SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION
by
DOMINADOR N.
MARCAIDA, JR.
30 January 2007
Introduction
Many
people today find the topic on religion quite interesting. Others, due to their
sensitiveness to religious questions, especially when religious beliefs or
convictions are discussed, would rather avoid the topic of religion. In the
study of sociology, however, it is but inevitable not to take up the topic of
religion as a social institution.
The
purpose of this paper is not to be critical of any religion. The intention is
simply to look at religion on its sociological perspective, or point of view.
It shall be concerned merely on the study of the complementariness of religion
and society in human history. In particular, it will: Show the relationships
between religion and society; Present the psychological and sociological
theories on the universality of the religious phenomenon and behavior; Contain
a definition of religion and its elements and society in its different
evolutionary stages; and Present a theoretical representation that shows the
complementariness of religion and society, including an explanation of each of
the predominant forms of religious beliefs that cropped up in the evolution of
the human society. This theoretical model will be presented in a tragic and
comic framework of drama.
Relationship between religion and society
Emile
Durkheim was a pioneer in the sociology of religion.[1] He emphasized the function of religion as a
celebration of the social order.
Karl
Marx saw religion as an instrument of oppression used by a ruling class to
cover up economic exploitation of the masses.
Max
Weber saw religion as an agent of social change.
Edward
B. Taylor (1832-1917), Durkheim’s contemporary, and Sir James Frazer
(1854-1941), were interested in the historical origins of religion and
speculated on its evolution from “primitive” beliefs. By implication they
viewed religion as a relic of earlier stages of human societal evolution. The
evolutionist theoretical model of Taylor and Frazer was criticized as “armchair
sociological theory” by some 19th century anthropologists, headed by
the German-born anthropologist Franz Boas.[2]
According
to the evolutionists, “All societies are undergoing historical changes that are
passing through definite stages of development.”[3] This evolutionist point of view may be
complimented by the functionalists’ theoretical model by the proposition that
each element in society has the function to keep that particular society stable
in any given moment in the history of society.
The
functionalist theoretical model of the religious phenomenon was spearheaded by
Bronislaw Malinowski (1884-1942). He saw religion as filling a gap between
human aspirations and abilities. Anthropologist Clifford Geertz (1965) saw religion
as “relieving the intense anxiety people feel when they are at the limits of
their analytical capacities and moral insights.”[4]
In
support of this statement, one source says:
“By trusting that
they could be implored for help through rituals and prayers, the person’s
anxieties over the uncertainties of life is fairly quieted down to a point that
gives him self-assurance and confidence and a mind set for coping up with
reality. This is the adaptive function of religious rituals” (Castroverde,
2000).[5]
Functionalism
is concerned with the close correlation between social structure and social
functions. It explains that the unit of functions of society tend to serve the
structure, and to perpetuate it.
According to the functionalist theoretical model, religion has a
functionalist role in society. An author said:
“In viewing
religion as a social institution, functionalists evaluate its impact on human
societies. The first two functions of religion…integration and social control –
are oriented toward the larger society. Thus they are best understood from a
macro-level viewpoint in terms of the relationship between a religion and
society as a whole. The third function – providing social support – is more
oriented toward the individual and can be understood more effectively from a
micro-level viewpoint. The fourth function, promoting social change, is
illustrated using Max Weber’s macro-level concept of Protestant ethic.” [6]
The Sociological and
Psychological Theories on the universality of the Religious Phenomenon and
Behavior
The
sociological theories on the universality of the religious phenomenon and
behavior may be complemented with the psychological explanation on the origin
of religion. Sigmund Freud and William James saw religion as springing from a
deep psychological need.[7]
However,
the sociological and psychological perspectives may be quite different from
each other. Whereas the sociological perspective is concerned with the external
expression of religion, how religious behavior affects social relationships
among people in society, psychological perspective concerns with the internal
root causes of religion, its psychological origins and functions, individual
motives, purposes and religious experiences.
Psychological
theories explain the universality of religion in the attempt to reduce anxiety
or to satisfy cognitive need for intellectual understanding. Sociological
theories say that religion is the reflection of society and its social
conditions.
Some
sociologists prefer a mixture of the psychological and sociological
perspectives, saying, “Religion is the response to strain or deprivation felt
by the individual and caused by events in society.”[8]
As
the psychological motive is the source of the outward expression of religion,
the two perspectives therefore could not be separated from each other. Both
perspectives, together with the anthropological, have offered theories to
account for the universality of religion. Both the psychological and social
needs of man give rise to religious beliefs and practices.[9]
Two
other sources explaining the complementariness of religion and society are the
psychological source and the Marxian source. The psychological source states
that religion is...
“the product,
psychologically speaking, of an empty life, a repressed life, a bitter life.
Speculation on the meaning of life inevitably results in a philosophy, at
whatever level of thought and culture it takes place, and the instant such
speculation begins to justify the present in terms of a hoped-for and imagined
better or idealistic future that will give what the heart longs for and the
situation in life denies, we have religion. Religions may, also, take the view
that there never can be aught that humans would enjoy and that the purpose of
life is to teach resignation, aloofness, non-resistance, but behind even this
lies the belief that by such means with or without the aid of magic or
superhuman agencies, individuals may achieve a better life, a life which, while
pleasure is not increased, at least pain and struggle will be diminished.”[10]
According to this psychological
explanation on the origin of religion, there are two worlds which man tries to
reconcile in his personal life: one, the ideal, and the other, the real world.
The ideal life is everything that man’s heart desires, which is limitless. The
real life is everything that he does not like, which he more or less avoids,
because it is painful, cruel, corrupt and bitter. Man tries to reconcile this
by discovering a benevolent force outside, which is much stronger and greater
than him, which he believes, would help him cope or tame the strange and
hostile forces of life. Such beliefs give him the power to attain whatever is
desirable or beneficial to him. Man, therefore, invents religion as a vehicle
to approach the natural forces. Relying on some supernatural forces, he
believes that the natural forces could be manipulated, tamed and controlled for
his benefit and advantage in order to make his life more bearable. Thus,
religion is involved in intricate rites and practices, that are mysterious (the
weirder, the better) and magical, believed to have the power to repel the evil
forces away from, and attract the benevolent forces towards, himself.
The development of all these
religious rites and practices, with their magical or “miraculous” powers that
man knew since the beginning of human evolution, is what constitutes religious
history.
To support this opinion, let us take
a further elaboration from the same author of Psychology quoted earlier:
“The history of religion
shows clearly, for each age and each people, that it is an effort to square an
imagined good life with an actual not-so-good existence. Each new theology is
both a philosophy of life and a sketch of the universe, a bridging of the gap
between the organism and its home. In so far as such philosophies work in terms
of fact, use objective methods, base results on human values of biological
satisfaction and happiness, the become psychologies and ethics, and the
other-worldliness fades and becomes a mere gesture. We now live here, and
wherever we may someday live, our present problem is emphatically here. The
hereafter must be in terms of the now, not the reverse; the so-called spiritual
must be founded on the physical and not mere words that have no significance,
no relation to real facts and conditions; higher values depend on lower ones,
and there is no royal road to freedom other than through health, balance, and
the sanity of individual and group.”[11]
This home that man tries to bridge
is the sense of the “sacred.” Phyllis A.
Tickle says: “The sacred is essence perceived as a place wherein all that can
be grasped is equally present, where the good and the evil have changed to the
warm and the cold, and neither is better; a place where light and its absence
are the emotions.”[12]
Based on these observations, it is
discovered that the concept of man about his relationship with the supernatural
forces also underwent a corresponding development as human society passed from
one mode of production to another, an observation that did not escape the
scrutiny of Carl Marx. The Marxian explanation on the source of religious
beliefs states that the religious phenomenon and behavior had resulted from the
predominant economic base, or mode of production, and that there is an inverse,
or dialectical, relationship between the religion and society. [13]
According
to Carl Marx, the development of social consciousness is conditioned, to a
great extent, by social existence. Hence, the transformation of the economic
base alters the superstructure of society. Marx wrote, “Whatever is the mode of
production of society, such in the main is society itself, ideas and theories
its political views and institutions.” [14]
In
his “Critique of Political Economy (1859)”, called the materialist conception
of history, or historical materialism, he proposed that in every historical
epoch the prevailing economic system by which the necessities of life are
produced determines the form of societal organization and the political and
intellectual history of the epoch. [15]
According
to Amable G. Tuibeo, “While the superstructure arises from the economic base,
it can impact in, or influence, the economic base of society. In other words,
the relationship between the economic base and the superstructure is dialectical”[16]
The
prevailing form of society gives rise to a predominating form of religious
belief that complements and builds it, according to Carl Marx (1818-1883). An
author wrote:
“Marx acknowledges
that religion plays an important role in legitimating the existing social
structure. The values of religion, as already noted, reinforce other social
institutions and the social order as a whole. From Marx’s perspective, religion
promotes stability within society and therefore helps to perpetuate patterns of
social inequality. In a society with religious faiths, the dominant religion
will represent the ruling economic and political class.” [17]
Hence,
the theoretical representation on the complementariness of religion and society
(see Figure 2) illustrates the inverse, or dialectical, relationship that
existed between religion and the economic base, or modes of production, in the
history of human society.
Carol
R. Ember et al aptly summarizes the psychological and the Marxian sources in
just one statement: “The realm of the gods parallels and may reflect the
everyday social and political world.”[18]
Religion and its Elements
What is religion? Religion,
etymologically speaking, comes from the Latin word “religare,” meaning to bind or tie again, to reconcile.
In
the strict sense, religion is “any set of institutionalized beliefs and
practices that deal with the ultimate meaning of life."[19]
From
the sociological viewpoint, religion may be defined as “a system of beliefs and
practices relative to sacred things which unite their adherents into a kind of
moral community.” [20]
According to Richard J. Gelles et
al, (1999), religion has four elements. These are: Religious Beliefs – affirms
the existence of a divine or supernatural order, define its character and
purpose, and explain the role humans play in that order; Rituals – formal,
stylized enactment of religious beliefs; Subjective experience – grow out of
beliefs and rituals, as a feeling that someone is guiding and may feel
transported from everyday reality and experience; and Community – belong to a
community of believers, either as a natural group in a less complex
environment, to a “church” in a more organized society.
This
paper will not go into much detailed discussion of the other elements, the
functions and techniques that go with the practice of religion. It will confine
itself with religious beliefs to focus the discussion on the different
predominant forms of religious beliefs that developed as society evolved. The
other elements are mentioned just to make the reader aware of the dynamics that
went through with the practice of religion.
What
is religious belief? Religious beliefs
may be defined as “statements to which members of a particular religion
adhere.” [21]
According to Epitacio Palispis, religious beliefs attempt to explain the nature
and origin of sacred things.” [22]
Just
to summarize this part, a whole paragraph of Phyllis A. Tickle (1995),
contained in her previously cited work, may be quoted, thus:
“Religion,
for most of us, is an attitude for interpreting history, both the massive,
collective history of our species in general and the private histories of our
own small existences. Religion is also a governor we set upon our choices, upon
both our large society’s choices and upon our own small individual choices.
Religion gives point and purpose to the confusion of our foreshortened view of
life, although sometimes, ironically, it does so to the diminution and
denigration of the sacred. But religion, whether we are comfortable admitting
it or not, is as much man-made construct as a god-made one. It is, in the
popular terminology of our day, at its core a co-creation between the mystery
of immutable absolutes and our attempts to engage, apply, manipulate, appease,
and enjoin those absolutes. The sacred, however, admits to nothing. It is.”[23]
Society and its Evolution
What
is society? Society is “a group of people who share a common culture.” [24]
Since society is concerned with people, therefore society also underwent a
historical evolution, and, with it, all its other institutions.
According
Richard J. Gelles and Ann Levine, the sociologists Gerhard and Jean Lenski
viewed “the history of society as a process of sociocultural evolution, from
simpler to more complex forms.”[25]
They mentioned four basic types of societies that emerged over the course of
human history: hunter-gatherer bands, horticultural villages, agrarian states,
and, more recently, industrial nations. It is believed that 99 percent of human
history had been spent in the hunter-gatherer stage. To illustrate, below is a
diagram of the four types of societies that had been identified.[26]
|
* B.P. means before present.
Figure 1. The history of Human Societies
Theoretical Representation of the Complementariness of Religion and Society
In
this section, it will be noted that a modification was made on the above
presentation of the evolution of society, as presented by Richard J. Gelles and
Ann Levine. Such modification reflects that the hunter gatherer stage was split
into the cave and nomadic society, horticultural villages was named as the
primitive communal or tribal society, the agrarian states stage was split into
the slave and feudal society, and the industrial nations stage was split into
the capitalist and socialist society. The present stage of society is now
called as the cyber society. Adam Presbitero (1990) illustrates the evolution
of society with a parallel development of religious beliefs as: [27]
SOCIETY IDEAL
CAVE SOCIETY “NEW
AGE”
ATHEISM
MONOPOLYTHEISM
NOMADIC MONOTHEISM
POLYTHEISM
PRIMITIVE COMMUNAL
H
U M A N FETISHISM H
I S T O R Y
SLAVE
SHAMANISM
FEUDAL
CAPITALIST
SOCIALIST
ANIMISM
CYBER
RELIGION REAL
Figure 2. Dialectical
relationship between predominant religious beliefs and society.
This
drawing tries to illustrate the link, or relationship, that exists between society and religion, and
their complementariness. It uses the tragic and comic symbols of drama. Three
crisscrossing arrows, from the left going to the right side, indicate society
(topmost), human history (center) and religion (bottom). There are also two
lines, one on top and the other at the bottom of the drawing, which are realms,
and accordingly marked as the “Ideal” and the “Real”. The two arrows that represent society and
religion are punctuated with buttons indicating the different forms of society
(starting with the Cave Society and so on
and so forth, from the top line on the left side and ending with the Cyberspace
society towards the bottom line on the right side) and religion (starting with Animism, and so on and so
forth, from the bottom line on the left side and ending with New Age Religion
at the top line on the right side) that have arisen as human history
evolved. The broken lines on the left and on the right are the starting and the
terminal points of the arrows.
The
cave society, the first button on the top line in the ideal realm, is the most
ideal society. It is called “cave” to indicate both habitat and mode of life
that existed in that particular society. It is complemented by the Animist
religion, also the first button at the bottom line in the real realm, to
indicate that the animist religion is the most real religion that human history
had ever known. The explanation to this assertion may be found in the statement
of George Ritzer who said: “Primitive religion’s ideological systems are less
well developed…As a result, religion can be studied in primitive societies in
its most pristine form.” [28]
We are now ready to investigate the different economic base, or modes of
production, and their corresponding religion, as man passed from one form of
society to the next in the course of human history.
A. Animism and the Cave Society
Going back to the theoretical model on the
complementariness of religion and society, the first society and religion that
the first man in pre-historic existence knew was that of the cave society and
animism. In the model, the cave society is shown in the apex of the Ideal
Realm, while Animism is shown in the lowest ebb of the Real Realm. This way of
presentation on the complementary relationship that existed between the first
society and religion shows that the Cave Society was the most ideal society and
that Animism is the most real religion that man had ever known in history.
Why were the cave society and animism the first society
and religion that the first man knew? And why is it that the cave society is
considered as the most ideal society and Animism the most real religion that
man had ever experienced and known in history?
1. Cave
Society: Its Characteristics
The earliest beginnings of
man could be traced back to the cave man, so called because of his habitat and
mode of life which he inherited, more or less, from the apes, his most
immediate predecessor in the mammalian order Primates. This is the dawning of
prehistoric man, man’s emergence from his ape ancestors.
Some authorities also called
the cave man as the “ape man” (pithecanthropus), since he shared the ape’s
physical features and habitat.
The earliest man may be
described as sharing the same physical features as his ape ancestors, except
that he had a more developed brain than them, and a continuing development of
the brain’s cerebral cortex. With full development of the leg muscles, his
hands were freed from its use in walking and he became a “pithecanthropus
erectus,” an erect ape-man. This was during the Old Stone Age, at around
250,000 – 500,000 years ago.
With the emergence of the
erect ape man, such inventions as stone tools and implements began to appear.
Artifacts, such as pottery, knives and dishes, flaked flint tools, were
identified as having been used by pre-historic man, the Homo sapiens (thinking or wise man, because of a fully developed
cerebral cortex), in the New Stone Age about 10,000 years ago.
For
the consideration of this paper, we shall begin with Homo sapiens. The hominid family embraces both the Australopithecus[29]
and Homo (habilis, erectus, heidelbergensis, neanderthalensis,
and sapiens) species. [30] Modern sociologists and
anthropologists begin the study of human society with prehistoric man, Homo
sapiens. The first man showed characteristics of the first primates because
social behavior is also exhibited even among animals.
Man’s immediate ancestors were the fist
primates. According to Kenneth Cooper, the order of mammals called primates is
of particular interest to man because he himself belongs to the group.
Although the ancestors of
man, the first primates, or anthropoids, were tree dwelling animals that lived
about 70,000,000 years ago, and continued to dwell in trees, hence these
constituted the so-called arboreal primates.
It was only the baboons and man which broke away from this mode of life
later on.[31]
The first hominids
(pre-human apes) appeared about 4 million years ago; fossils discovered in
Africa indicate that they walked erect and had bipedal stride even before the
great increase in their brain size. [32] Regarding
the earliest form of the human species, the Homo sapiens, to practice religion,
the Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia has this to say:
“By 350,000 years ago, planned hunting, fire-making, and
the wearing of clothing were well established, as was possibly ritualized
disposal of the dead. Evidence of religion, recorded events, and art date from
30,000 to 40,000 years ago and imply advanced language and ethics for the
complex ordering of social groups required for such activities. From about that
time the genus Homo began to stabilize into the one generalized species
of Homo sapiens”.[33]
To
elucidate this point, another author had said:
“Religious
beliefs and practices are found in all known contemporary societies and
archeologists think they have found signs of religious belief associated with
Homo sapiens who lived at least 60,000 years ago. People then deliberately
buried their dead, and many graves contain the remains of food, tools, and many
other objects that were probably thought to be needed in an afterlife. Some of
the artistic productions of modern humans after about 30,000 years ago may have
been used for religious purposes. For example, sculptures of females with ample
secondary sex characteristics may have been fertility charms. Cave paintings in
which the predominant images are animals of the hunt may effect a belief that
the image had some power over events. Perhaps early humans thought that their
hunting would be more successful if the drew images depicting good fortune in
hunting. The details of religions practiced in the distant past cannot be recovered.
Yet evidence of ritual treatment of the dead suggests that the early people
believed in the existence of supernatural spirits and tried to communicate
with, and perhaps influence, them.”[34]
Richard
Gelles et al also reported that:
“The
earliest evidence of religious behavior dates back over 50,000 years. In Europe
and southwest Asia, Neanderthals buried their dead with tools and other
supplies, suggesting that they had some notion of the “world beyond.” We cannot
know exactly what Neanderthal groups believed or how they enacted their beliefs
in ritual. But we do know from historical records and ethnographic studies that
all societies tend to have some form of religion.”[35]
A
report on the characteristics of the Neanderthals is found in Encarta Encyclopedia
that says:
“Neanderthals
had long, low, thick-boned skulls, with heavy brow ridges, in contrast to the
high-domed, thin-walled skulls of modern human beings. The robust, heavily
muscled frames of Neanderthals, with relatively long bodies and short legs,
were well-adapted to their hunter-gatherer lifestyle in the often extremely
cold conditions leading up to the last Ice Age. Although males were more
strongly built than females, both sexes were very muscular, even as children.
Neanderthals had large heads with very large projecting noses and receding
chins. On average their brains were as large as or larger than the average
modern human brain, which was probably related more to their large body size
and heavy musculature, than heightened intelligence.
Although
Neanderthal technology was fairly simple, there is evidence that they were
capable hunters, and that they demonstrated a degree of compassion by caring
for the infirm and the disabled, and by burying their dead. It has been
suggested that Neanderthals practiced cannibalism, but there is little
substantial evidence in the archaeological record to support this theory.” [36]
Reuters News
(PDI, 6 March 2005) reports “Early 'hobbit' human was smart.” This is
its story:
“Tiny pre-humans who lived on
an Indonesian island until about 12,000 years ago had brains so surprisingly
sophisticated that the creatures may represent a previously unrecognized
species of early humans, scientist reported Thursday. CAT scans of the inside
of a skull – among the bones of eight individuals found in a cave on the
Indonesian island of Flores – suggest brains that would have allowed advanced
behavior such as toolmaking, the international team of researchers said. They
said further study of the skulls of the creature, nicknamed “the Hobbit” after
a literary character, showed it clearly was a normal adult of its species, not
a mutant or diseased species, as some critics have alleged. “I am bowled over,”
said Dean Falk of Florida State University, who studied CAT scans to make a
virtual cast of the inside of the creature's skull. “I thought we were going to
see a little chimpanzee-like brain and I was wrong. Nothing like this had been
seen before,” she told a telephone briefing. Falk saw features that would have
allowed the “Hobbit” to have made the tools found in the Indonesian cave, to
use fire and to hunt as a group...Homo floresiensis stood only about one
meter tall and had a brain about a third the size of modern adult humans. It
had long arms and would have
walked upright. “We know from the record that these little humans, these little
meter-high humans, were hunting things like pygmy elephants, were making fire
and were making some stone tools,” said Mike Morwood of the University of New
England in Australia, who led the initial mission that uncovered the bones.
Writing in the journal Science, the team of US, Australian and Indonesian
researchers said their unusual study of the inside of the “Hobbit's” brain case
showed it was related to Homo erectus, which lived from 2 million years to
about 25,000 years ago. “However, it was not like a little miniature Homo
erectus brain. It was different” Falk said.”
Associated Press (PDI, 10 March 2005) reports
“Scientists find man's earliest walking ancestor.” This is the story:
“A team of US and Ethiopian
scientists has discovered the fossilize remains of what they believe is
humankind's first walking ancestor; a hominid that lived in the wooded grasslands of the Horn of Africa nearly
4 million years ago. The bones were discovered in February at a new site called
Mille, in NE Afar region in Ethiopia, said Bruce Latimer, director of the
Cleveland Museum of Natural History in the US state of Ohio. They are estimated
to be 3.8-4 million years old. The fossil include a complete tibia from the
lower part of the leg, parts of the thighbone, ribs, vertebrae, a collarbone,
pelvis and a complete shoulder blade, or scapula. There is also an anklebone,
which, with the tibia, proves the creature walked upright, said Latimer,
co-leader of the team that discovered the fossils. “Right now we can say this
is the world's oldest bipedal (an animal walking on two feet) and what makes
this significant is because what makes us human is walking upright,” Latimer
said. “This new discovery will give us a picture of how walking upright
occurred”... Paleotologists previously discovered in Ethiopia the remains of Archipethicus
ramidus, a transitional creature with significant ape characteristics
dating back as many as 4.5 million years. There is some dispute over whether it
walked upright on two legs, Latimer and Aiello said. Scientists know little
about A. ramidus. A few skeletal fragments suggests it was even smaller
than Australopithecus Afarensis, the 3.2 million year old species widely
known by the nearly complete “Lucy” fossil, measures about 1.2 meters tall.
Scientists are yet to classify the new find, which they believe falls between A.
ramidus and A. afarensis.”
2. Animism: Its Characteristics
The cave man practiced the earliest form of religion, the
worship of dead ancestors. It consisted with the rituals that accompanied the
burial of the dead, from the washing of the body, embalming with herb juices,
stuffing into two wooden planks, drying them on top of tree branches or hollows
of tree trunks, and burying them inside caves or earthen ground.
The animist religion began with, and was the predominant
form of religious belief during, the cave society. Nature worship was the
religion of the earliest man, his rise from irreligion to religion. Nature
worship, which constitutes Natural religiosity, is the lowest or minimal form
of religiosity. As man saw the awesome forces of nature, he worshipped their
beneficial and life giving powers and recognized his dependence on them. With
this also came the awareness of the destructive forces, the apparent death of
nature in the seasonal cycles with the death of plants, the sun and moon. With
darkness comes the fear of death and extinction, which are the dynamics of
natural religiosity.
Animism (from Latin, anima, “breath” or “soul”) is
the belief in spiritual beings. As a religious belief, animism holds that all
objects in the world have an inner psychological being, or soul. The
18th-century German doctor and chemist Georg Ernst Stahl coined the word animism
to describe his theory that the soul is the vital principle responsible for
organic development. Since the late 19th century, however, the term has been
mainly associated with anthropology and the British anthropologist Sir Edward
Burnett Tylor, who described the origin of religion and primitive beliefs in
terms of animism, a term which he used to refer to beliefs in souls.
In Primitive Culture (1871) Tylor defined animism as
the general belief in spiritual beings and considered it “a minimum definition
of religion”. He asserted that all religions, from the simplest to the most
complex, involve some form of animism. According to Tylor, primitive peoples,
defined as those without written traditions, believe that spirits or souls are
the cause of life in human beings; they picture souls as phantoms, resembling
vapors or shadows, which can transmigrate from person to person, from the dead
to the living, and from and into plants, animals, and lifeless objects. In
deriving his theory, Tylor assumed that an animistic philosophy developed in an
attempt to explain the causes of sleep, dreams, trances, and death; the
difference between a living body and a dead one; and the nature of the images
that one sees in dreams and trances.
Tylor's theories were criticized by the British
anthropologist Robert R. Marett, who claimed that primitives could not have
been so intellectual and that religion must have had a more emotional,
intuitional origin. He rejected Tylor's theory that all objects were
regarded as being alive. Marett thought that primitive peoples must have
recognized some lifeless objects and probably regarded only those objects that
had unusual qualities or that behaved in some seemingly unpredictable or
mysterious way as being alive. He held, moreover, that the ancient concept of
vitality was not sophisticated enough to include the notion of a soul or spirit
residing in the object. Primitive peoples treated the objects they considered
animate as if these things had life, feeling, and a will of their own, but did not
make a distinction between the body of an object and a soul that could enter or
leave it. Marett called this view “animatism” or “preanimism”, and he claimed
that animism had to arise out of animatism, which may even continue to exist
alongside more highly developed animistic beliefs.[37]
According
to Richard Gelles et al, “Animist Religions hold that the world is inhabited by
spirits with motives and emotions like our own. Although believers do not
worship these spirits as gods, they do attempt to influence their behavior
through magic. This animist belief in spirits explains the occurrence of
illness or accidents and prescribes a course of action.”[38]
Alvin
Toffler characterized animism as a “Belief behind immediate physical reality of
things lie spirits that even seemingly dead objects, rocks or earth, have a
living fuse within them, which they called mana.
The Sioux called it wakan, the
Algonquians, Manitou, and the Iroquois, orenda.
For such people, the environment is alive!” [39]
The
most ideal society, according the model, is that of the cave society because
man was living in a most pristine kind of existence. Although this society may
have lasted for several centuries only after the first human evolution from the
first primates, yet it is the most ideal society man had ever known.
The
most real religion that man had ever known is the animist religion, according
to the model. Animism is nature worship.
B. Nomadic Society and Its Shamanistic Religion
The second economic base is
the nomadic society. During this time, nomads lived “in small bands and tribes
and subsisting by gathering, hunting, or fishing.”[40] Its religion is the shamanistic religion.
In the theoretical model
illustrating the complementariness of religion and society, the second society
(Nomadic) and second religion (Shamanism) which man knew in history are shown
halfway between the Ideal and the Real realms. The Nomadic society is shown
halfway down from ideal realm and the middle line, indicating a decadence of
this society. The shamanistic religion is shown in the model as halfway up from
the Real Realm and the middle line, indicating that this religion was an
improvement of the animistic religion.
1. The Nomadic
Society: Its Characteristics
Nomads are groups of people whose way
of life involves frequent moves from place to place. Usually nomads live in
tents, grass-covered shelters, or other temporary or mobile dwellings. The term
“nomadism” (from Greek, “nomas,” wanderer) is used to refer to the
peripatetic or wandering way of life.
There are three kinds of nomads: Pastoral nomads,
Hunter-gatherer nomads, and Nomadic travelers.
The difference between these three is that: the pastoral nomads, or pastoralist nomads
of the Middle Eastern countries, are those who moved and even today move with
their camels, cattle, sheep, and goats, seeking pasture for them at each season
of the year; the hunter-gatherer nomads
are those who live by hunting and gathering, have been peripatetic and without
fixed dwellings; and the nomadic travelers are those living and moving among
sedentary peoples and making their living from their sedentary neighbors by
working as musicians, metal workers, seasonal laborers, traders, fortunetellers
(the gypsies), and a whole range of other occupations that are recurrently in
demand. [41]
Richard J. Gelles and Ann Levine report that,
“The
hunter-gatherer nomads lived in nomadic bands of ten to fifty, whose members
were free to come and go. The basic unit of social structure was the nuclear
family. There were no formal economic institutions: the exchange of goods and
services was governed by informal norms of reciprocity. Although each family
was able to provide for itself, food was shared with other members of the band.
Hunter-gatherer had no formal leaders. Individuals might earn special respect
for their skills or knowledge and wisdom. People looked to them for advice but
had no obligation to follow it. Religion was woven into everyday life: what we
might call rituals and prayers were considered an integral part of such practical
activities as carving arrows or cooking food. Children learned the skills they
would need as adults by observing adults, listening to their stories and
gossip, imitating adult activities in play, and working alongside them. Every
male was a hunter, and every adult female, a gatherer. Within the confines of
these roles, hunter-gatherers enjoyed a high degree of individual freedom. No
one worked for anyone else, and no one had the right to issue commands. Warfare
was unknown in this stage of the evolution of societies. The human population
of the world was small, and natural resources were abundant. When families or
bands could not get along, they simply moved apart. Only a few such societies
have survived into modern times.” [42]
2. Shamanism: Its Characteristics
A shaman is a religious specialist, originally found in
hunter-gatherer cultures, which are loosely structured, technologically simple,
and homogeneous. The word shaman is derived from a word in the Tungus
language of Siberia, one of the areas in which the classical form of shamanism
was found.[43]
Shamans are “women or men who are socially recognized as
having special abilities for entering into contact with spirit beings and for
controlling supernatural forces.” [44] According to another source, a shaman is
“usually a part-time male specialist who has fairly high status in his
community and is involved in healing. Westerners call shamans witch doctors
because they don’t believe that shamans can effectively cure people.” [45]
Although a shaman can achieve religious status by heredity,
personal quest, or vocation, the recognition and call of the individual is
always an essential part of that individual's elevation to the new status. The
shaman, usually a man, is essentially a medium, a mouthpiece of the spirits who
became his familiars at his initiation, during which he frequently undergoes
prolonged fasts, seclusion, and other ordeals leading to dreams and visions.
Training by experienced shamans follows.
The main religious tasks of a shaman are healing and
divination. Both are achieved either by spirit possession or by the departure
of the shaman's soul to heaven or to the underworld. Accounts exist of the
shaman effecting miraculous resurrections by traveling to the land of the dead
to fetch back the deceased's spirit. Shamans also divine the whereabouts of
game, the position of the enemy, and the best way of safeguarding and
increasing the food supply.[46]
Marvin Harris et al report: “While in a trance, the shaman
may act as a medium, transmitting messages from the dead ancestors. With the
help of friendly spirits, shamans predict future events, locate lost objects,
identify the cause of illness, battle with spirits on behalf on the patient,
prescribe cures, and give advice on how clients can protect themselves against
the evil intentions of enemies.[47]
C. Primitive Communal Society and its
Fetishistic/Totemistic Religion
Man
left the nomadic stage to live in a more settled life in the tribal villages or
settlements. We call this period the Tribal Village or the primitive communal
society.
1. Primitive Communal Society: Its
Characteristics
This
period of the Primitive Communal and its fetishistic/totemistic religion is
shown in the theoretical model as halfway between the Ideal and the Real
realms, meaning that this primitive
communal society and totemistic/fetishistic religion was the most normal kind
of society and religion; neither too idealistic nor too realistic, but on an average level.
Sociologists
are of the opinion that the fundamental driving force which brought about the
stage of the Village Tribal society was the invention of agriculture. Richard
J. Gelles and Ann Levine report that:
“About 10,000 years
ago, some groups of hunter-gatherers discovered how to plant and harvest crops
and to tame and herd animals. For the first time, human beings became food
producers. Slash and burn agriculture (burning down a patch of forest and
planting in the cleared area) enabled people to establish larger, semipermanent
villages. The domestication of plants and animals did not create a “Garden of
Eden.” To the contrary, attacks and raids on neighboring villages were
frequent. But village or tribal warfare was largely a ritual activity, staged
to settle disputes and restore balance, in which few people were killed.” [48]
Agriculture
became the main economy and force of production, the main form of occupation
for the village people. Hunting no longer appealed to them since the wild
animals became scarce. The forest no longer gave the fruits to men as they have
become more populous. That is why he now learned to cultivate and till the soil
to plant seeds that would serve as food for the tribe.
Man
invented the plow and learned to domesticate animals for farming purposes. He
invented the art of irrigating his fields by constructing canals and dikes to
channel water from mountain springs. With the invention of the wheel, he used
wooden carts drawn by animals to transport his product from his farm to the
market. Boats were used for water transportation.
With
agriculture, man learned to band together for common or joint labor. Thus,
agricultural society was born, and with it, the first civilization.
The
members of the agricultural society equally shared in the farm work, depending
upon sex, age and ability; so did they equally share the surplus of their
labor. The tools, equipments and land used for production were owned in common.
Thus, relationship within the agricultural society of the tribal village people
was cohesive and friendly, and not antagonistic or divisive.
The
village tribe was composed of one family clan. It was headed by a chief or
chieftain. It began as more of a ceremonial figurehead, awarded to a person who
had shown exemplary strength or heroism in a battle against other enemy tribes.
In some tribes, the chieftain was assisted by the council of elders. Later,
chieftainship began to be hereditary, handed down by the chief to his favorite
offspring. By hereditary chieftainship, the other members shared in the status
and dignity of the chief, by being called nobles. Thus, hereditary
chieftainship gave rise to the nobility class among the communal tribes.
With
the conquest of new territories, through the waging of tribal wars or through
intermarriages, the chief grew wealthy and powerful. His wealth could support the
needs of the whole tribe. With wealth, he could furnish his household with a
retinue of servants whose needs were well provided for. With the capture of
people from other tribes, his servants were substituted by these captured
prisoners, becoming virtual slaves of the chieftain’s household and land
holdings.
Private
property became in vogue. Production surplus brought more wealth and more
property to be owned privately. The land which was held in common before became
the private property of the chief and the nobility class. The other members of
the tribe could privately own a portion of land belong to the tribal territory
through personal reward for service rendered to the chief, by inheritance, or
by purchase. Since work in the land was now done through slave labor, the
members of the tribe did not work directly but participated in the production
force by owning more lands, tools, animals, equipments, or slaves. With
privatization of the means of production, came the end of the tribal society,
as relations became antagonistic and divisive, breaking away of tribal
loyalties and ties. Thus, social stratification of society started with the
nobility class, warriors, free men and slaves. Classification may concern
property, the propertied and non-propertied class or poor men.
Social
stratification brought society into the next period – slave society. The
propertied class becoming masters, while large masses of people became poor
men, to become virtual slaves of the rich.
Primitive
communism designates “a largely self-sufficient village economy where the basic
tools of production, animals, land, etc., are the property of the community as
a whole. The idea that individual private property is an impediment to a just
society has led many writers to imagine a state of affairs without private
ownership.” [49]
The
characteristics of the Primitive communal or tribal village society are the
following: 1. All tools and lands were collectively owned; 2. all tribal
members engaged in common labor on the basis of their age, sex, and strength;
3. the fruits of labor, or surplus of production, were commonly owned and
shared; and 4. social relations were mutual, since tribal man had to band
together to withstand the forces of nature which they could neither understand
or control. Tribal man “had to associate and work together to struggle for
physical survival.” [50]
Regarding
this stage of social evolution, Richard J. Gelles et al reported that:
“Horticultural
villages ranged in size from 40 to 250 members. There were no formal political,
economic, or religious institutions in these villages, but the beginnings were
there. Kinship was more clearly defined, and membership in a clan (or
extended-kinship group) determined the individual’s rights to land and to
marriage partners. There was little formal trade (direct, calculated exchange
for one item for another), but feats and banquets were used to cement alliances
between clans.” [51]
2. Fetishism: Its Characteristics
The most predominant religion of the Tribal period was
Fetishism. It was the worship of the Tribal Fetish – a sacred object or thing
that is believed to possess magical powers. This was a development of the
ancestor worship were relics of dead ancestors were carried or worn around the
body as necklaces or amulets by nobles and warriors.
When a dead man was a person of renowned or heroic deeds,
such as one who killed a wild beast or brought the biggest game that saved the
group from famine, not only did they preserved his body but his past deeds were
retold as well. With the invention of language, tales about the heroic acts of
valiant villagers were retold inside tribal houses or communal dwellings from
generation to generation. Such
narratives of powerful deeds of dead ancestors when told and retold sanctified
their subjects and inspired the listeners to emulate their feat and revere
them. Skeletal remains of these men were treasured and kept until they became
sacred relics of the tribe, called fetishes.
Thus, fetishism began with the
primitive communal society.
These relics were believed to be possessed by the “spirit”
of dead ancestors, to help their possessors in times of difficulties or crises.
With the advent of the Village Tribal folks, this belief was transferred to the
Tribal fetish – a totem pole, the dried head of a war chief, an ancient tree, a
sacred rock or stone, skull or tooth of an animal. The fetish was worshipped
and invoked with elaborate tribal rituals and ceremonies – dancing and chanting
around tribal fires, with eating and drinking wines and spirits. Power is
believed to emanate from the sacred Fetish if accompanied with the killing of a
sacrificial victim, a person (usually slave women) or animal. Blood sacrifice
is poured over the fetish object or totem pole. The flesh of victims is eaten
raw or roasted in the sacred fire. Participants of the tribal rituals may
experience euphoric feelings during the ceremony. Rituals also brought about
cohesiveness among the tribes.
Fetishism is a term used in anthropology to identify the
concept of devotion to objects. These sacred objects are called fetishes and totems.
In anthropology, fetishism applies to a form of belief and religious
practice in which supernatural attributes are imputed to material, inanimate
objects, known as fetishes. The practice includes magic, often with many
attendant ceremonies and minor rituals. The fetish itself is usually a figure
modeled or carved from clay, stone, wood, glass, or other material in imitation
of a deified animal or other object. Frequently it consists of fur, feathers, hair,
or a bone or tooth of a tutelary (guardian) animal. Sometimes it is the
animal itself, or a tree, river, rock, or place associated with the tutelary in
the mind of the devotee. In some cases the belief is so definitely crystallized
about the object that the original connection with the tutelary is obscured,
and the belief merges into idolatry. At one time fetishism was thought to be
practiced only in West Africa, but it is now known to prevail among peoples in
all lands. Anthropologists in the 19th century limited the use of the term to
the doctrine of potencies (spirits) attached to, or conveying influence
through, material objects. According to more recent data, however, fetishes
need not be connected with spirits, except to the extent that they are employed
to thwart malevolent beings.
3. Totemism: Its Characteristics
Rites of solidarity were also common among clans and other
descent groups. Tribal groups, or whole villages, usually have names and
emblems that identify group members and set one group off from another. Animal
names and emblems predominate, but insects, plants, and natural phenomena such
as rain and clouds also occur. These group-identifying objects are known as
totems. [52]
The
fetishistic religion, and its accompanying Totemism, compensated for the
degradation of man who was being dispossessed of his natural right to own the
land in common. The tribal fetish reminded him that the tribe had only one
ancestor, although now dead, but had always remained in their midst calling his
children to surround him. This was more wonderful and important thing than the
powers that the tribal fetish could give to its worshippers. But tribal men had
missed this, or had forgotten this point. The slaves or the poor men of the
late tribal period, who were totally dispossessed of their tribal rights, began
to look upon the tribal fetish for liberation from their oppressive conditions
or for individual salvation from this cruel world. These salves wore their
fetish objects on necklaces around their necks and clan to it devotion during
adverse times, and they felt power surging their bodies to make them endure
oppression and deprivation of the soul and body. But the burning hope was alive
in them that one day the land that was unjustly taken from them will be restored
to make them owners and tillers of the soil again. This was the magic they
hoped to get from worshipping or wearing their fetish objects. However, that
day never came for many of the slaves of the late tribal period. Instead,
tribal society was ushered in to its next tragic period, the slave
society.
D. The Slave Society and Its Polytheistic Religion
The
fourth society is that of the Slave society. This is shown in the model as
located a little down the middle line towards the Real realm, indicating that
this society is a decadent society of the primitive communal or tribal society.
1. Slave Society: Its Characteristics
Slavery,
social institution defined by law and custom as the most absolute involuntary
form of human servitude. The definitive characteristics of slaves are as
follows: their labor or services are obtained through force; their physical
beings are regarded as the property of another person, their owner; and they
are entirely subject to their owner's will. Since earliest times slaves have
been legally defined as things; therefore, they could, among other
possibilities, be bought, sold, traded, given as gifts, or pledged for a debt
by their owner, usually without any recourse to personal or legal objection or
restraint.[53]
The practice of slavery dates to prehistoric
times, although its institutionalization probably first occurred when
agricultural advances first made possible more highly organized societies.
Tribal
society, with its agricultural economy, made possible the ownership of private
property. This not only included the means of production, such as land, tools,
machineries, and the surplus of production which brought more wealth to their
owners, but also the ownership of the labor force. The more property to manage
meant more people are needed for production and cultivation. The propertied
class relied on slave force to do the work of cultivation of the land for them.
In return, they received protection and benefits. Since they owned nothing,
they had to sell their labor to those who have the means of production in order
to subsist and to support the needs of his family. Thus, they willingly became
slaves.
Others
have been captured in battle. The conquest of other territories brought about
the capture of its people. Taken as prisoners into the conquering tribe, mostly
the women and children, who could not resist their capturers or return back
home, were made into slaves by the conquerors.
Others
became slaves because of indebtedness. They had to sell themselves to redeem
their own or their parents’ debts. For a large sum of debt was tantamount to be
reduced to slavery.
For
others, it was punishment for crimes committed, viz., rebellion, murder, theft,
etc. They were chained to work in mines, or to row battle or merchant ships, or
become gladiators in the sports arena of the emperor.
Because
of these, vast majority of the population became virtual slaves to some few
masters who could do anything to their slaves, either to be sold, or killed if
not fit for more productive work.
Private
individual became masters by privately owning the means of production, land,
tools, goods, and wealth due to the accumulation of surplus labor or goods.
The
chiefs and the nobility, the war chiefs, army men, statesmen, who were
prominent citizens, were the masters of slave society.
The
establishment of the state became necessary to protect the interest of the
masters against these slaves. The State, headed by the Emperor, brought about
the emergence of the empire’s massive conquests through slave force.
The
formation of armies came about to aid in the work of conquest, in empire
building, and to maintain peace and order among the slaves to prevent rebellion
and to suppress it, if there arose one, in the empire.
Citizenship
was granted only to those who had property, land and slaves. Slaves therefore
could not qualify for citizenship.
Social
stratification during the slave society comprised the following: 1. the Ruling
Class, composed of the Emperor, statesmen, army men and warriors; 2. The
Nobility, composed of the most prominent and wealthy citizens; 3. the Citizens, or the propertied class; and 4. the
Slaves, property-less class.
The same stratification was found in the
subjugated regions, only that tribute to the emperor was being demanded from
its citizens as payment for imperial protection.
The
slaves were a useful commodity, which resulted in the slave-holding venture.
They were found in all aspects of empire building. They were found in
households, army, and gladiators in sports arena, battleships rowing,
transportation and road building, construction work in such wonders of Rome,
Greece, Egypt and Asia Minor.
The
conquest from the North and the countless rebellions of slaves brought about
the collapse of the Mediterranean empires and the end of the slave society.
2. Polytheistic Religion: Its
Characteristics
The
most predominant religion that arose during the Slave society was polytheism.
As shown in the model, this religion is a little above the middle line going up
towards the Ideal realm, indicating that polytheism is a much improvement of
fetishism or Totemism.
Polytheism,
etymological speaking, is taken from two Greek words “poly”, many, and “theos”, god. Hence, it connotes the worship of many gods.
Polytheism is the belief in the existence of many gods or
divine beings. It has been widespread in human cultures, past and present, and
has taken many forms. Natural forces and objects—celestial, atmospheric, and
earthly (such as stars, rain, mountains, and fire)—have often been identified with
divinities. Gods have also been worshipped in the form of vegetation
(especially trees and cultivated plants) and animals (for instance, the monkey
in India and the hummingbird among the Aztecs). The assumption of human forms
and characteristics by divine beings (anthropomorphism), as in the emphatically
human passions and behavior of the Greek and Roman gods, is virtually a
universal feature of polytheism.
Polytheism is clearly related to a belief in various kinds
of demons and spirits, as in animism, Totemism, and ancestor worship, but in
polytheism the spirits are distinct, personified deities who belong to a cosmic
hierarchy described in myths or sacred writings. Scholars have proposed several
theories to account for its emergence. It has been attributed, for instance, to
the need for supernatural moral sanctions or to the awe inspired by (and the
desire to appease) the uncontrollable forces of nature. It has also been
associated in some theories with the development of a social structure
characterized by specialization and class distinctions.
Many polytheistic religions, such as
Hinduism and ancient Egyptian religion, have exhibited a clear tendency towards
monotheism, the belief in and worship of one god or divine power, and
polytheistic beliefs and practices sometimes coexist with an essentially
monotheistic theology. [54]
Polytheism
was an offshoot, or a form of ancestor spirit worship, which believed the dead
ancestors’ spirit as living in an ethereal, or heavenly existence, in another
world. Polytheistic deities had anthropomorphic personalities, behaving and
acting like ordinary mortals.
Mortal men
looked upon the deities as controllers of their fates. The failure or success
of an endeavor was determined or decided by the gods in the heavens. Every
aspect of human life, be it a journey or endeavor, had a heavenly patron who
must be consulted first, through auguration and divination before being
undertaken.
If mortal
man had a master on earth, the gods have a chief or master or “high” god in
heaven. For the Greeks, the chief god is Zeus (Latin “Deus”, or Spanish “Dios”)
who lived at the peak of Mt. Olympus. The Romans had Jupiter, or Jove, as their
chief god. These high gods had wives and children and a whole cohort and
retinue of gods and goddess that composed their whole household and court. This
observation is indeed in contrast with the one that was made by Carol R. Ember,
who said, “A polytheistic religion recognizes many important gods, no one of
which is supreme.” [55]
The temple
priests and priestesses were the earthly representatives, and in some places
were even considered as earthly counterparts, of these gods and goddesses. The
chief priests ruled the temple cohort and retinue. The temple was the place of
worship, and every god or goddess had their own temples dedicated to their
honor. The priests took charge of the auguration and divination to consult the
gods or goddesses.
Temple sacrifices were demanded by the priests as a way to
approach the gods: such as, fruits, human offerings, and blood poured
(libation) on the altar or sprinkled on devotees.
Fertility cults and temple fornications were practiced.
Slave virgins were offered as victims to arouse the goddess of nature to bring
fertility to the land.
Polytheism affected the life of the people. Its elaborate
rituals aroused euphoria among devotees. The sight and spilling of blood
through the butchering of sacrificial animals gave satisfaction to masters and
slave spectators alike, both of which lusted for blood. The variety of gods for
a variety of functions aroused the imagination of the Greek and Roman classical
writers to produce immortal literatures about the immortal gods and goddesses.
Slaves, who had suffered much the tragedy and misery of
slavery, looked to the immortal gods enthroned in the heavens for much sought
solace and refuge from their daily sufferings. Slaves were forbidden to
practice the religion. However, they became part of the worship of such
religion when they become the sacrificial victims offered on the altar of the
master’s gods and goddesses or to be the sports and entertainment for the
emperors. The slaves were burned on the sacred fires both for the satisfaction
of the gods and the emperor.
Polytheism was a higher form of religion than fetishism. It
was supposed to compensate for human degradation, which the slaves endured. It
offered them a sense of other-worldliness and transported them psychologically
to a place of bliss and contentment which were physically denied of them. As
they were roasted alive in sacred fires, their masters watched with pious
satisfaction that they were fulfilling a religious obligation to their gods and
goddesses. These slaves constructed the temples of these gods and goddesses and
the tombs of the emperors as they endured much hunger and disease. The
propertied class who propagated polytheism for the entertainment of the slaves
watched them languish in their oppressive chains. The propertied class felt
ecstatic at the sight of blood oozing from the necks of their slaves being
butchered upon the altar of inhumanity. As the priests sprinkled the blood of
slaves over them, the propertied class claimed responsibility over these
inhuman acts in the name of religious belief.
Meanwhile, these slaves paid much for their long-awaited liberty and freedom
at the hands of death.
Polytheism rose to become monotheism to free at last the
slave masters of their crimes against humanity though the capture, torture and
sacrifice of the slaves in the name of religion and to cover up for another
decadent inhuman society, which is the feudal society, which transformed the
slaves into serfs.
E. Feudal Society and Its Monotheistic Religion
The slaveholding society and
its polytheistic religion had gone away, only to be replaced by another more
decadent society, the Feudal Society. The masters of the slave society had gone
away, only to return in a new form, the lords of the Feudal Society.
This society is shown in the model as half
way down in the Real realm, next to slave society. Its religious belief,
Monotheism, which is an improvement of polytheism and, therefore, higher in the
ideological ladder, is shown half way up to the Ideal realm.
1. Feudalism: Its Characteristics
Feudal society first appeared in Western Europe during the
Middle Ages, after the fall of the Roman Empire. While many Mediterranean
states were still slave-holding, a new political and socio-economic system was
emerging in the subjugated regions of the empire, especially in Western Europe.
Western Europe was once the barbarian kingdoms of the Gaul,
Teutons, Swiss, Iberians, and Belgians. These were conquered by the Romans at
the first half of the 2nd century, A.D. When the Roman Empire
collapsed, these kingdoms, or subjugated regions, were awarded to some Roman
military generals. Because of their outstanding military service to the Roman
Emperor, they were given territories to administer. They were awarded tracks of
lands on condition that they will continue to render military service.
Feudalism is defined as “a contractual system of
political and military relationships existing among members of the nobility in
Western Europe during the High Middle Ages.” [56]
Feudalism was characterized by the granting of fiefs,
chiefly in the form of land and labor, in return for political and military
services—a contract sealed by oaths of homage and fealty (fidelity).
When the German invaders conquered the
Western Roman Empire in the 5th century, they destroyed the professional Roman
army and substituted their own armies, made up of warriors who served their
chieftains for honor and booty. To support his cavalry soldiers, Martel gave
them estates farmed by dependent laborers, which he took from the Church. Such
estates, called benefices, were given for the duration of the soldiers'
service. The soldiers were called vassals (from a Gaelic word meaning servant).
The vassals, however, being selected soldiers with whom the Carolingian rulers
surrounded themselves, became models for the nobles who followed the court.
With the breakup of the Carolingian Empire in the 9th century, many powerful
men strove to assemble their own bands of mounted vassals, giving them
benefices in return for their services. Some of the weaker landowners then
found themselves obliged to enter into vassalage and to concede their lands to
the lordship of the more powerful, receiving them back as benefices. The
greater lords were expected to protect their vassals, as the vassals were
expected to serve their benefactors.
Some of the essential features of classical feudalism are:
1. The fief - the estate given a vassal, understood to be hereditary,
provided that the vassal's heir was satisfactory to the lord, and provided
further that he paid an inheritance tax called a relief; and, 2. A special oath
of homage to the feudal lord who invested him with a fief. Thus, feudalism was
a political as well as military institution that was based upon a contract
between two individuals, both of whom held rights in the fief.
Feudalism reached its maturity in the 11th
century and flourished in the 12th and 13th centuries. Its cradle was the
region between the Rhine and the Loire, but in the late 11th century rulers of
that region conquered southern Italy and Sicily, England, and, with the First
Crusade, the Holy Land. To each place they took their feudal institutions.
In its classical form, western feudalism
assumed that most of the land belonged to the sovereign prince, be he the king
or duke, marquis or count.
The prince then granted fiefs to his barons, who
made their oaths of homage and fealty to him and were required to give him
political and military service according to the terms of the grant. The barons,
in turn, might grant portions of their fiefs to knights who swore homage and
fealty to them and served them according to their grants.
Military service in the field was
fundamental owed by a vassal to his lord. When the lord had a castle, he might
require his vassals to garrison it, a service called castle-guard. The lord
also expected his vassals to attend his court in order to give him advice and
to participate in judgments of cases concerning other vassals. If the lord had
need of money, he might expect his vassals to give him financial aid.
2. Monotheism: Its Characteristics
Monotheism was the religion of the Feudal society. It
originated with the monotheistic beliefs of the Hebrew people. Began with the
legendary Hebrew patriarchs, Abraham, until this God revealed (“revelare”, lit. means to remove the veil) himself as “YHWH” to
Moses. It was not a powerful religion until King David founded a kingdom with
monotheistic laws and institutions. The temple worship of monotheistic religion
began.
Monotheism is the belief or worship of one God. It found
its champions in Judaism, Christianism and Mohammedanism.
Monotheism is the “belief in one God.” [57]
Carol R. Ember describes monotheistic religion as: “…one in which there is one
high god as the creator of the universe or the director of events (or both);
all the other supernatural beings are either…”[58]
In another part, she adds, “Although monotheism means “one god,” most
monotheistic religions actually include more than one supernatural being (e.g.,
demons, angels, the Devil). But the Supreme Being or high god, as the creator
of the universe or the director of events (or both), is believed to be
ultimately responsible for all events.” [59]
F. The Capitalist Society and Its Monopolytheistic Religion
1. Capitalism: Its
Characteristics
Capitalism is
an “economic system in which private individuals and
business firms carry on the production and exchange of goods and services
through a complex network of prices and markets.”[60]
Karl Marx, the founder of Communism, first introduced the
term capitalism in the mid-19th century.
The individual who comes closest to being
the originator of contemporary capitalism is the Scottish philosopher Adam
Smith, who first set forth the essential economic principles that undergrid
this system. In his classic An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the
Wealth of Nations (1776), Smith sought to show how it was possible to
pursue private gain in ways that would further not just the interests of the
individual but those of society as a whole. Society's interests are met by
maximum production of the things that people want. In a now famous phrase,
Smith said that the combination of self-interest, private property, and
competition among sellers in markets will lead producers “as by an invisible
hand” to an end that they did not intend, namely, the well being of society.
Capitalism
has certain key characteristics. First, basic production facilities—land and
capital—are privately owned. Capital in this sense means the buildings,
machines, and other equipment used to produce goods and services that are
ultimately consumed. Second, economic activity is organized and coordinated
through the interaction of buyers and sellers (or producers) in markets. Third,
owners of land and capital, as well as the workers they employ, are free to
pursue their own self-interests in seeking maximum gain from the use of their
resources and labor in production. Consumers are free to spend their incomes in
ways that they believe will yield the greatest satisfaction. This principle,
called consumer sovereignty, reflects the idea that under capitalism producers
will be forced by competition to use their resources in ways that will best
satisfy the wants of consumers. Self-interest and the pursuit of gain lead them
to do this. Fourth, under this system a minimum of government supervision is
required; if competition is present, economic activity will be self-regulating.
Government will be necessary only to protect society from foreign attack,
uphold the rights of private property, and guarantee contracts. This
19th-century view of government's role in the capitalist system has been
significantly modified by ideas and events of the 20th century.
Two developments paved the way for the emergence
of modern capitalism; both took place in the latter half of the 18th century.
The first was the appearance of the physiocrats in France after 1750; and the
second was the devastating impact that the ideas of Adam Smith had on the
principles and practice of mercantilism.
Physiocracy is the term
applied to a school of economic thought that suggested the existence of a
natural order in economics, one that does not require direction from the state
for people to be prosperous. The leader of the physiocrats, the economist
François Quesnay, set forth the basic principles in his Tableau économique
(1758), in which he traced the flow of money and goods through the economy.
Simply put, this flow was seen to be both circular and self-sustaining. More
important, however, was that it rested on the division of society into three
main classes: (1) the productive class was made up of those engaged in
agriculture, fishing, and mining, representing one-half of the population; (2)
the proprietary class consisted of landed proprietors and those supported by
them, which amounted to one-quarter of the population, and (3) the artisan, or
sterile, class, made up the rest of the population.
Quesnay's Tableau is significant
because it expressed the belief that only the agricultural classes are capable
of producing a surplus or net product, out of which the state either could find
the capital to support an expansion of the flow of goods and money or could levy
taxes to meet its needs. Other activities, such as manufacturing, were regarded
as essentially sterile, because they did not produce new wealth but simply
transformed or circulated the output of the productive class. It was this
aspect of physiocratic thought that was turned against mercantilism. If
industry did not create wealth, then it was futile for the state to try to
enhance society's wealth by a detailed regulation and direction of economic
activity.
The ideas of Adam Smith represented
more than just the first systematic treatise on economics; they were a frontal
attack on the doctrines of mercantilism. Like the physiocrats, Smith tried to
show the existence of a “natural” economic order, one that would function most
efficiently if the state played a highly limited role. Unlike the physiocrats,
however, Smith did not believe that industry was unproductive or that only the
agricultural sector was capable of producing a surplus above the subsistence
needs of society. Rather, Smith saw in the division of labor and the extension
of markets almost limitless possibilities for society to expand its wealth
through manufacture and trade.
Thus, both the physiocrats and Smith
contributed to the belief that the economic powers of governments should be
limited and that there existed a natural order of liberty applicable to the
economy. It was Smith, however, far more than the physiocrats, who opened the
way for industrialization and the emergence of modern capitalism in the 19th
century.
The ideas of Smith and the physiocrats
provided the ideological and intellectual background for the Industrial
Revolution—the material side of the sweeping transformations in society and the
world that characterized the 19th century.
The fundamental characteristic of the
industrialization process was the introduction of mechanical power (originally
steam) to replace human and animal power in the production of goods and
services. As the mechanization of production gained momentum in England and
gradually spread to other parts of the world, several fundamental changes
occurred. Production became more specialized and concentrated in larger units,
called factories. The modern working class began to emerge; workers no longer
owned their tools, they had little property, and generally they had to exchange
their labor for a money wage. The application of mechanical power to production
brought with it a great increase in worker efficiency, which made goods
abundant and cheap. Consequently, the real standard of living rose throughout
much of the world during the 19th century.
The development of industrial capitalism had
serious human costs. The early days of the Industrial Revolution were marred by
appalling conditions for large numbers of workers, especially in England.
Abusive child labor, long working hours, and dangerous and unhealthy workplaces
were common. These conditions led Karl Marx, who spent most of his adult life
in England, to produce his massive indictment of the capitalistic system, Das
Kapital (3 vol., 1867-1894). Marx's work, which is the intellectual
foundation for the kind of Communist economic systems, used in the USSR and
still nominally in use in China, struck at the fundamental principle of
capitalism—private ownership of the means of production. Marx believed that
land and capital should be owned collectively (that is, by society) and that
the products of the system should be distributed according to need.
Capitalism was also beset by business cycles
of “boom and bust”, periods of expansion and prosperity followed by economic collapse
and waves of unemployment. Marxian criticisms, along with frequent depressions
in the major capitalist nations, helped to establish vigorous trade union
movements that fought to raise wages, shorten working hours, and improve
working conditions.
In the late 19th century, especially in
the United States, the modern corporation, with its limited liability and
immense financial power, began to emerge as the dominant form of business
organization. The tendency towards corporate control of manufacturing led to
many attempts to create combines, monopolies, or trusts that could
control an entire industry.
Despite such difficulties, capitalism continued
to expand and prosper almost without limit throughout the 19th century. It was
successful because it demonstrated an enormous ability to create new wealth and
to raise the real standard of living for nearly everyone touched by it. As the
century closed, capitalism was the dominant economic and social system.
2.
Monopolytheism, or Unitrinitarianism: Its Characteristics
Most predominant religion in Capitalist society was
Monopolytheism. Capitalism’s monopolistic tendencies found its counterpart in
religious Monopoly-theism.
Monopolytheism comes from the Greek word “mono”, one, “poly”, many, and “theos”, god. This
is the Trinitarian belief of the Christian churches. Because they believed the
Christian doctrine of the Trinity, one God in three divine persons, some groups
called such belief as Unitrinitarianism.
Monopolytheism began to be practiced by men even before
society began to practice capitalism, as wage-labor pre-existed capitalism and
slavery pre-existed slave-holding society, or private property pre-existed the
tribal period. And so, Monopolytheism pre-existed the capitalist society also.
Monopolytheism attempts to combine monotheism and
polytheism. This doctrine arose when Christianity began to be influenced by
pagan beliefs and practices, with the intrusion of the Roman emperor into the
administrative activity of the early Christian churches. At this time, early
attempts had been made to amalgamize the two beliefs of monotheism and
polytheism that gave birth to Monopolytheism, a belief in three equally divine
persons within the one God, as a way to accommodate the monotheistic beliefs of
the Jews with the polytheistic beliefs of Rome.
Monopolytheism
is the worship, or belief, in the one God in three persons, or the Trinity, as
Catholics and Protestants would name this kind of god.
Of particular interest of the two religious groups are the
Protestants, with their religious belief on austerity and renunciation of
wealth. The Protestants claim to have given rise to the capitalist system of
the economy, with the doctrine of Max Weber (1864-1920).
Max Weber was a “German economist and sociologist, known
for his systematic approach to world history and the development of Western
civilization. His best-known works, Die protestantische Ethik und der Geist
des Kapitalismus (The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism,
1904-1905; trans. 1930), wherein he tried to prove that ethical and religious
ideas were strong influences on the development of capitalism. He expanded on
this theme in his later writings on Asian religions, in which he postulated
that the prevailing religious and philosophical ideas in the Eastern world
prevented the development of capitalism in ancient societies, despite the
presence of favorable economic factors.”[61]
G. Socialist Society and Its Atheistic Religion
1. Socialist Society: Its Characteristics
Socialism is “the concept and party-based
political movement, originally based in the organized working class, generally
antagonistic towards capitalism.”[62] While the final aim of socialists was a
communist or classless society, they increasingly concentrated on social
reforms within capitalism. As the movement developed, the concept itself
acquired different meanings in different times and places.
The term began to be used in the
first half of the 19th century by radical intellectuals who considered
themselves to be the true heirs to the Enlightenment. Among its early theorists
were a French aristocrat, Claude de Saint-Simon, and a British capitalist,
Robert Owen. With Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, socialism
acquired a theory of exploitation and a theory of history.
Socialists assumed that all their demands could
be achieved peacefully in democratic countries, that violence might be
necessary where despotism prevailed, and ruled out participation in bourgeois
governments. The majority assumed that their task was to build up the movement
until the eventual collapse of capitalism would enable socialism to be
established.
Socialist society was characterized by common ownership of
the means of production. This means that society should hold wealth in common;
that the management of the economy should be by the state and that public
sector should be expanded through nationalization.
Socialist society is fundamentally a different
socio-economic formation. Similar to primitive communalism, the relations of
production are characterized by mutuality and cooperation. There is social
ownership in the means of production, so that people are no longer divided into
those who own and to those who own nothing. Abolition of private property in
the means of production is what makes socialist society “classless.” Harmonious
relationship between forces of production and relations of production is
cohesive since there is a social appropriation of the fruits of social
production.
In socialist society, development is geared to meet
people’s needs and to perfect social relations. Any individual regards his work
and its results as contribution to social transformation and to the enrichment
of the various aspect of social life. Idleness has no place in socialist
society – putting into practice the Christian dictum “from each according to
his abilities, to each according to his needs”. Man has to work and to produce
in order to eat and fulfill himself.
The socialist state is still a revolutionary phase towards
the communist state, because it has to consolidate the gains of the proletariat
class and to attain the economic and cultural reconstruction of society. Hence,
the superstructure must play an important role as socialism is not the end of
social revolution as it must lead to communism. The totality of the ideological,
political and other institutions is mobilized in a scientific way to advance a
worldview that is reflective and supportive of the aspirations of all people
for equality, brotherhood and prosperity. The present socialist society must,
therefore, be understood as a revolutionary stage towards the communist state.
“Towards the end of the 1950s West
European socialist parties began to discard Marxism openly, accepted the mixed
economy, loosened their links with the trade unions, and abandoned the idea of
an ever-expanding nationalized sector. The late 1950s revisionism proclaimed a
new goal of socialism, which is the redistribution of wealth according to
principles of social justice and equality.” [63]
2. Atheism: Its Characteristics
Atheism (Greek, a,”not”; theos,”god”) is a
“doctrine that denies the existence of deity.” [64]
Atheism differs distinctly from agnosticism, the doctrine that the existence of
deity can neither be proved nor disproved. Many people have incorrectly been
called atheists merely because they rejected some popular belief in divinity.
To the Romans, the early Christians were atheists because they denied the Roman
gods. Adherents of various Christian sects have applied the term to anyone
unwilling to accept every tenet of their doctrine. Freethinkers, such as the
French philosopher and writer Jean-Jacques Rousseau, the French writer
Voltaire, or the Anglo-American political philosopher and author Thomas Paine,
although subscribing to a form of deism, may frequently be referred to as an
atheist. The Sankhya philosophy, one of the great systems of Hindu thought,
Buddhism, and Jainism have all been described as atheistic because all deny a
personal God.
With the increase in scientific knowledge and the
consequent scientific explanation of phenomena formerly considered
supernatural, atheism has become a more natural and less despised philosophical
trend.
H. Cyber Society and the New Age Religion
1. Cyber Society: Its Characteristics
Cyber society, the term used by Toffler to refer to Third
Wave civilization, began in the United States of America “sometime in mid
‘50s”, when the Silicon Valley in California zoomed.[65]
Toffler says: “Electronics and computers clearly form one such interrelated
cluster, and is the fourth largest industry. Computers are destined to reshape,
not only business, from production to retailing, but every nature of work and
even the structure of the family.”[66]
The term “cyber” is derived from the word “cyberspace.”
Cyberspace is the “environment created by the global networking of computer
systems.” [67]
The term is widely applied to the Internet as it exists today, but in its
origins in science fiction it referred to a far more ambitious and speculative
conception: the total immersion of the human senses in an artificially generated
environment. The human being's sensory experience would actually be generated
by the machine and fed directly into the human brain. The other aspect of
cyberspace is indicated by this quotation: as a system for organizing and
accessing the vast amounts of data stored on computers. Currently the Internet,
and especially that facet of it called the World Wide Web, is the major system
for collating and accessing the huge store of electronic data
One characteristics of Cyber society is its cyber infosphere,
one that is “imparting to ‘dead’ environment not life but intelligence.”[68]
The key point is the computer, combination of electronic
memory with programs that tell machines how to process stored data. Cyber
society is also characterized by machine age thinking, a part of social
mythology. Moviemakers, cartoonists, science fiction writers use them to
symbolize the future, and pictured the computer as all-powerful brain with a
massive concentration of superhuman intelligence.[69]
Other characteristics are the Electronic cottage, where
“people huddled around a computer” and the telecommuters.[70] Toffler says of the cyber society as a
“home-centered society.”[71] Certainly not everyone can and will work at
home. Many people will work at home part-time and outside the home as well.
Dispersed work centers will no doubt proliferate. Some will work for months or
years in their homes and then switch to outside job. Small firms will take the
responsibility to organize, train, and manage teams of houseworkers.
With the introduction of the computer in every home, a
chain of consequences would flow to society, such as the following:
a)
Community impact –
Working at home involving sizeable function of the population mean greater
community stability;
b)
Environmental impact –
work transfer into the home not only reduce energy requirements, but could also
lead to energy decentralization, spread out energy demand and thus make easier
the use of solar, wind and other alternative energy technologies. Small-scale
energy generation units in each home could substitute for at least some
centralized energy now required;
c)
Economic impact –
Electronics and computer and communication industries would flourish, to the
diminution of oil companies, automobile industries and commercial real estate
developers; and
d)
Psychological impact –
Working at home suggests a deepening of face-to-face and emotional
relationships in both home and neighborhood.
2. New Age Religion: Its Characteristics
With cyber society comes “cyber religion,” a term that was
used by Richard Gelles and Ann Levine.[72]
The World Wide Web offers information on all kinds of religious beliefs current
in the world today. All that one has to do in other to learn and join is to
browse and access in the web sites.
Passionate religious sects characterize Cyber religion.
Alvin Toffler reports: “Today, millions are desperately searching for their
shadows, devouring movies, plays, novels and self help books that promise to
help them locate their missing identities. Victims hurl themselves into group
therapy, mysticism or sexual games.” [73]
The New Age Movement, the predominant religious beliefs of
the cyber society, is a:
“Broad-based
amalgam of diverse spiritual, social, and political elements with the common
aim of transforming individuals and society through spiritual awareness. The
New Age is a utopian vision, an era of harmony and progress. Comprising
individuals, activist groups, businesses, professional groups, and spiritual
leaders and followers, the movement brought feminist, ecological, spiritual,
and human-potential concerns into the mainstream in the 1980s, creating a large
market in various countries for books, magazines, audio and videotapes,
workshops, retreats, and expositions on the subject, as well as for natural
foods, crystals, and meditation and healing aids.
Often seen as resurgent paganism or Gnosticism, the modern
movement has more recent roots in 19th-century spiritualism and in the 1960s
counter-culture, which rejected materialism in favor of Eastern mysticism and
preferred direct spiritual experience to organized religion. Techniques for
self-improvement and the idea that the individual is responsible for and
capable of everything from self-healing to creating the world, have found
applications in health care and counseling as well as in sports, the armed
forces, and corporations, and have provoked debate in religious and other
circles.
Holistic thinking has influenced attitudes about medicine,
the environment, the family, work, regional planning, and world peace, among
others. Ideas frequently associated with the New Age movement include
anthroposophical teachings, inner transformation, reincarnation,
extraterrestrial life, biofeedback, chanting, alchemy, yoga, transpersonal
psychology, shamanism, martial arts, the occult, astrology, psychic healing,
extrasensory perception, divination, astral travel, acupuncture, massage,
tarot, Zen, mythology, and visualization.[74]
Christianity today “recommends that no version should be
the ‘standard’. Our religious views, like our tastes, are becoming less uniform
and standardized.”[75]
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION
We have seen the drama between religion and society.
Society played the tragic drama in human history, one which started from the
apex of life. Religion played the comic drama that started from the ebb
gradually going up to the apex of life.
Man is dead – and so is his society – this is the greatest
irreligion of all. For everything he went through from one religious belief to
another to hide from his fear of death, and what he went through from one form
of society to another to assuage his hunger for food, shelter and clothing, all
the while he was just looking at the ground for a place to be buried in.
As earliest man left the pristine life of his arboreal
existence, living on the bounty of the forest jungles and where he did not
labor much, going to the last stage of communal existence in the communist
society, he experienced decadence, a corruption or downward move towards
degeneration, in his society.
And from his lowest level of irreligion in the Cave
society, where he practiced the crudest form of religion which is animism,
a religion that is a kind of dialogue with nature, he progressed upward from
one religious belief to another, until he reached the highest form of
irreligion which is atheism.
All these show man that one need is supplied by another
need. His lack in the real world is supplied and filled in his ideal world, and
vice versa.
Human nature then learns to balance, and to compensate for
his needs in life. This is the most important law of life, a law of nature.
That is how religion and society played their role in human
history. Whatever had been lacking in human society was supplied by religion,
and whatever is lacking in religion was supplied by society. Man to compensate,
to balance, and to reach the average or normal, what society was actually
losing gradually, which is life, used religion. Hence, man to cover up what
society lacks, and vice versa used religion. There was that type of religious
belief that was suited to a particular type of society.
In the final stage, in communism, man is in the most
decadent, in the lowest ebb of social existence, as he labors in order to eat
(one has to be a productive citizen so that he could eat – “no produce - no
food”). One must therefore learn once more how to protect and to dialogue with
nature for it to produce more food. In this stage, he does not bother with any
god or gods to be a religious believer, as it could not help him get his food –
he is busy looking for it. But from its lowest ebb in communism, man could
either die or rise up again to continue his existence, he could start his climb
in society, while from atheism, his highest irreligion, he could gradually go
down to another form of religion.
Anyone who thinks that society can do without religious
belief of any form is surely mistaken. As can be seen from the beginning to the
end of human history, man cannot do away with the drama and the interplay
between religion and society. Religion, together with all the other institutions
or superstructures of society, will always be there to fulfill their functions
for the advancement and betterment of society.
One has to take account the present religious behavior in
studying the past and the future of human society. The past of all religions is
animism. Its future form is the New Age religion. There is a type of religious
belief that is suited to a particular type of society, one that dominates all
the others. Religion serves to cover up what society lacks and vice versa. When
society was in the ideal state, it seems that man did not need the God of
religion.
For every trouble in society that man encounters, there is
always born an aspiration and longing for a messiah or savior. Religion and
society has served the interest of man for a long time since the beginning. As
we said in the beginning, the intention of this paper is not to be critical of
any religion. The intention is simply to mention the predominant religious
beliefs that cropped up in every form of society. For man cannot do away with
religion in society because of his longing for the sacred: “those experiences
that transcend everyday experiences its extraordinary, powerful, potentially
dangerous and awe-inspiring. The sacred consists of the things kept separate or
apart from everyday experiences, things awe-inspiring and knowledgeable only
through extraordinary experience.” (Dr. Epitacio S. Palispis, Introduction to
Sociology and Anthropology. Manila: Rex
Book Store, 1997), page 264.
Those who practice religion are either psychologically or
sociologically bitter. Those in the business of religion are necessary in
society since the existence of these religious beliefs make people resilient
and able to cope up with the bitterness and sufferings in life. These services may
not only be offered now-a-days by religion but are quite readily available for
a fee at psychiatric clinics and hospitals.
There is indeed complementariness between religion and
society when a civilized society is likely to produce a kind of religion that
best reflects its predominant socio-economic condition.
Human institutions, just like human beings, are here today
in order to survive by hook or by crook. That, indeed, is a basic instinct.
Religion, particularly the Roman Catholic form, has served well
Philippine society as one factor that keeps it away from going into a bloody
civil revolution, as much do the other factors of OFW remittances and the
rampant drug use among the majority of the Filipino populace.
Religion remains to be a mere human institution, contrary
to its claim of divine institution. It is considered to be man’s attempt to
link reality, one that exists outside his external senses, to an ideal world
that exists merely in the mind. In the final reckoning, however, religion still
serves this purpose by bringing to his reality the sense of the sacred. What
man considers sacred to him will his home in the ground where he will be
finally rested when he die. His burial ground is one reality most sacred to man
because it is his real home after all.
As a human institution, then, religion will always be a subject to
sociology.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Brinkerhoff, David B. and Lynn K.
White, Sociology. St. Paul,
MN: West Publishing Co., 1988.
Broom, Leonard and Philip
Zelznick, Sociology. Harper
and Row, 1963.
Castroverde, Jacob M., “Theories
of Society and Culture”. Photocopy.
Castroverde, Jacob M., “What
Is It That Changed In Society”. Photocopy.
Cooper, Kenneth, Science Through the Ages, “Apes,
Monkeys and Their Kin.”
Ember, Carol R. and Melvin Ember,
Anthropology. (Prentice-Hall
(Singapore) Pte. Ltd.,
1999.
Gelles, Robert J. and Ann Levine,
Sociology: An Introduction (6th
ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill College, 1999.
Harris, Marvin and Orna Johnson, Cultural Anthropology, Singapore,
Pearson Education Asia Pte. Ltd., 2000.
Leary, Daniel Bell, That Mind of Yours. Philadelphia, USA:
Lippincott Co., 1927.
Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia,
2003.
Presbitero, Adam, Manual of Evangelization, “New Mind,
New Heart, New Strength,” Book 2 - Teacher’s Explanation. Iriga City:
Manuscript, 1990.
Ritzer, George, Classical Sociological Theory. New
York: McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1973.
Salcedo, Lucila L. et al, General Sociology. Quezon City: JMC
Press Inc., 2001.
Schaeffer, Richard T. and Robert
P. Lamm, Sociology (5th
ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc. 1983.
Tickle, Phyllis A., Re-discovering the Sacred. New York:
Crossroad Publishing Co., 1995.
Toffler, Alvin, Third Wave. New York, NY: Bantam Books,
1981.
Tuibeo, Amable G., A Critical Discourse in Sociology. Makati
City: Grandwater Publications and Research Corporation, 1996.
[1]
Richard J. Gelles and Ann Levine, Sociology:
An Introduction (6th ed.) (McGraw Hill College, 1999) p. 486.
[2] Jacob M.
Castroverde, Ph. D., “Theories of Society
and Culture,” (Photocopy).
[3] Ibid.
[4] Robert
J. Gelles and Ann Levine, op. cit.,
p. 484.
[5] Jacob M.
Castroverde, “What Is It That Changed In
Society?” (Photocopy).
[6] Richard
T. Schaefer and Robert P. Lamm, Sociology
(5th. Ed). (NY: McGraw-Hill, Inc.:1983), p. 396.
[7] Richard
J. Gelles and Ann Levine, op. cit.,
p. 487.
[8]
Epitacio S. Palispis, Introduction to
Sociology and Anthropology (Manila: Rex Bookstore, 1997),
p.
263.
[9] Carol R.
Ember and Melvin Ember, Anthropology, (Singapore: Prentice Hall Pte. Ltd.:
1999), p. 422.
[10] Daniel Bell Leary, That Mind of Yours, (Philadelphia, USA: J.B. Lippincott Co., 1927),
pp. 205-206.
[11] Ibid, p. 208.
[12] Phyllis
A. Tickle, Rediscovering the Sacred.
(New York: Crossroad Publication Co., 1995), p. 14.
[13] Dialectical process is a process where “a
concept gives rise to its opposite, and as a result of this conflict, a third
view, the synthesis, arises, or else a form of consciousness, through
reflection of itself, discovers a contradiction within itself and is thereby
forced to transform itself into a new form of consciousness.” (Article on “Dialectic,” from Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia,
2003).
[14] Carl
Marx, Critique of Political Economy,
1859.
[15] Article
on “Carl Marx,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[16] Amable
G. Tuibeo, A Critical Discourse in
Sociology, (Makati: Grandwater Publications, 1996), p. 22.
[17]
Schaeffer and Lamm, op. cit, p. 398.
[18] Carol
R. Ember et al, op. cit., p. 426.
[19] Robert
Gelles et al, op. cit., p. 484.
[20] Lucila
L. Salcedo et al, General Sociology
(Quezon City: JMC Press Inc., 2001), p. 162.
[21]
Schaefer and Lamm, op. cit., p. 401.
[22]
Epitacio S. Palispis, op. cit., p.
264.
[23] Tickle,
op. cit., p. 13.
[24] J. M.
Castroverde, “The Social System Approach,” (photocopy).
[25] Richard
J. Gelles and Ann Levine, op. cit., p. 186.
[26] Ibid,
p. 187.
[27] Adam Presbitero, “New Mind, New Heart, New
Strength,” Manual of Evangelization, Book 2 Teacher’s
Explanation. (Iriga City: manuscript, 1990), p. 110.
[28] George
Ritzer, Classical Sociological Theory
(New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1973), p. 197.
[29] Australopithecus,
extinct genus of hominid represented by at least six species that lived in
eastern and southern Africa between 4.5 million and about 1 million years ago.
In some ways they were similar to living apes in having small brains and
ape-like body proportions. However, they were distinguished from them by their
upright posture and bipedal (two-footed) gait. In addition, the teeth of
australopithecines included smaller canines as well as thickened enamel on the
molars. These features are also found in humans. The australopithecines can be
divided into two groups: the heavier-built forms (A. aethiopicus, A. robustus,
and A. boisei existing about 2.5 to 1 million years ago), which had a diet of
rough vegetable matter; and the lighter-built forms (A. afarensis, A. garhi,
and A. africanus existing about 3.7 to 2 million years ago), which had a more
general diet. A new species, A. anamensis, was discovered in 1994 and is
thought to have lived about 4 million years ago. They were partly adapted to
bipedal walking and may be ancestral to both groups of australopithecines. Most
anthropologists conclude that one of the lighter-built species of
australopithecine is likely to have been ancestral to species of our own genus,
Homo. (Contributed by the Department of Paleontology, Natural History Museum. Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2003).
[30] Homo
sapiens or Human
Being, common name given to any individual of the species Homo
sapiens and, by extension, to the entire species. The term is also applied
to certain species that were the evolutionary forerunners of Homo sapiens
Scientists consider all living people members of a single species. Homo sapiens is identified, for purposes of classification, as an animal
(kingdom Animalia) with a backbone (phylum Chordata) and segmented spinal cord
(subphylum Vertebrata) that suckles its young (class Mammalia); that gestates
its young with the aid of a placenta (subclass Eutheria); that is equipped with
five-digited extremities, a collarbone, and a single pair of mammary glands on
the chest (order Primates); and that has eyes at the front of the head,
stereoscopic vision, and a proportionately large brain (suborder Anthropoidea).
The species belongs to the family Hominidae.
[31] Kenneth
Cooper, “Apes, Monkeys and Their Kin,” from the book Science through the Ages, p.251.
[32] Article
on “Hominid,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2003.
[33] From the article “Homo
sapiens,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2003.
[34] Carol
R. Ember and Melvin Ember, Anthropology, (Prentice Hall (Singapore) Pte. Ltd.:1999),
p. 421.
[35] Richard
J. Gelles et al., op. cit., p. 484.
[36] Article
on “Neanderthal,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[38] Richard Gelles et al, op. cit., p. 486
[39]Alvin
Toffler. Third Wave, New York, NY:
Bantam Books, 1981, p. 168.
[40] Ibid, p. 21.
[41] James
Woodburn, “Nomads,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[42] Richard
J. Gelles and Ann Levine, op. cit.,
page 187.
[43] From
the article “Shamanism,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[44] Marvin Harris and Orna Johnson, Cultural Anthropology, (Singapore:
Pearson Education Asia Pte. Ltd., 2000), p. 268.
[45] Carol
R. Ember et al, op. cit, p. 432.
[46] From
the article on “Shamanism,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[47] Marvin
Harris et al, loc. cit.
[48] Richard
J. Gelles and Ann Levine, op. cit.,
p. 187.
[49] From
the article on “Communism,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[50] Amable
G. Tuibeo, op. cit, p. 35.
[51] Richard
J. Gelles and Ann Levine, op. cit.,
p. 186
[52] Marvin
Harris et al, op. cit., p. 270.
[53] From
the article on “Slavery,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[54] From the article “Polytheism,” Microsoft
Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[55] Carol
R. Ember et al, op. cit., p. 426.
[56] From
the article on “Feudalism,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[57] From
the article on “Monotheism,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[58] Carol
R. Ember et al, op cit., p. 437.
[59] Ibid,
p. 426.
[60] From
the article on “Capitalism,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[61] Article
on “Max Weber,” Microsoft Encarta
Encyclopedia, 2003.
[62] From
the article on “Socialism,’ Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[63] From
the article on “Socialism,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[64] From
the article on “Atheism,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[65] Alvin
Toffler, op. cit., p. 139.
[66] Ibid,
p. 140.
[67] From
the article on “Cyberspace,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003.
[68] Alvin
Toffler, op. cit., p. 168.
[69] Ibid, 169.
[70] Ibid,
pp. 199, 200, 250-251.
[71] Ibid,
p. 204.
[72] Richard
J. Gelles and Ann Levine, op. cit., p. 511.
[73] Alvin
Toffler, op. cit., pp. 123 and 127.
[74] From
the article on “New Age Movement,” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia, 2003
[75] Ibid,
p. 255.