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Ancient Religion and Cognition

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2026

Hugh Bowden
Affiliation:
King's College London
Esther Eidinow
Affiliation:
University of Bristol

Information

Ancient Religion and Cognition

  • Series Editors

  • ESTHER EIDINOW, University of Bristol

  • HUGH BOWDEN, King’s College London

This series seeks to take advantage of a critical moment in the development of the study of ancient religion. This is one in which previous models (especially the sharp oppositions frequently drawn between ritual and belief, or between the social and the individual) are increasingly being questioned, and in which scholars of the ancient world are more and more drawing on cognitive approaches in the search for new paradigms. The ‘cognitive science of religion’ draws on insights developed in a wide range of fields: cognitive and evolutionary psychology, social anthropology, and neurobiology, amongst others. In essence, however, it seeks to understand religious experience as rooted in the ordinary cognitive capacities of the human brain. The series covers not only Greek and Roman religion but a range of ancient cultures from the Mediterranean and Near East, including Greece, Rome, Egypt, Babylonia, Persia, and Phoenicia, as well as cultures from Iron Age Europe. It will also explore the implications for the study of these cultures of a range of different cognitive approaches to religion and will include work by scholars from a wide range of disciplines in anthropology, the study of religion, evolutionary psychology, and neuroscience in addition to that by historians and archaeologists of the ancient world.

References

Titles in the series:

Cognitive Approaches to Ancient Religious ExperienceEidinow, Esther, Geertz, Armin W., and North, JohnCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Senses, Cognition, and Ritual Experience in the Roman WorldMisic, Blanka and Graham, AbigailCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Visiting the Oracle at DodonaBowden, Hugh and Eidinow, EstherGoogle Scholar

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