Ordinary religious experience, learning and adaptation: a call for interdisciplinary inquiry
Keywords: 
Religious experience
Religious practitioners
Issue Date: 
2017
Publisher: 
Springer Nature
ISSN: 
2662-9992
Editorial note: 
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line.
Citation: 
F. Barrett, N. Ordinary religious experience, learning and adaptation: a call for interdisciplinary inquiry. Palgrave Commun 3, 17061 (2017).
Abstract
Within disciplines of religious studies, discussions of religious experience tend to revolve around the most rare and extraordinary cases, while neglecting much more common varieties of “ordinary religious experience”—that is, experiences of regular practitioners in the midst of normal religious activities such as worship or prayer. This comment will, first, call attention to this essential aspect of religious life, and, second, will suggest ways in which it can be made more accessible to investigation. This article suggests that researchers focus on the variability of engagement in religious practice and the processes of learning and adaptation by which regular practitioners enhance their experience of religious practice. It also suggests that ethnographic studies be extended by carefully selected theories of perception and cognition that address the role of material conditions in ordinary religious experience.

Files in This Item:
Thumbnail
File
Barret2017.pdf
Description
Size
202.06 kB
Format
Adobe PDF


Statistics and impact
0 citas en
0 citas en

Items in Dadun are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.