Article de revue: ID no. (ISBN etc.):  15677095 Clé de citation BibTeX:  Barsalou2005c
Barsalou, L. W., Barbey, A. K., Simmons, K. W., & Santos, A. (2005). Embodiment in religious knowledge. Journal of Cognition & Culture, 5(1/2), p. p14–57.
Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane 2008-02-06 16:08:52
 B  
Catégories: Cognition incarnée, concept, Full text
Descripteurs: COGNITIVE psychology, KNOWLEDGE, PSYCHOLOGY, RELIGION, RELIGIOUS thought, Theory of (Religion)
Auteurs: Barbey, Barsalou, Santos, Simmons
Collection: Journal of Cognition & Culture

Nombre de vues:  387
Popularité:  35.15%

 
Résumé
Increasing evidence suggests that mundane knowledge about objects, people, and events is grounded in the brain's modality-specific systems. The modality-specific representations that become active to represent these entities in actual experience are later used to simulate them in their absence. In particular, simulations of perception, action, and mental states often appear to underlie the representation of knowledge, making it embodied and situated. Findings that support this conclusion are briefly reviewed from cognitive psychology, social psychology, and cognitive neuroscience. A similar representational process may underlie religious knowledge. In support of this conjecture, embodied knowledge appears central to three aspects of religious experience: religious visions, religious beliefs, and religious rituals. In religious visions, the process of simulation offers a natural account of how these experiences are produced. In religious beliefs, knowledge about the body and the enviro
Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane

 
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Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane
 

 
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