Sunday, November 24, 2013

Baptiste Gille, 29/11/2013, 11 am (in the conference room of the DEC)



Date: Friday 29th November
Time: 11 am
Place: Conference room of the Département d’Etudes Cognitives - 29, rue d'Ulm
Speaker: Baptiste Gille (Post-doc, Quai Branly)
Title:Supernatural Beings: Proposal for a New Cognitive Theory of Counter-intuition
Abstract: I submit for consideration the theory of ontological violation proposed by Boyer (1994; 2001) and show that it can be developed and extended to a prototypical level. This extension allows the cognitive apprehension of supernatural beings on a morphological level for iconographic or descriptive representations. Boyer considers that the understanding of supernatural beings is based on the violation of expectations held in a given ontological domain. I want to show that if there is indeed a violation, it remains that, in some cases, this violation mainly occurs at the level of specific or prototypical expectations. Thus, I try to restore the status of what Boyer calls “oddities”, which are forms of chimerical constructions, but which do not constitute, for him, a viable criterion for the understanding of supernatural entities (Boyer 2001, 118).
At a methodological level, I present an anthropological approach to the morphological analysis of concrete entities. At a theoretical level, I highlight the fact that a single psychological theory – the “Domain-Specificity theory” – underpins Boyer’s system (Boyer 2001, 101-106). It is my contention that one can understand the cognitive constitution of supernatural beings by resorting to intuitive psychological principles which are not based on the distinction between specific domains. I suggest focusing on the prototypical analysis of the basic-level category. I therefore thoroughly follow Boyer’s recommendations: cognitive anthropology is able to explain religious phenomena in terms of a special use of our basic cognitive intuitions which are mobilized in our daily interactions.