Toward a cognitive science of religion
Part I. Theoretical issues in the cognitive science of religion
Magic bullets and complex theories
The wedding of psychology, ethnography, and history: methodological bigamy or tripartite free love?
Cognitive categories, cultural forms, and ritual structures
Evokes and transmitted culture
Part II. Cognition and the imagination
Cognitive constraints on imagining other worlds
The explanation of myth and myth as explanation
Psychological perspectives on agency
Part III. Cognition, culture, and history
The cognitive science of religion and the growth of knowledge
Counterintuitive notions and the problem of transmission: the relevance of cognitive science for the study of history