How Schrödinger's cat became a zombie: on the epidemiology of science-based representations in popular and religious contexts

Research on cultural transfers between science and religion has not paid enough attention to popular science. This article develops models that grasp the complexities of the epidemiology of science-based representations in non-scientific contexts by combining tools from the cognitive science of reli...

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Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Asprem, Egil 1984- (Auteur)
Type de support: Imprimé Article
Langue:Anglais
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Publié: Brill [2016]
Dans: Method & theory in the study of religion
Année: 2016, Volume: 28, Numéro: 2, Pages: 113-140
Sujets / Chaînes de mots-clés standardisés:B Religion / Sciences de la nature / Popularisation / Transmission culturelle / Science cognitive / Expérience de pensée
RelBib Classification:AA Sciences des religions
AB Philosophie de la religion
AE Psychologie de la religion
Sujets non-standardisés:B Religion and science
B cultic milieu
B Popular Science
B epidemiology of representations
B Religious movements
B Science
B RELIGION & science
B History
B Culture
B cognitive optimization
B thought experiments
Description
Résumé:Research on cultural transfers between science and religion has not paid enough attention to popular science. This article develops models that grasp the complexities of the epidemiology of science-based representations in non-scientific contexts by combining tools from the cognitive science of religion, the history, sociology, and philosophy of science, and the study of new religious movements. The popularization of science is conceptualized as a process of cognitive optimization, which starts with the communication efforts of scientists in science-internal forums and accelerates in popular science. The popularization process narrows the range of scientific representations that reach the public domain in structured ways: it attracts minimally counterintuitive representations, minimizes the massively counterintuitive, and rerepresents (or translates) hard-to-process concepts in inferentially rich metaphors. This filtered sample trigger new processes of meaning-making as they are picked up and re-embedded in new cultural contexts.
ISSN:0943-3058
Contient:Enthalten in: Method & theory in the study of religion