Zombies Roaming Around the Pantheon

Authors

  • Leonardo Ambasciano Oxford Brookes University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/imre.24338

Keywords:

Belief, Cognition, Consciousness, Orthopraxy, Philosophical Zombies, Roman History

Abstract

The present contribution explores how the field of Roman History has formalized and justified the absence of “belief”—and religious belief in particular—as part of its standard research programme. In positing an unbridgeable gap between ancient Romans and modern human beings mainly based on the idea that “belief” and “faith” are modern Protestant concepts, Roman History inadvertently transmogrified its subjects of study into a legion of zombies incapable of holding meta-representations of their own religious (and non-religious) beliefs. While Roman History might have been an outlier in its staunch commitment to this exclusionary approach, the post-1970s move towards the abandonment of “belief” insofar as the study of ancient religion(s) is concerned was part of a widespread paradigm shift within the Humanities, which only very recently has been questioned. The history of the concept of “belief” in both Roman History and anthropology, as well as its rejection from the former’s disciplinary toolbox, are tackled, while the peculiar disciplinary concepts of Roman “orthopraxy” and “demythicization” (sometimes hailed as explananda or replacements for the absence of “belief” in Roman antiquity) are also explained. Finally, a cognitive rebuttal of this absence is provided through a reappraisal of David Chalmers’ “philosophical zombies” mental experiment.

Author Biography

  • Leonardo Ambasciano, Oxford Brookes University

    Leonardo Ambasciano earned his Ph.D. in Historical Studies at the University of Turin, Italy, in 2014, with a cognitive and evolutionary analysis of the ancient Roman female cult of Bona Dea. In 2016, he was Visiting Lecturer in Religious Studies at Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic.
    Since 2014, he has been involved in the Editorial Board of the Journal of Cognitive Historiography, where he started as Editorial Assistant. He currently serves as Managing Editor and keeps working at the crossroad between history, social sciences, and the natural sciences.
    Leonardo is the author of An Unnatural History of Religion: Academia, Post-Truth, and the Quest for Scientific Knowledge (Bloomsbury, 2019), and of various articles, book reviews, and chapters, including “History as a Canceled Problem? Hilbert’s List, du Bois-Reymond’s Enigmas, and the Scientific Study of Religion”, co-authored with T. J. Coleman, III and published in the Journal of the American Academy of Religion 87(2): 366-400.

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Published

2023-11-17

How to Cite

Ambasciano, L. (2023). Zombies Roaming Around the Pantheon. Implicit Religion, 25(1-2), 33–75. https://doi.org/10.1558/imre.24338