ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 1935, collects together material on the origins of religion from two very different sources. South America, where the author spent six years studying the religious beliefs and customs of several Indian tribes representing different stages of culture; and the Finno-Ugrian area, where Finnish and Russian ethnologists had brought to light a new body of facts which formed an important addition to our knowledge of religious life at an early stage of cultural development. This book is a key work in the study of comparative religion, and is an essential reference source on the origins of religion.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part |190 pages

Primitive Religious Beliefs

chapter Chapter I|11 pages

Theories of the Origin of Religion

chapter Chapter III|12 pages

Primitive Conception of the Soul

chapter Chapter IV|15 pages

The Soul and Magical “Power”

chapter Chapter V|17 pages

The Worship of Animals

chapter Chapter VI|23 pages

The Worship of Plants

chapter Chapter VII|27 pages

The Worship of Inanimate Nature

chapter Chapter VIII|18 pages

Totemism

chapter Chapter IX|18 pages

Spirits, Demons, Ghosts

chapter Chapter X|22 pages

“Supreme Beings” of Primitive Peoples

part |93 pages

Religious Cult

chapter Chapter XI|10 pages

The Origin of Ritual. Magic and Religion

chapter Chapter XII|15 pages

Communion with the Spirit World

chapter Chapter XIII|12 pages

The Control of Spirits by Magical Means

chapter Chapter XIV|13 pages

Purification Ceremonies

chapter Chapter XV|18 pages

Sacrifice

chapter Chapter XVI|7 pages

Prayer

chapter Chapter XVII|18 pages

Funeral and Mourning Customs. The Cult of the Dead