1997
DOI: 10.1163/157361297x00117
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Concept of Ritual in the Psychology of Religion and Ritual Studies

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“…“Ritual” can be a pejorative term in the secular lexicon as it has connotations of, primitive, ignorant, meaningless, and destructive [ 33 ]. In an extreme example, Freud used “ritual” with a very constricted meaning essentially applied to repetitive, pathological compulsive behaviours of the neurotic [ 34 ]. Ritual, in secular usage, is also a practice of ancient, less cognitively developed peoples [ 35 , 36 ].…”
Section: Essentially Contested Conceptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…“Ritual” can be a pejorative term in the secular lexicon as it has connotations of, primitive, ignorant, meaningless, and destructive [ 33 ]. In an extreme example, Freud used “ritual” with a very constricted meaning essentially applied to repetitive, pathological compulsive behaviours of the neurotic [ 34 ]. Ritual, in secular usage, is also a practice of ancient, less cognitively developed peoples [ 35 , 36 ].…”
Section: Essentially Contested Conceptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ritual studies are increasingly acknowledged as an interdisciplinary field of study with a focus on ritual as a cultural domain, rather than exclusively a religious domain (Grimes, 2014; Legare, Watson-Jones, & Souza, 2016). Less attention has been paid to psychological theories of ritual, with some exceptions (Beckstead, 2016; Grzymala-Moszczynska & Simpson, 1997; Legare et al., 2016; McCauley & Lawson, 2004; Vohs, Wang, Gino, & Norton, 2013). Recently, ritual has been gaining attention in psychological literature, such as neuropsychological approaches to ritual as a sensory and rhythmic experience (Bull & Mitchell, 2015; Hainskou & Liebst, 2016).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%