Causal Opacity or Causal Translucence?

Magic, Causal Heuristics and the “Ritual Stance”

Authors

  • Jennifer Larson Kent State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jch.23722

Keywords:

ritual cognition, ritual efficacy, causal cognition, magic, ancient Greek religion, purification, oaths, causal opacity

Abstract

According to longstanding interpretations in the social and cognitive sciences, rituals are said to be characterized by arbitrary action and the lack of a causal connection between action and desired outcome. The observer who assigns a physical-causal connection has taken the instrumental stance, while one who accepts a group convention is said to take the ritual stance. I argue that in religious rituals at least, including those with magical elements, the gap is bridged and causal intuitions are present, if limited. For example, we rely on a mental heuristic called Representativeness in order to make many causal judgments, and Representativeness tells us that effects usually resemble their causes. This heuristic, studied by Daniel Kahnemann and Amos Tversky, corresponds to J. G. Frazer’s so-called “Law of Similarity” in magic. Representativeness and other forms of magical thinking appear to yield weaker causal inferences than our intuitions about physical processes or the agency of other people. Accordingly, religious rituals are often employed in situations where a goal cannot be achieved in more obvious ways, but some lesser intuition of causal efficacy can still be generated. Illustrative examples are drawn from ancient Greek rituals of offering, oath-taking, and purification.

Author Biography

  • Jennifer Larson, Kent State University

    Jennifer Larson is Professor of Classics at Kent State University, Ohio, USA. Her research interests include ancient Mediterranean religions, Greek poetry, ancient gender and sexuality, and Classical Mythology. She is the author of five books including Understanding Greek Religion: A Cognitive Approach (Routledge 2016) and Greek Nymphs: Myth, Cult, Lore (Oxford University Press 2001). As a research affiliate of Oxford’s School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography, Larson works with Seshat: Global Databank to test hypotheses about the role of religion in world history, and is a Seshat Board member. She currently serves as Chair of the Fellowship of American Bibliophilic Societies.

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Published

2024-01-30

How to Cite

Larson, J. (2024). Causal Opacity or Causal Translucence? Magic, Causal Heuristics and the “Ritual Stance”. Journal of Cognitive Historiography, 8(1-2), 115-140. https://doi.org/10.1558/jch.23722