Inventing Superstition: From the Hippocratics to the Christians

Inventing Superstition: From the Hippocratics to the Christians

by Dale B. Martin
ISBN-10:
0674024079
ISBN-13:
9780674024076
Pub. Date:
03/01/2007
Publisher:
Harvard University Press
ISBN-10:
0674024079
ISBN-13:
9780674024076
Pub. Date:
03/01/2007
Publisher:
Harvard University Press
Inventing Superstition: From the Hippocratics to the Christians

Inventing Superstition: From the Hippocratics to the Christians

by Dale B. Martin
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Overview

The Roman author Pliny the Younger characterizes Christianity as “contagious superstition”; two centuries later the Christian writer Eusebius vigorously denounces Greek and Roman religions as vain and impotent “superstitions.” The term of abuse is the same, yet the two writers suggest entirely different things by “superstition.”

Dale Martin provides the first detailed genealogy of the idea of superstition, its history over eight centuries, from classical Greece to the Christianized Roman Empire of the fourth century C.E. With illuminating reference to the writings of philosophers, historians, and medical teachers he demonstrates that the concept of superstition was invented by Greek intellectuals to condemn popular religious practices and beliefs, especially the belief that gods or other superhuman beings would harm people or cause disease. Tracing the social, political, and cultural influences that informed classical thinking about piety and superstition, nature and the divine, Inventing Superstition exposes the manipulation of the label of superstition in arguments between Greek and Roman intellectuals on the one hand and Christians on the other, and the purposeful alteration of the idea by Neoplatonic philosophers and Christian apologists in late antiquity.

Inventing Superstition weaves a powerfully coherent argument that will transform our understanding of religion in Greek and Roman culture and the wider ancient Mediterranean world.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674024076
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 03/01/2007
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 5.06(w) x 7.94(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Dale B. Martin is Woolsey Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies at Yale University.

Table of Contents

Prefaceix
1Superstitious Christians1
2Problems of Definition10
3Inventing Deisidaimonia: Theophrastus, Religious Etiquette, and Theological Optimism21
4Dealing with Disease: The Hippocratics and the Divine36
5Solidifying a New Sensibility: Plato and Aristotle on the Optimal Universe51
6Diodorus Siculus and the Failure of Philosophy79
7Cracks in the Philosophical System: Plutarch and the Philosophy of Demons93
8Galen on the Necessity of Nature and the Theology of Teleology109
9Roman Superstitio and Roman Power125
10Celsus and the Attack on Christianity140
11Origen and the Defense of Christianity160
12The Philosophers Turn: Philosophical Daimons in Late Antiquity187
13Turning the Tables: Eusebius, the "Triumph" of Christianity, and the Superstition of the Greeks207
Conclusion: The Rise and Fall of a Grand Optimal Illusion226
Notes245
Works Cited283
Index301
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