |
| Timothy Jenkins Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 87 | 
| Simon Coleman Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 104 | 
| Marit Melhuus Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 120 | 
| Roger Sansi Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 137 | 
| Maria Coma Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 153 | 
| Part III Meaning Systems | |
| João de Pina-Cabral Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 173 | 
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                                        Chapter Ten. Religion, Magic and Practical Reason: Meaning and Everyday Life in Contemporary Ireland
                                    
                                 Tom Inglis Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 188 | 
| Heonik Kwon Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 207 | 
| Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 221 | 
| Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed | 225 |