Revisiting this several years on. I still think Boyer and Atran are largely correct about how to understand religion. The divide between "elite" and "popular" religion, in particular seems more and more salient to me all the time.
Roughly, elite religion, which researchers previously considered representative out of their own bias, is the product of sociological & psychological outliers, & gains broader social purchase primarily through coercion, but quickly loses its hold without that. It's where most of
the most salient differences bw religions are at their most pronounced. Popular religion, by contrast, seems more deeply similar everywhere, and includes a lot of beliefs/practices previously dismissed by researchers as not representative of their respective religions, but which
actually represent something like the default mode of human religiosity. Elite Christianity & elite Hinduism are > diff from each other than their respective pop forms. & maybe there's an arg to be made that their pop forms are, in some ways, > similar to each other than they are
to their respective elite forms. You only see this when you're able to get past seeing Augustine as real Catholicism & what the vast majority of avg Catholics believe/do as either just the same as him or as corrupt, incomplete or unrepresentative (both unjustified). Obviously,
most religious people have never, don't & will never care about things like Augustine's Christology or Nagarjuna's view of emptiness. But people persist in trying to grasp religion through these anomalous minority conceptions. Even irreligious ppl are tempted by the elitist bias.
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One of the most stunning exchanges I've ever seen on here, branching out into multiple, simultaneous threads, quote tweets, etc. Can't capture it all, but here are some of the main branches. Politics twitter has nothing on engineering twitter. If you've got a few min, be amazed.
Some scans of harder-to-find Japanese art book images to dispel feverish and monotonous election vibes. Starting off with some Amano.
Some of the more explicitly Klimt-y Amano
Some "Oriental" Amano. The 3rd image may be a little more popular, since it's his version of the heroine Ilian from Moorcock's fantasy novels, & was used as cover art for a Japanese translation of Count Brass.
If I'm getting this right, a White woman who started a failed MeToo org for people in STEM only to be accused of racist harassment herself was exposed as having created an account where she pretended to be a nonexistent queer Native American professor at Arizona State University.
And she was exposed after trying to ditch the account by claiming the prof died of COVID and doing this bizarre eulogy thread to her.
The ex-cop (who was locked up for drug trafficking and murder) w/ phone access who may have had something to do w Epstein's injuries was from Briarcliff Manor, a town a north of NYC known for its wealthy estate-owning families, including the Vanderbilts, Astors, & Rockefellers.
"Briarcliff Manor has a number of wealthy residents, and was rated 19th on CNNMoney's 25 Top-Earning Towns in the U.S."
The Briarcliff Manor's police department's troubles with unsavory cops goes right up to the level of the ex-chief himself, who was suspended without pay in 2015 for an infraction that no one in the department will discuss.