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The Spirit of Contradiction in Christianity and Buddhism
Contributor(s): Nicholson, Hugh (Author)
ISBN: 0190455349     ISBN-13: 9780190455347
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
OUR PRICE:   $93.10  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: March 2016
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Religion | Comparative Religion
- Religion | Christian Theology - General
- Religion | Christianity - General
Dewey: 202
LCCN: 2015021842
Physical Information: 1.1" H x 6.2" W x 9.3" (1.30 lbs) 344 pages
Themes:
- Religious Orientation - Christian
- Religious Orientation - Buddhist
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The cognitive science of religion has shown that abstract religious concepts within many established religious traditions often fail to correspond to the beliefs of the vast majority of those religions' adherents. And yet, while the cognitive approach to religion has explained why these
theologically correct doctrines have difficulty taking root in popular religious thought, it is largely silent on the question of how they developed in the first place. Hugh Nicholson aims to fill this gap by arguing that such doctrines can be understood as developing out of social identity
processes.

He focuses on the historical development of the Christian doctrine of Consubstantiality, the claim that the Son is of the same substance as the Father, and the Buddhist doctrine of No-self, the claim that the personality is reducible to its impersonal physical and psychological constituents. Both
doctrines are maximally counterintuitive, in the sense that they violate the default expectations that human beings spontaneously make about the basic categories of things in the world. Nicholson argues that that these doctrines were each the products of intra- and inter-religious rivalry, in which
one faction tried to get the upper hand over its ingroup rivals by maximizing the contrast with the dominant outgroup. Thus the pro-Nicene theologians of the fourth century developed the concept of Consubstantiality in the context of an effort to maximize, against their Arian rivals, the
contrast with Christianity's archetypal other, Judaism. Similarly, the No-self doctrine stemmed from an effort to maximize, against the so-called Personalist schools of Buddhism, the contrast with Brahmanical Hinduism with its doctrine of an unchanging and eternal self. In this way, Nicholson
shows how religious traditions, to the extent that their development is driven by social identity processes, can back themselves into doctrinal positions that they must then retrospectively justify.