Author: admin

  • Privacy Statement

    Effective date: January 15, 2020

    This policy explains what information we collect when you use IBCSR’s website or register for membership (“services”). It also has information about how we store, use, and transfer that information. Our aim is not just to comply with privacy law, but to earn your trust.

    For site browsers: IBCSR doesn’t make money from ads so we don’t collect to push advertising at you. But we do collect information about your interactions with our network to make the site work optimally: the pages you visit, your ip address, information about your device (such as type of browser), and referral information. We use this information to improve services, fight spam, and generate aggregate information to guide site development and planning.

    For people registering for IBCSR Research Review: we collect your email so we can mail you the free monthly IBCSR Research Review.

    For IBCSR members: we collect indentifying information, including your name, email, and mailing address so we can send you the quarterly journal Religion, Brain & Behavior. When you pay for your membership, you communicate directly with a payment service and not with this site, so we neither collect nor store any financial information.

    We do not share any of this information with other organizations. We neither collect nor store financial informaiton. Our platform is audited annually by a third-party qualified security assessor. Member information is deleted upon request.

    If you would like more information about this privacy policy, please contact admin@ibcsr.org. IBCSR is wholly owned and operated by the Center for Mind and Culture, Inc., 566 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02215, USA.

  • Boston Colloquium on Scientific Study of Religion

    Boston Colloquium on Scientific Study of Religion

    Announcing the 2021-2022 Boston Colloquium on the Scientific Study of Religion:
    Cognitive Science of Religion

    The Colloquium, convened by Dr. Wesley J. Wildman, meets weekly for interdisciplinary discussions of the scientific study of religion. The group is a friendly and supportive environment for people making their way in the scientific study of religion, building connections between early-career scholars and researchers. The Colloquium meets on Wednesdays from 12:30-1:20 Eastern time. Most meetings involve a discussion of a research article, a presentation by a member of the group, or a guest speaker.

    Each year, the readings and discussions are focused on a specific theme. For 2021-2022, the theme is Cognitive Science of Religion. The Colloquium will build on remote discussions over the past year to use a hybrid format that will include participants from a variety of locations. Members will attend the group, read the articles, and engage in discussions. They may also have the opportunity to present their own research.

    Graduate students and postdoctoral researchers are invited to apply to become Colloquium members for the upcoming year by emailing a CV and a short paragraph explaining your interest in the Colloquium to admin@mindandculture.org. To ensure optimal group size, the number of participants will be limited, and applications should be received before September 1, 2021. Researchers outside of Boston and Boston University are encouraged to apply.

    The Colloquium is based at Boston University and affiliated with the Center for Mind and Culture.

          

  • Max Planck Institute Postdoc in Evolution of Human Cooperation and Religion

    Max Planck Institute Postdoc in Evolution of Human Cooperation and Religion

    Post-doctoral researcher in the evolution of religion and cooperation

    The Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, unites scientists with various backgrounds (natural sciences and humanities) whose aim is to investigate the history of humankind from an interdisciplinary perspective with the help of comparative analyses of genes, cultures, cognitive abilities, languages and social systems of past and present human populations as well as those of primates closely related to human beings.

    Call for post-doctoral researcher in the evolution of religion and cooperation

    The Department of Human Behavior, Ecology and Culture at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology invites applications for a post-doctoral researcher in the evolutionary, cognitive, cultural and/or behavioral sciences of religion. The candidate will work under the direct supervision of Dr. Benjamin Purzycki (Senior Researcher).

    The contract period is for 2 years. The salary is according to the German public service pay scale (TVöD). The appointment is based in Leipzig.

    We are looking for a researcher with a background in methods and/or data analysis interested in working on a series of projects examining the cross-cultural co-evolution of religion and cooperation. We ultimately hope to develop ways of examining and explaining cross-cultural variation in the domain of religion. The central questions we’re asking are:

    Do specific socioeconomic and ecological conditions contribute to the content of religious beliefs and the costs, timing, and placement of ritual behaviors?Do salient, locally specific problems feed into the forms religions take?If so, how? Does the form that religions take reduce the costs of corresponding problems? The successful candidate will have opportunities to analyze already-collected data, take the lead in ongoing projects, write reports and collaborate on publications with the supervisor and his research network. The ideal candidate will have an eye toward field research and/or the development of longitudinal, cross-culturally applicable methods for field researchers.

    The candidate is expected to:

    • Analyze extant data and write up results
    • Design and manage projects assessing the social and ecological conditions that predict religious beliefs and practice
    • Manage edited volumes

    Requirements:

    • PhD degree in Anthropology, Psychology, Evolutionary Ecology/Biology, or another relevant field
    • Fluency in spoken and written English
    • Strong, demonstrated knowledge of data management and analysis of quantitative data and/or modelling
    • Excellent organizational and time management skills

    Please address questions and completed applications electronically to Dr. Benjamin Purzycki (benjamin_purzycki[at]eva.mpg.de) with the subject heading “MPI POSTDOC APPLICATION”. 

    Applications should include (in a single pdf document):

    1. a cover letter describing: a) how you meet the aforementioned requirements, b) how you might contribute to the general goals of the call for post-docs, and c) your preferred start date.

    2. a CV with the contact information of at least three professional references who are prepared to write informative letters of support

    All electronic applications received by October 31, 2017 will be considered. We interview suitable candidates via Skype by November 30, 2017 for a flexible starting date. Current doctoral students and post-docs finishing in 2018 are encouraged to apply.

    The Max Planck Society wishes to increase the proportion of women in areas in which they are underrepresented; women are therefore explicitly encouraged to apply.
     

    The Max Planck Society is committed to equal opportunities and to employing individuals with disabilities and explicitly encourages them to apply.

    We look forward to receiving your completed application.

  • IBCSR Research Review Issues

    If you are a member, please log in to review past issues of IBCSR Research Review.

    IBCSR members have access to the entire history of IBCSR Research Review issues as well as a searchable database of publications in the scientific study of religion. The database is a one-stop solution to finding what has been published in the biocultural study of religion and in spirituality and health research, with no extraneous results to sift through on your way to locating the information you seek. The IBCSR Research Review Database contains all entries from all issues of the IBCSR Research Review as well as articles from previous years back to the middle of the nineteenth century, and is expanding all the time. IBCSR members enjoy other benefits, too. Join IBCSR today using the link on this page and on the IBCSR home page.

    Click here to review a sample issue of IBCSR Research Review.

    Click here to review past issues of IBCSR Research Review.

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  • The cognitive science of religion

    The cognitive science of religion

    Here’s an introduction to the cognitive science of religion, in video form! It includes a quick history of the discipline, including tracing its roots to historical religious studies. 

      Spectrums Project

  • What is modeling?

    What is modeling?

    This video introduces the Simulating Religion Project and discussing the all-important question: What is computer modeling, anyway?

      Spectrums Project

  • Simulating religious violence

    Simulating religious violence

    Listen up – religious violence is bad news. That’s why we’re studying the psychological, social, and economic roots of religious terrorism using computer simulations. Learn more by watching the video below.

      Spectrums Project

  • Theories of Religion

    Theories of Religion

    Today’s topic is “theories of religion!” Watch this video for a fun and informative overview of academic theories of religion and how they can be used to inform computer models of human society and cognition.

      Spectrums Project