Do Thor and Odin Have Bodies? Superperception and Divine Intervention among the Old Norse Gods
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theological Correctness
Is It Correct?
3. Gods’ Bodies
3.1. Anthropomorphism
3.2. Non-Anthropomorphism
3.2.1. Monitoring
3.2.2. Action
4. Discussion
4.1. The Acts of Gods
[C]ertain phenomena, which we, from comparative perspectives, should expect to be part of the pagan religion, are not mentioned in any of the so-called “reliable” sources… [T]his means that argumenta ex silentio should be used with great care: if comparative investigations, or sources within Old Norse religion themselves, suggest the existence of a certain phenomenon, it is not reasonable to reject it just because it is not expressly stated in any “reliable” source.
4.2. A Return to Theological Correctness
5. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | The word anthropomorphism, referring to the assignment of human characteristics to non-human entities, will largely be used in this paper in the sense of having human-like bodies through which to interact with the world. The anthropomorphic quality of having mental states like desires and knowledge is set aside, except at certain points in this paper where I address that topic explicitly and will indicate that the term is being used more expansively. |
2 | The label theological correctness has been quibbled with in the past (e.g., Purzycki and McNamara 2016, p. 158; Slone 2004). I will persist with theological correctness here as it does reflect the effect of authority on the transmission and uptake of religious representations and in view of the currency the label has achieved within CSR. Nonetheless, theological correctness may be better thought of as “social” correctness, as a spur to greater contemplation of it in relation to social relations and pressures. Barrett and Keil use theological to encapsulate complex god-concepts, with attributes like omniscience and omnipotence, that correspond with systematized and culturally sanctioned teachings. They disregard the intellectual themes, like exegesis, hermeneutics, soteriology, and theodicy, that are typically folded into the term. When theological is used in this article, it is in the same register as that of Barrett and Keil. |
3 | Dual-process and dual-system models of cognition are popular in various branches of the cognitive sciences. These often-competing models do not figure enough into this article’s arguments to be explored in detail here, suffice to say that they can align well with the schema of conceptualizing gods outlined by Barrett and Keil and have a substantial basis in empirical evidence (Evans and Stanovich 2013; cf. Pirutinsky et al. 2015; Tremlin 2005), though findings are sometimes inconsistent and some researchers have disputed the basic dichotomy such models imply between subconsciousness and intentionality (e.g., Keren and Schul 2009; Melnikoff and Bargh 2018a; Melnikoff and Bargh 2018b; Newstead 2000; Pennycook et al. 2018). |
4 | The term priming signifies exposure to a stimulus that influences subsequent behaviour. |
5 | Besides changes in the methodology (in the order of experiments and from a listening to a reading exercise (Barrett and Keil 1996, p. 225)), other minor issues might have affected Barrett and Keil’s results. They allude themselves to the smallness of their groups of participants (Barrett and Keil 1996, p. 240; Barrett 1998, p. 618 [n. 8]), and they exacerbate this by breaking the groups down into sub-groups of as small as 7 people. Furthermore, Barrett and Keil’s college students in the United States are homogenous in terms of their average age of 20 but express a range of religious affiliations (1996, p. 225); Barrett’s 1998 group was more consistent in its religious affiliations (largely Hindu, though alongside three Muslims) but the ages range from 9 to 55 years old and so does their level of educational attainment (p. 614). Like is not being compared with like and the ceteris paribus assumption on which the experiments are constructed is undermined. Moreover, age and educational attainment may impact the generation, transmission, and use of religious concepts (e.g., Gregory and Barrett 2009; Casler and Kelemen 2008; cf. Barrett 1998, p. 616). |
6 | One set of experiments was designed as a recall exercise (Barrett and Keil 1996, pp. 224–34). |
7 | The performative role of Old Norse idols is a fascinating topic that would occupy too much space on its own to delve into here. However, idols co-exist in many cultures with discourses incorporating omniscient and omnipotent gods, often straddling uncertainly between symbolizing and manifesting deities (cf. Boyer 2001, pp. 85–86), and the same may be true for early Scandinavia. |
8 | Old Norse gods are on rare occasions rendered through terms denoting their power. Often these words are a reflection of physical strength (for examples, see Taggart 2018, pp. 47–48, 53), but almáttki “almighty” (Jakob Benediktsson 1968, chp. H 268) and rammaukin “intensified in power” (Einarr skálaglamm Helgason 2012, st. 31; Jόnas Kristjánsson and Vésteinn Ólason 2014, p. 466) hint at an understanding of the Old Norse gods that approaches omniscience. The former word may not have been applied to an Old Norse god at all, however, and may be a product of Christian antiquarianism, used under Christian influence, or denote a Christian god incorporated into a Nordic pantheon (for further discussion and references, see Taggart 2018, pp. 35–36). |
9 | For an in-depth analysis of the presentation of runes in literature and the dangers of extrapolating from runes’ literary usage to historical practice, see Birkett 2017, pp. 121–43. |
10 | In Old Norse and Modern English, Balder is typically rendered as Baldr, as it was earlier in this article. |
11 | It would be useful to further analyse the explanatory motifs for superperception and disembodied intervention in light of recent attempts to construct a framework for understanding magical reasoning. Some violations of intuitions of physics, psychology, and biology (of the sort that might be categorized as magic) are deemed on a widespread basis to require more effort than others; for example, conjuring an animal into existence is repeatedly reported as more difficult than changing one’s colour, and this effect that may be intuitive or related to real-world knowledge, especially to the explanatory structures provided by cultural authority figures (McCoy and Ullman 2019; Shtulman and Morgan 2017). The likelihood that a certain motif is created to explain superperception and disembodied intervention may therefore increase or decrease according to the intuitions they violate. However, this is difficult to explore in depth on the basis of the extant Old Norse evidence. |
12 | Though some anthropomorphic properties may, however, conflict more markedly than others with a deity’s supposed non-anthropomorphism, holding beliefs being more compatible than a limited godly attention span, for instance (Shtulman and Lindeman 2016, p. 648). |
13 | The idea that there was a theologically correct Old Norse standpoint is debatable: no centrally authorized canon existed for Old Norse religion, and religious concepts and texts could always be added to, even if such additions might not always have been accepted or communicated further (see McKinnell 1994 and, for parallels in younger Old Icelandic literature, O’Connor 2005). Yet paradigms of stories, characterizations, and conceptualizations did persist across the geographically widespread area populated by worshippers of gods like Freyja and Odin, passed on by authorities of various degrees of influence, including poets and political and religious leaders; consensuses more localized in space and time would have existed to an even greater degree (see Clunies Ross 2005; Sundqvist 2016). That the same story elements can be found etched as images onto stones in the east of modern-day Sweden and preserved in the ink of much later Icelandic manuscripts (cf. Altuna 2008; Bunge 2019; Larrington 2014; Snorri Sturluson 1995) attests to the presence of systems of thought that could change but were nevertheless widely influential. |
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Taggart, D. Do Thor and Odin Have Bodies? Superperception and Divine Intervention among the Old Norse Gods. Religions 2019, 10, 468. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10080468
Taggart D. Do Thor and Odin Have Bodies? Superperception and Divine Intervention among the Old Norse Gods. Religions. 2019; 10(8):468. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10080468
Chicago/Turabian StyleTaggart, Declan. 2019. "Do Thor and Odin Have Bodies? Superperception and Divine Intervention among the Old Norse Gods" Religions 10, no. 8: 468. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10080468
APA StyleTaggart, D. (2019). Do Thor and Odin Have Bodies? Superperception and Divine Intervention among the Old Norse Gods. Religions, 10(8), 468. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10080468