THERE – Theory and Empiricism of Religious Evolution: Foundation of a Research Program

6.2. How Religion Proceeds and Science Observes It

Cf. also Connerton (1989, 74): “The direction upwards, against gravity, establi­shes the postural base in our experience of lived space for the dichotomous sense to which we attach values, such as those expressed in the oppositions between high and low, rise and decline, climbing and falling, superior and inferior, looking up to and looking down upon. It is through the essentially embodied nature of our social existence, and through the incorporated practices based upon these embodyings, that these oppositional terms provide us with metaphors by which we think and live. Culturally specific postural performances provide us with a mnemonics of the body.” And William Stokoe (2001, 42) writes: “Meanings like ‘up’ and ‘down’ have been associated with human vision and movement for a very long time, thus they have become conventionally as well as naturally linked to their meanings. (They are both an index and a symbol.)”

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