4.3 Article

Whence collective rituals?: A cultural selection model of ritualized behavior

Journal

AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST
Volume 108, Issue 4, Pages 814-827

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1525/aa.2006.108.4.814

Keywords

ritual; cognition; evolution; epidemiology; cultural transmission

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Ritualized behavior is a specific way of organizing the flow of action, characterized by stereotypy, rigidity in performance, a feeling of compulsion, and specific themes, in particular the potential danger from contamination, predation, and social hazard. We proposed elsewhere a neurocognitive model of ritualized behavior in human development and pathology, as based on the activation of a specific hazard-precaution system specialized in the detection of and response to potential threats. We show how certain features of collective rituals-by conveying information about potential danger and presenting appropriate reaction as a sequence of rigidly described precautionary measures-probably activate this neurocognitive system. This makes some collective ritual sequences highly attention-demanding and intuitively compelling and contributes to their transmission from place to place or generation to generation. The recurrence of ritualized behavior as a central feature of collective ceremonies may be explained as a consequence of this bias in selective transmission.

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