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Evolutionary and Intellectualist Theories

Evolutionary and intellectualist theories explain religion as an early human attempt to understand the world rationally, evolving through stages from animism toward magic, religion, and science.

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Definition

Intellectualist theories hold that religion arises from individuals reasoning about puzzling experiences (dreams, death, natural forces), while evolutionary theories arrange religious forms in a developmental sequence from simpler to more complex.

Scope

This topic covers the nineteenth-century anthropological theories of E. B. Tylor and J. G. Frazer, who treated religion as the product of human reasoning about experience. It includes Tylor's animism, the idea that religion begins with belief in souls and spirits; Frazer's developmental scheme moving from magic through religion to science; and the broader assumption that 'primitive' religion is a rational but mistaken proto-science. It also notes the major criticisms these theories later received.

Core questions

  • What experiences led early humans to posit souls, spirits, and gods?
  • Is religion best understood as a primitive form of explanation or science?
  • Do religious forms develop through identifiable stages, and toward what?
  • Why did the evolutionary, intellectualist program lose favor in twentieth-century scholarship?

Key theories

Animism (Tylor)
Tylor argued that the minimal definition of religion is 'belief in spiritual beings', which originates when early people, reflecting on dreams, visions, and death, infer the existence of a soul and then extend the idea of spirits to nature at large.
Magic–religion–science sequence (Frazer)
Frazer proposed that human thought passes through three stages: magic (coercing nature by sympathetic principles), religion (propitiating personal gods), and science (understanding natural law), with magic and science sharing a confidence in regularity that religion lacks.
Intellectualist critique
Later anthropologists such as Evans-Pritchard criticized these theories as armchair speculation that projected Victorian rationalism onto other cultures and ignored the social context of belief.

History

Tylor's Primitive Culture (1871) introduced animism as the origin of religion, and Frazer's vast comparative work The Golden Bough (first edition 1890) popularized the magic–religion–science scheme. These theories dominated late-Victorian anthropology but were challenged from the early twentieth century onward by fieldwork-based scholars who rejected their unilineal evolutionism and their neglect of social and emotional dimensions.

Debates

Armchair speculation versus fieldwork
Critics argued that Tylor and Frazer theorized about 'primitive' minds without firsthand ethnographic study, projecting their own rationalist assumptions; defenders note their pioneering role in establishing comparative method.

Key figures

  • Edward Burnett Tylor
  • James George Frazer
  • Herbert Spencer
  • E. E. Evans-Pritchard

Related topics

Seminal works

  • tylor1871
  • frazer1890

Frequently asked questions

Did Tylor and Frazer think religion was simply false?
Both treated religion as a rational but ultimately mistaken way of explaining the world, expecting it to be superseded by science. Their work is now read as a historically important but flawed stage in the study of religion rather than as an accepted account.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts