Article ID: CBB001320134

E. B. Tylor, Religion and Anthropology (2013)

unapi

Edward Burnett Tylor (1832-1917) is often considered the father of the discipline of anthropology. Despite such eminence, his biography has never been written and the connections between his life and his work have been largely obscured or ignored. This article presents Tylor's main theories in the field of anthropology, especially as presented in his four published books, the most famous of which is Primitive Culture, and in the manuscript sources for his last, unpublished, one on 'The natural history of religion'. One of Tylor's major areas of interest was the use of anthropological evidence to discover how religion arose. This preoccupation resulted in his influential account of 'animism'. Drawing upon biographical information not known by previous scholars, Tylor's Quaker formation, later religious scepticism and personal life are connected to his intellectual work. Assumptions such as his evolutionary view of human culture and intellectualist approach to 'savage' customs, his use of the comparative method, and distinctive notions of his such as 'survivals' are first explained, and then the discussion is taken a step further in order to demonstrate how they were deployed to influence contemporary religious beliefs and practices. Tylor argued that the discipline of anthropology was a 'reformer's science'. Working within the warfare model of the relationship between faith and science, I reveal the extent to which this meant for him using the tools of this new field of inquiry to bring about changes in the religious convictions of his contemporaries.

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Authors & Contributors
Cantor, Geoffrey N.
Larsen, Timothy
Anstey, Peter R.
Atherton, Mark
Bruckerl, Frank
Gaya, Hannah
Journals
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
Annals of Science: The History of Science and Technology
British Journal for the History of Science
Historiographia Linguistica: International Journal for the History of the Language Sciences
History of Education
History of the Human Sciences
Publishers
Oxford University Press
University of Chicago Press
Northwestern University
The Boydell Press: Cambridge University Library
Concepts
Science and religion
Quakers and Quakerism
Anthropology
Astrophysics
Science education and teaching
Popularization
People
Tylor, Edward Burnett
Thompson, Silvanus Phillips
Darwin, Charles Robert
Eddington, Arthur Stanley
Douglas, Mary
Eliot, George
Time Periods
19th century
17th century
18th century
20th century, early
20th century
Places
Great Britain
Pennsylvania (U.S.)
United States
England
Mexico
France
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