scholarly journals Vision and Video. Marian Apparition, Spirituality and Popular Religion

Author(s):  
Hubert Knoblauch ◽  
Sabine Petschke

The chapter demonstrates that spirituality and popular religiosity are built into the Marian apparitions, thus turning them into a contemporary ‘modern’ phenomenon. The study refers to a series of apparitions which happened during 1999 in Marpingen, a German village close to the Western border with France. This village was the setting for a series of Marian apparitions back in the 19th century. These earlier apparitions have recently been subjected to a very thorough study by British historian David Blackbourn (1993). Whereas Blackbourn based his analysis on written documents mostly stored in archives, the authors had not only access to written documents, newspapers and books, but also the exceptional chance to collect video-tape records from the event, and they could also rely on audio-taped statements by the seers. These data, supported by ethnographic field data, are subject to a fine-grained video-analysis provided in the chapter. In Marpingen, it was Marion who began to have visions on May 17 and 20 near the chapel (built by the above-mentioned association) where the earlier apparitions had happened. Thereafter, the three women together had various apparitions near the chapel, mostly in the company of an increasing number of pilgrims. The sixth apparitions on June 13, 1999, was already witnessed by about 4,000 visitors, and on the ninth day of the apparitions, on July 18, 12,000 visitors turned up. The final apparitions were said to be at- tended by 30,000. As a hundred years before, the incident not only attracted masses, there was also some turmoil accompanying the apparitions: television stations turned up and reported critical- ly on the event, the Church prohibited any proclamation by the seers, the seers were threatened and, finally, the village administration and the chapel association got into a conflict. The authors pointed out that when talking about the apparition, we must be aware of the fact that this notion refers not only to a subjective experience by the seers. In order to become an apparition, it needs to be communicated. The communication of the apparition does not only draw on the verbalisation by which the apparition is being reported, i.e. reconstructed. In addition, the apparition is also being performed by the body of the seers who form part of the setting which includes the visitors in relation to the seers and the spatial constellations of other objects. Thus, the authors interpret apparition as a communicative performance of religious action. However, the verbalisation of the cited vision is not, as in other cases, reconstructed after the vision. On the contrary, the seer (Marion) talks into a dictograph which is held by another visionary – Judith – while having the vision. In this way, the apparition is turned into a live report. It may be no accident that this kind of live report is not directly addressed to the live audience. Rather, it is recorded so to be accessible to a larger media audience via audio tapes, transcripts of the visions and a number of books based on these reports. According to Auslander (1999: 39ff.), it is the ‘techno- logical and aesthetic contamination of live performance’. The authors noted that the media are not only added to the event but are imparted in the event to such a degree that they transform it into something different. Thus, the use of the dictograph results in a format of the ‘live report’ on the inner visions. The microphone allows coordinating the actions of the seers with those of the crowd – a phenomenon that was virtually impossible at earlier apparitions. According to the authors, the Marian movement is not only a static remnant of earlier periods but also a form of modern expression against rationality and secularism. The Marian apparition in question, according to the authors, is an example for the modernity of this form of religion by exhibiting the essential features of popular religion. It is not that religion has changed its contents: it is still the realm of the transcendent as the subject matter of religion. However, this subject matter is not an element of cognitive or moral belief; it is something to be experienced subjectively, the reasserting subject being the major instance and locus of religiosity. This way, the analysis of Marian apparitions is a case for the thesis of the modernity of religion and a case that demonstrates what is modern about religion.

1994 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 225-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph Glicksohn

Why is it that raters differ in their assessment of subjective experience? Assuming that the rater's personal involvement or experience with the subject matter would determine the location of a diagnostic threshold, individual differences in rating would be indexed by the former. In this study, independent judges were asked to assess introspective reports for the appearance of an altered state of consciousness. The rater's own absorption score was determined, and a negative correlation ( r = −0.48) was found between the number of instances of an altered state of consciousness (ASC) assessed and absorption score. Interrater disagreement regarding subjective experience may therefore be a function of variability in absorption.


Author(s):  
Néstor O. Míguez

This article will present some historical cases, some ancient, some very recent, of how such ambiguity of the religious forces and popular religiosity has played in Latin America. Through this case we will analyze how and why in “the popular” the same cultural phenomena can play sometimes a very conservative role, and then, in others, turn into a menacing power to the traditional social order. On one hand, it is a way in which conservative hegemony has captured the potential and will of the masses and used it to domesticate its claims (opium of the people). But in other cases it has stimulated the dreams and hopes, and has provided unexpected vitality to the people in their search for justice and better living conditions. The traditional aboriginal (pre-conquest) religions and worldviews, as well as new religious experiences brought by the slave trade and migrations sometimes provided myths and images that reinforced the liberating thrust of religious forces.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-26
Author(s):  
ILARIA CANAVOTTO ◽  
FRANCESCO BERTO ◽  
ALESSANDRO GIORDANI

Abstract We study imagination as reality-oriented mental simulation (ROMS): the activity of simulating nonactual scenarios in one’s mind, to investigate what would happen if they were realized. Three connected questions concerning ROMS are: What is the logic, if there is one, of such an activity? How can we gain new knowledge via it? What is voluntary in it and what is not? We address them by building a list of core features of imagination as ROMS, drawing on research in cognitive psychology and the philosophy of mind. We then provide a logic of imagination as ROMS which models such features, combining techniques from epistemic logic, action logic, and subject matter semantics. Our logic comprises a modal propositional language with non-monotonic imagination operators, a formal semantics, and an axiomatization.


2014 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Javier E. Díaz-Vera

AbstractThe article analyzes some aspects of the literal and figurative conceptualizations of shame in Old English. Through the reconstruction and fine-grained analysis of the whole set of literal, metonymic and metaphoric expressions of shame recorded in a corpus of Old English texts, I show here that the embodiment model for the conceptualization of this emotion was not used in Old English until the arrival of Christianity and the new moral standards it brought. The slow but progressive introduction of embodied metonymies and metaphors in Old English is, I will argue here, a direct consequence of the adaptation of patristic texts into the vernacular. The pressure to spread the Christian concept of shame, where this emotion is presented as an internal and subjective experience, and the need to substitute the old, honour-based model favoured the emergence and evolution of new figurative expressions of shame, based on its physiological effects on the experiencer.


2006 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard K. Lowe ◽  
Harto Promono

Little is known about the influence of micro-level design factors on the effectiveness with which static and animated graphics support comprehension of dynamic information. Graphics are frequently used as adjuncts to written and spoken text with the aim of addressing any potential ambiguities that may arise during interpretation. When used to depict information about temporal change, graphics can present the situational dynamics with varying degrees of explicitness. With static graphics, viewer interpretation is reliant on some degree of inference; whereas with animated graphics, the dynamics can be presented in a direct, analog form. The effectiveness of static and animated graphics for portraying dynamic subject matter appears to be closely related to fine-grained aspects of the interaction between the graphic and its user that may be missed if a largely intuitive approach to design is adopted. Selected findings from empirical research into the effects of content, cues, background knowledge and attentional influences are discussed as a basis for suggesting a more principled approach to the design of adjunct graphics.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dennis Küster ◽  
Eva Krumhuber ◽  
Lars Steinert ◽  
Anuj Ahuja ◽  
Marc Baker ◽  
...  

The ability to automatically assess emotional responses via contact-free video recording taps into a rapidly growing market aimed at predicting consumer choices. If consumer attention and engagement are measurable in a reliable and accessible manner, relevant marketing decisions could be informed by objective data. Although significant advances have been made in automatic affect recognition, several practical and theoretical issues remain largely unresolved. These concern the lack of cross-system validation, a historical emphasis of posed over spontaneous expressions, as well as more fundamental issues regarding the weak association between subjective experience and facial expressions. To address these limitations, the present paper argues that extant commercial and free facial expression classifiers should be rigorously validated in cross-system research. Furthermore, academics and practitioners must better leverage fine-grained emotional response dynamics, with stronger emphasis on understanding naturally occurring spontaneous expressions. We posit that applied consumer research might be better situated to examine facial behavior in socio-emotional contexts rather than decontextualized, laboratory studies, and highlight how AHAA can be successfully employed in this context. Also, facial activity should be considered less as a single outcome variable, and more as promising input for two-step machine learning in combination with other (multimodal) features. We illustrate this point in a case study using facial activity as input features to predict crying behavior in response to sad movies. Implications of this approach and potential obstacles that need to be overcome are discussed within the context of consumer research.


Projections ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 91-115
Author(s):  
Julian Hanich

A look at current emotion research in film studies, a field that has been thriving for over three decades, reveals three limitations: (1) Film scholars concentrate strongly on a restricted set of garden-variety emotions—some emotions are therefore neglected. (2) Their understanding of standard emotions is often too monolithic—some subtypes of these emotions are consequently overlooked. (3) The range of existing emotion terms does not seem fine-grained enough to cover the wide range of affective experiences viewers undergo when watching films—a number of emotions might thus be missed. Against this background, the article proposes at least four benefits of introducing a more granular emotion lexicon in film studies. As a remedy, the article suggests paying closer attention to the subjective-experience component of emotions. Here the descriptive method of phenomenology—including its particular subfield phenomenology of emotions—might have useful things to tell film scholars.


Perception ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 447-455 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Kalckert ◽  
Ian Bico ◽  
Jia Xi Fong

The rubber hand illusion is a perceptual illusion of perceiving an object like a model hand as part of the own body. The question whether the illusion can be induced with noncorporal objects that do not look like a human body part is not perfectly resolved yet. In this study, we directly assessed the subjective experience of two different components within the illusion (i.e., ownership and referral of touch) when a model hand and a balloon are stimulated. We observed significantly stronger illusion ratings for the hand as compared with the balloon, and only the hand ratings showed a clear affirmation of the illusion. We further conclude that (a) a significant difference between synchronous and asynchronous conditions may not be sufficient to argue for the successful induction of the illusion and (b) the subcomponents show a different pattern in the different conditions, which may lead to alternative interpretations. These observations call for a more fine-grained interpretation of questionnaire data in rubber hand illusion studies.


An-Nas ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 103
Author(s):  
Saeful Anwar

Tulisan ini bertujuan untuk memberikan gambaran metodologi dan pendekatan yang ditawarkan Charles J.Adam dalam melakukan kajian Islamic Studies. Tawaran tersebut muncul atas respon kegelisahan akademik terhadap kegagalan  yang dilakukan para ahli sejarah Islam dalam mendefinisikan Islam atau agama terhadap metodologi dan pendekatan yang dipakai. Menurut Adams tidak ada metode yang canggih untuk mendekati aspek kehidupan-dalam individu dan masyarakat beragama, tetapi sarjana harus menggunakan tradisi atau aspek luar keberagamaan sebagai landasan dalam memahami dan melakukan studi agama. Sebagai tantangan dalam mengkaji Islam, sebagai sebuah agama harus melampui dimensi tradisi atau aspek luar agar mampu menjelaskan dimensi kehidupan-dalam dari masyarakat Islam.Untuk menjawab tantangan dan tugas para pengkaji Islam, Adams merekomendasikan dua pendekatan yang diletakkan pada sebuah garis kontinum yaitu merentang dari pendekatan normatif sampai dengan pendekatan deskriptif. Pendekatan normatif adalah pendekatan yang dijiwai oleh motivasi dan tujuan keagamaan, sedangkan pendekatan deskriptif muncul sebagai jawaban terhadap motivasi keingintahuan intelektual atau akademis. Pendekatan normatif dapat dilakukan dalam bentuk misionaris tradisional, apologetik, maupun pendekatan irenic (simpatik). Sementara pendekatan deskriptif, Adams mengelompokkan pada pendekatan-pendekatan filologis dan sejarah, pendekatan ilmu-ilmu sosial, dan pendekatan fenomenologis. Pendekatan normatif dan deskriptif dengan berbagai varian tersebut dapat dipergunakan dalam mengkaji Islam yang memiliki 11 subject matter, yaitu: (1) pre-Islamic Arabia, (2) studies of the Prophet, (3) Qur’anic studies, (4) prophetic tradition (Hadis), (5) kalam, (6) Islamic law, (7) falsafah, (8) tasawuf, (9) the Islamic sects—shi’ah—(10) worship and devotional life, dan (11) popular religion.


2013 ◽  
Vol 72 ◽  
pp. 169-188 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Roden

AbstractPhenomenology is based on a doctrine of evidence that accords a crucial role to the human capacity to conceptualise or ‘intuit’ features of their experience. However, there are grounds for holding that some experiential entities to which phenomenologists are committed must be intuition-transcendent or ‘dark’. Examples of dark phenomenology include the very fine-grained perceptual discriminations which Thomas Metzinger calls ‘Raffman Qualia’ and, crucially, the structure of temporal awareness. It can be argued, on this basis, that phenomenology is in much the same epistemological relationship to its own subject matter as descriptive (i.e. ‘phenomenological’) physics or biology are to physical and biological reality: phenomenology cannot tell us what phenomenology is really ‘about’. This does not mean we should abjure phenomenology. It implies, rather, that the domain of phenomenology is not the province of a self-standing, autonomous discipline but must be investigated with any empirically fruitful techniques that are open to us (e.g. computational neuroscience, artificial intelligence, etc.). Finally, it entails that while a naturalized phenomenology should be retained as a descriptive, empirical method, it should not be accorded transcendental authority.


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