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A Science of Social Control

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2024

Extract

The trouble about discussing religion is that most of us are against it. Since Bruno was burned at the stake and Galileo bullied into saying that the world was flat, rational and scientific thought about man and the world has known its enemy: God and the priests and all their works, the whole black cloud of canting obscurantists who have clogged understanding and persecuted knowledge for the sake of kings, popes, proprietors or other baleful fatherfigures clinging to their privilege and comfort at other mens'expense. If the liberal thinkers of the nineteenth century did not go as far as Marx and Engels in affirming that “law, morality, religion are to (the proletarian) so many bourgeois prejudices, behind which lurk just so many bourgeois interests,” they said much the same in their own context. They saw Christianity as a deplorable mystification, at best a mere vestige of primitive awe in face of the unknown, at worst an ingenious racket. Wrestling with it, they called for aid to “primitive religion.” There they found “a weapon which could, they thought, be used with deadly effect against Christianity,” since “if primitive religion could be explained away as an intellectual aberration, as a mirage induced by emotional stress, or by its social function,” so too could “higher religion” and the path thereby cleared to that extent of historical lumber.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1968 Fédération Internationale des Sociétés de Philosophie / International Federation of Philosophical Societies (FISP)

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References

1 E.E. Evans-Pritchard, Theories of Primitive Religion, 1965, pp. 14.

2 M. Fortes, Oedipus and Job in West African Religion, 1959, p. 53.

3 Evans-Pritchard, op. cit., p. 4.

4 I discuss this concept of the "ideal equilibrium" in other chapters.

5 T.O. Ranger, Revolt in Southern Rhodesia, 1967, esp. ch. 6.

6 C. Lévi-Strauss, La Pensée Sauvage, 1962: London, The Sauvage Mind, 1966.

7 Ibid.

8 N. Dyson-Hudson, Karimojong Politics, 1966, p. 16 and p. 97.

9 Lévi-Strauss, op. cit., p. 67.

10 R. Horton, "Ritual Man in Africa," in Africa 2 of 1964.

11 Id., "African Traditional Thought and Western Science," in Africa 2 of 1967.

12 J.-P. Lebœuf, "L'Histoire de la Région Tchadienne," in The Historian in Tropical Africa, ed. J. Vansina, R. Mauny and L.V. Thomas, 1964.

13 D'Hertefelt, "Mythes et Idéologies dans le Ruanda ancien et contem porain."

14 V.W. Turner, "Ritual Symbolism, Morality and Social Structure among the Ndembu," in African Systems of Thought, ed. M. Fortes and G. Dieterlen, 1965; and "Three Symbols of Passage in Ndembu Circumcision Ritual," in Essays on the Ritual of Social Relations, ed. M. Gluckman, 1962.

15 Ibid., 1962.

16 G. Lienhardt, Divinity and Experience: The Religion of the Dinka, 1961, pp. 298.

17 P. Morton-Williams, "The Kingdom of Oyo," in West African Kingdoms in the Nineteenth Century, ed. D. Forde and P.M. Kaberry, 1967.