Ritual: Difference between revisions

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Early rituals aimed at making the "sacred being" appear, and required participation from all the members of the community in issuing the sign. A failure of performance from a participant is known as [[mistakenness]], and might cause the center to refrain from making itself "present" if not corrected. If ritual is successfully performed, the community enters into an [[imperative]] exchange with the center; by "honoring" the "sacred being," they hope to be given protection from certain harms (mimetic violence). However, even in successful performance the ritual will sometimes fail (the center fails to fulfill its "promises"), leading to narrative explanations for the failures through [[myth]].
Early rituals aimed at making the "sacred being" appear, and required participation from all the members of the community in issuing the sign. A failure of performance from a participant is known as [[mistakenness]], and might cause the center to refrain from making itself "present" if not corrected. If ritual is successfully performed, the community enters into an [[imperative]] exchange with the center; by "honoring" the "sacred being," they hope to be given protection from certain harms (mimetic violence). However, even in successful performance the ritual will sometimes fail (the center fails to fulfill its "promises"), leading to narrative explanations for the failures through [[myth]].


[Rituals are repeated acts or processes we participate in, and thus one of the characteristics is that they are institutionalized. We have to go through them, and in turn make sure others go through them, in order to ensure that a given scene we participate in remains the same.]
[Rituals are repeated acts or processes we participate in, and thus one of the characteristics is that they are institutionalized. We have to go through them, and in turn make sure others go through them, in order to ensure that a given community we participate in remains the same.]


== Uses ==
== Uses ==

Revision as of 18:26, 8 May 2023

Ritual is the commemoration of a memorable scene aimed at making the center present.

[A ritual is an act or process we go through in order to ensure that the scene is the same scene it was after the ritual, as it was before the ritual]

Origin

After the originary scene and the sparagmos, the members of the community would once again face each other over the remains and mementos of the central object of desire. However, since this would no longer be the same central object the originary sign deferred appropriation of, the sign would be at risk of failing. But once it's recognized that the sign can defer potentially violent situations, and the "new" central object is "similar" enough to invoke the memory of the originary scene, the sign can once again be used successfully at a lowered "threshold of significance." The process of constructing scenes around "similar" central objects commemorate the originary scene in order to issue the sign is known as ritual.

Characteristics

Early rituals aimed at making the "sacred being" appear, and required participation from all the members of the community in issuing the sign. A failure of performance from a participant is known as mistakenness, and might cause the center to refrain from making itself "present" if not corrected. If ritual is successfully performed, the community enters into an imperative exchange with the center; by "honoring" the "sacred being," they hope to be given protection from certain harms (mimetic violence). However, even in successful performance the ritual will sometimes fail (the center fails to fulfill its "promises"), leading to narrative explanations for the failures through myth.

[Rituals are repeated acts or processes we participate in, and thus one of the characteristics is that they are institutionalized. We have to go through them, and in turn make sure others go through them, in order to ensure that a given community we participate in remains the same.]

Uses

[The rituals of our society are numerous. During life we go through various institutions, kindergarten, school, college, etc. whose function of educating and enculturing are ritualistically ensuring that the population and culture "remains the same" over time.

A job interview is a ritual ensuring that the workplace remains the same after, as it was before.

Entry tests/tasks to a social club, or similar, are rituals that ensure the club remains the same after a new member's entry, as it was before.

References