Difference between revisions of "The Psychology of Religion"

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The human species has always had a sense of the mystical. Even as our beliefs about what is sacred differ and fluctuate, the presence of these beliefs remains constant: the human psyche is hardwired for religion, myth, and ritual. This course will explore the psychology behind humanity’s affinity for the divine, examining religious experiences, doctrines, and institutions through scholars like Freud, Jung, and Maslow. It will also investigate what happens when the scale tips from belief to fanaticism—when and how a prosocial paradigm mutates into a cult, for instance—using examples from history, politics, and literature as case studies.
 
The human species has always had a sense of the mystical. Even as our beliefs about what is sacred differ and fluctuate, the presence of these beliefs remains constant: the human psyche is hardwired for religion, myth, and ritual. This course will explore the psychology behind humanity’s affinity for the divine, examining religious experiences, doctrines, and institutions through scholars like Freud, Jung, and Maslow. It will also investigate what happens when the scale tips from belief to fanaticism—when and how a prosocial paradigm mutates into a cult, for instance—using examples from history, politics, and literature as case studies.
 
[[Category: Courses]]
 
[[Category: Carlisle]]
 

Revision as of 10:49, 22 April 2018

The Psychology of Religion (PREL) was a cancelled CTY course meant for the Institute for Advanced Critical and Cultural Studies at Carlisle, but due to lack of enrollment and other issues was cancelled before the session began.

Course Description

From the CTY Course Catalog (2018):

The human species has always had a sense of the mystical. Even as our beliefs about what is sacred differ and fluctuate, the presence of these beliefs remains constant: the human psyche is hardwired for religion, myth, and ritual. This course will explore the psychology behind humanity’s affinity for the divine, examining religious experiences, doctrines, and institutions through scholars like Freud, Jung, and Maslow. It will also investigate what happens when the scale tips from belief to fanaticism—when and how a prosocial paradigm mutates into a cult, for instance—using examples from history, politics, and literature as case studies.