1/31 Is Judaism boring? Tamás Biró ACLC, University of Amsterdam Groningen Centre for Religion & Cognition.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Embracing Your New Identity
Advertisements

Semantics (Representing Meaning)
When Religion Meets Regeneration (3:1-15). When Religion Meets Regeneration 1.The RELIGIOUS MAN & His SIMPLE QUESTION (vs. 1-2) 2.The RIGHTEOUS SAVIOR.
Syntax-Semantics Mapping Rajat Kumar Mohanty CFILT.
Jewish Marriage Impact on the Community & Individual Jewish – ritual & ethical guidance for marriage Impact on the Community & Individual Jewish – ritual.
Basic Beliefs and Observances in Judaism. Mitzvot Jewish observance is structured around doing mitzvot – commandments Jewish observance is structured.
Circumstances of Origin: Abraham In the year 1900 B.C.E., a boy named Abram was born. God chose Abram to be the father of a great nation. Before the time.
Linguistic Theory Lecture 8 Meaning and Grammar. A brief history In classical and traditional grammar not much distinction was made between grammar and.
1/19 Is Judaism Boring? The role of symbols in “imagistic” Jewish movements in the nineteenth century Tamás Biró ACLC, University of Amsterdam Groningen.
Theories of Mind: An Introduction to Cognitive Science Jay Friedenberg Gordon Silverman.
Sept 15. Jewish Life Cycles.. For Wed: Judaism 101 site: Marriage Funerals For Friday: Daily Prayers and Sabbath Next week: Calendar and Festivals. Week.
Main Principles of the Jewish Ethical System. The main principles of the Jewish ethical system are derived from: the Tenach the Talmud the on-going rabbinical.
Bar Mitzvah/Bat Mitzvah Learning objectives: What happens at a Bar/Bat Mitzvah service and why The symbolism behind wearing Tefillin and Tallit. the importance.
The Existence of God Daniel von Wachter. Issues involved How does “God” refer? What is God supposed to be like? What makes theistic belief rational? (basic.
Ms Murtagh.
JUDAISM: SYMBOLS, PRACTICES, RITUAL The Way of Torah.
Beasley, Cate, Goldstein,Hall, Pirtle.  God is the creator of all that exists; He is one, incorporeal (without a body), and He alone is to be worshipped.
From Failure to Salvation October 7. Think About It … Failure is not a pleasant subject … but all of us have experienced it in one way or another. What.
Judaism “In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart.” - who’s quoted here? “In spite of everything, I still believe that.
THEORIES OF MIND: AN INTRODUCTION TO COGNITIVE SCIENCE Jay Friedenberg and Gordon Silverman.
Judaism Unit - review. For your test… Read your 6 trait model Reread your notes Make some connections Review the BIG list of terms.
5-2: The Beliefs of Judaism. Standards H-SS 6.3.2: Identify the sources of the ethical teachings and central beliefs of Judaism: belief in God, observance.
Galatians 3:13-14 Christ has redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us (for it is written, “Cursed is everyone who hangs on a.
A Ritual Initiation Bar Mitzvah for 13 year old boys: The age of moral and ritual responsibility (sometimes Bat Mitzvah ceremony for 12 year old girls).
From Galatia To Rome Reading Paul as Paul would be read January 12, 2014.
The at the. Dead Sea Sea of Galilee Samaria Judea Galilee Jerusalem Sychar Modern Nablus Sychar Modern Nablus.
Applying Belief Change to Ontology Evolution PhD Student Computer Science Department University of Crete Giorgos Flouris Research Assistant.
1/22 Where is the counterintuitive agent in Judaism? Tamás Biró ACLC, University of Amsterdam Groningen Centre for Religion & Cognition.
 Three of the world’s major religions were born in the Middle East.  They are Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. (In that order based on age.)  All.
The Gospel of JOHN “The Gospel of Boldness” Chapter Two: “A Bold Action” Page 15 1.
Some Covenant Benefits Lesson 12. What Was the Covenant? The Bible gives very few details of the covenant. Genesis 15 is one of the most detailed accounts.
 Galatians 1:6-8 (NIV) - 6 I am astonished that you are so quickly deserting the one who called you by the grace of Christ and are turning to a different.
1 / 26 Origins of Religion, Cognition and Culture Aarhus, January 5, 2006 Tamás Bíró: Liturgical linguistics Liturgical.
Topic 7: participant role Introduction to Semantics.
The Argument from Religious Experience Does a claimed experience of something divine prove God’s existence?
LOGIC AND ONTOLOGY Both logic and ontology are important areas of philosophy covering large, diverse, and active research projects. These two areas overlap.
Judaism What are the beliefs, history, and influence of Judaism?
Albert Gatt LIN3021 Formal Semantics Lecture 4. In this lecture Compositionality in Natural Langauge revisited: The role of types The typed lambda calculus.
Points of Discussion Discuss the link between theory and research. Explain the difference between inductive and deductive reasoning. What is a paradigm?
The Synagogue. Jewish place of prayer, community, and education Services daily but main service on Friday night and Saturday morning Requires a minyan.
SHABBAT The Sabbath. Objectives 1. To understand the symbolic objects and actions found in the celebration of the Jewish Sabbath. 2. To recognise the.
Jesus answered and said to him, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.” John 3:3.
EEL 5937 Agent communication EEL 5937 Multi Agent Systems Lotzi Bölöni.
Jewish Marriage as a rite of passage.
Florian A. Twaroch Institute for Geoinformation and Cartography, TU Vienna Naive Semantic Interoperability Florian A. Twaroch.
Linguistics as a Model for the Cognitive Approaches in Biblical Studies Tamás Biró SBL, London, 4 July 2011.
Judaism Can you think of a very important person we often talk about who followed the Jewish Faith?
WORLD RELIGIONS JUDAISM 7.5 Trace Islam’s historical connections to Judaism and Christianity. B3,7.
JEWISH MARRIAGE.
Introducing Judaism We can explain where we will find Jews in the world today. We can explain where we will find Jews in the world today. We will be able.
The Chinese Room Argument Part II Joe Lau Philosophy HKU.
In first century Palestine
Judaism World Religions. Background Judaism is a major world religion with over 18 million members. Jews believe in one God whom they call “Yahweh”. Judaism.
“ T he C hristian M ust B ecome C hrist” 03/04/2007 Dr. Dane Boyles.
MITZVOT JUDAISM - KS1 and SEN
She wants a real man who... Will love her as Christ loved the church. Will use his headship in loving service to his wife and family.
THE SERMON ON THE MOUNT.
April McCarty & Ann Hardin
The Dynamic Spatiality of Cinema and the Religious Belief:
Judaism CQuigley 2017.
Jews Believe… In one God(Yahweh), creator of the universe, personal ,happy and angry In prophets – especially Moses, through whom Torah was revealed to.
Verificationism on religious language
How can God die if Jesus is God? and other questions
The roles of men in Judaism Men are to put on The tallit, or prayer shawl, with its fringes or tassels known as tzitzit. They commanded in the Torah to.
Comunicación y Gerencia
The Hebrews Mod 3.5 pgs
7 Characteristics of Judaism
Index Beliefs system [according to various religion ]
A Kingdom of Priests and a Holy Nation
Presentation transcript:

1/31 Is Judaism boring? Tamás Biró ACLC, University of Amsterdam Groningen Centre for Religion & Cognition

2/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 E. Thomas Lawson & Robert N. McCauley Lawson & McCauley, 1990.: Rethinking Religion, Connecting Cognition and Culture – Foundations of the Cognitive Science of Religion – Model of rituals, based on Chomskyan syntax McCauley & Lawson, 2002: Bringing Ritual to Mind, Psychological Foundations of Cultural Forms – Which predicts better the arousal connected to rituals? Ritual form (L&McC, 1990) or frequency (Whitehouse, 1995)?

3/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 The fate of a scientific theory/model model first observations prediction new observations background “philosophy” Details, concrete examples

4/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 “A model without an example is like a car without an engine: it might look great, but it won’t take you anywhere.”

5/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Overview Introduction to / own reading of / elaboration on Lawson&McCauley’s model of ritual form L&McC: Implementation to religious rituals Implementation to Judaism Corroborate or refute the McC&L theory? NB: This talk aims at contributing to a CSR theory, and not to the study of Judaism.

6/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Linguistics: syntax–semantics interface Johnbrokethe window. The hammerbrokethe window. The windowwas brokenby John. The windowwas brokenby the hammer. The windowbroke.

7/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Linguistics: syntax–semantics interface subjectverbobjectby-phrase Johnbrokethe window. The hammerbrokethe window. The windowwas brokenby John. The windowwas brokenby the hammer. The windowbroke.

8/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Further linguistic observations John broke the window. Mary broke the window. John and Mary broke the window. * John and the hammer broke the window. John broke the window using the hammer. * The hammer broke the window using John. John = agent ↔ hammer = instrument.

9/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Linguistics: syntax–semantics interface subjectverbobjectby-phrase Johnbrokethe window. The hammerbrokethe window The windowwas brokenby John. The windowwas brokenby the hammer. The windowbroke.

10/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Thematic roles (Theta-roles) Semantic arguments of the action: – Agent: (“logical subject”) – Patient: (“logical direct object”) – Instrument Further semantic roles: – Recipient: (“logical indirect/dative object” ; L&McC p125 ) – Location, time – Experiencer – Etc.

11/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Frequent confusion: ontological categories – thematic roles human (incl. CIA) agent natural forceagentive categories agentive roles natural force animal patient plantrecipient location artefact natural object instrument

12/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Thematic roles for action representation So far: linguistic arguments to introduce them (arguments from specific languages and from cross-linguistic comparison). My hypothesis: Linguistic observations reflect a deeper cognitive phenomenon: the mental representation of actions and states-of-affair in the world. Need to be demonstrated even beyond religion.

13/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Axioms of Human Cognition 1 Axiom AHC 1: (1a) (Object Agency Filter) Agentive roles can be filled only by (some!) agentive categories. (1a’) Only agentive categories can bring about changes in the world. (1b) (Agent Overdetection) Agentive roles are preferably filled by ontological agents (humans and CIAs, but not by natural forces).

14/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Axioms of Human Cognition 2 The hammer broke the window. The window was broken by the hammer. John broke the window using the hammer. Axiom AHC 2: (2a) Agentive categories being able to perform action X can enable other categories to act as instrument, or as secondary agents in performing action X. (2b) Otherwise, non-agentive categories cannot act as instruments.

15/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Halfway summary Action representation system: 1. Agent – action (+ patient, instrument, time, location, recipient…) John broke the window in the house with a hammer. The wind broke the window yesterday. 2. Instrument – action (+ patient, instrument…) + prior enabling action The hammer [moved by John] broke the window.

16/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Lawson & McCauley on religious rituals – Religious ritual if and only if at least one slot is filled by a counterintuitive agent (CIA)… CIA in agent-role: The gods declare you a married man. CIA in recipient-role: We offer the sacrifice to the gods. – …or an agent/instrument enabled by a CIA. The priest [ordained by gods] declare you a married man..

17/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Lawson & McCauley on religious rituals – The shortest chain of enabling counts (Principle of Superhuman Immediacy). – “Special agent rituals” vs. others (Principle of Superhuman Agency) : CIA connected to agent vs. other thematic roles (via the shortest chain of enabling rituals) – Balanced ritual systems need both. – Tedium effect if no special agent rituals.

18/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Application to post-Temple Judaism Special agent rituals in Judaism? – Circumcision? – Bar mitzvah? – Wedding? Special patient rituals? – Ritual bath? Torah scroll, mezuzah? (burning chametz, lighting Shabbat candles, havdalah…) What about most commandments? – Positive vs. negative commandments

19/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Circumcision Widespread belief: Agent makes Patient a Jew by circumcision. BUT: J. women, not circumcised Jews: also Jews Gen. 17: who circumcised Abraham? Patient is minor: obligation on father or on beit din Patient is major: obligation on himself A Jewish man not circumcised may circumcise.

20/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Circumcision Gen. 17,13: …êúéá ãéìé ìåîé ìåîä Targum Johanan ben Uziel ad Gen. 17,13: The one who is circumcised should circumcise… Bab. Talmud, Avoda Zara 27a Maimonides, Hilchot Milla 2,1: Everybody is allowed to circumcise. Even the uncircumcised, the slave, the woman and the minor may circumcise, if there is no man present. But the gentile may not circumcise; yet, if he did so, one does not need to circumcise again.

21/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Circumcision Not a special agent ritual The person performing the ritual neither is a CIA nor does he need to have undergone any enabling ritual connecting him to a CIA. Nor a special patient ritual The person undergoing the ritual … Nor a special instrument ritual The instrument used during the ritual …

22/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Wedding Contract, not sanctity No need for a rabbi Has the rabbi undergone any enabling ritual (“ordination”)? Action of the groom Witnesses

23/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Burial No need for rabbi, any Jew can (must) perform it, supposing he knows how to do it.

24/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Pidyon ha-ben The redeeming of the first born Need for a cohen: – Is the cohen a CIA? Certainly not. – Has the cohen undergone any enabling ritual? Certainly not.

25/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Conversion The beit din (rabbinic court) as special agent? What enabling ritual has the court undergone? Court of ignorant Jews?

26/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Conversion “Immersion is not a cleansing process, but one whereby states are changed through a Divine purification process. Therefore, once a convert emerges from the waters of the mikvah, he ‘is … a Jew in every way’ (Yevamot 47b).” (Rabbi Yoel Schwartz: Jewish Conversion, 1994, p. 55)

27/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Mikvah – ritual bath No enabling ritual for the mikvah Must meet certain criteria: quantity, source of water, etc.

28/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Mezuzah, Torah scrolls Are these “special agents”? In folk religiosity, handled as if they were: – Dancing with / clothing the Torah scrolls – The mezuzah “protecting” the place But, are there enabling rituals? – The way of writing them – Fixing the mezuzah on the doorpost Who would be the special agent in these rituals?

29/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Conclusion: is Judaism boring? Jewish ritual actions do not involve a CIA in any of their thematic roles. What they involve is – A person who is halakhically Jewish – Meeting conditions that have been specified by CIA McC&L: No rituals at all in Judaism? Missing the target! A too simple, trivial model: Initial enabling ritual is conversion or being born Jewish Improve the L&McC model!

30/31 Tamás BIRÓ SBL Vienna, Austria, July 24, 2007 Summary An overview of Lawson & McCauley 1990 from a different perspective: – Thematic roles as elements of action representation system. – Axioms of cognition Implementing L & McC 1990 to Judaism: serious need to improve the model! What about other religions?

31/31 Thank you for your attention! Tamás Biró Download this presentation from the Archive for Religion & Cognition: