Things Hidden Since The Foundation of the World

Duration: 2 hours 4 mins
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Description: Cambridge Festival of Ideas, 20 October 2015. Presentation and discussion of two new books exploring the interface of nature and culture – and of science and religion -- through the far-reaching ideas of French-American culture theorist and fundamental anthropologist René Girard.

With Dr Rowan Williams (Master, Magdalen College), Dr Pierpaolo Antonello (Cambridge, St Johns College), Prof. Paul Gifford (University of St Andrews) and a distinguished panel of respondents in science and religion.
 
Created: 2015-11-17 10:43
Collection: Mimetic Theory
Publisher: University of Cambridge
Copyright: Dr P. Antonello
Language: eng (English)
Distribution: World     (not downloadable)
Keywords: René Girard; Mimetic Theory; Violence and the Sacred; Religious and Science;
Explicit content: No
Aspect Ratio: 16:9
Screencast: No
Bumper: UCS Default
Trailer: UCS Default
 
Abstract: Why is human violence the much-neglected key to understanding human emergence and development? How does it differ from animal violence? How was it controlled by the victimary or scapegoat mechanism? How does this stabilise human communities and lead to the creation of natural or archaic religion (‘the sacred’); and then to the development of our culture as a whole?

What does this understanding of 'how we became human' contribute to our grasp of violent sacralities now? And what are our chances of ‘surviving our origins’?
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