The Feeling of Believing; The Importance of Affectivity in the Rehabilitation of Belief

Resource added
How to Cite: Williams, J. (2023). The Feeling of Believing: The Importance of Affectivity in the Rehabilitation of Belief. Implicit Religion, 25(1-2), 77–101. https://doi.org/10.1558/imre.24340

Full description

The last half-century of religious studies scholarship has seen the diminishing importance of belief as a concept of analysis. The putative inaccessibility of beliefs and the concept’s Western Christian provenance has led many scholars of religion to reject the concept. Recent years have seen attempts to rehabilitate the concept of belief, including Kevin Schilbrack’s 2014 Philosophy and the Study of Religions. Schilbrack proposes that by engaging with contemporary philosophical reflection on belief—specifically dispositionalist and interpretationist theories—the traditional critiques of belief can be overcome. The purpose of this paper is to further develop this approach by proposing an additional, currently overlooked, element of belief—its affectivity. This approach builds on current research from enactivist cognitive science and avoids the objections traditionally levelled at belief, while enabling a more sophisticated analysis of power dynamics in religion

  • type
    Image
  • created on
  • file format
    jpg
  • file size
    13 KB
  • container title
    Implicit Religion
  • creator
    Jack Williams
  • issn
    ISSN 1743-1697 (online)
  • issue
    25.1/2
  • publisher
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • publisher place
    Sheffield, United Kingdom
  • rights holder
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • doi