Chanting and Enchantment: A Philosophical Communicology of Idolic Submission and Emotional Intoxication Part I: Foundation

  • Eric Mark Kramer
  • Kyle A. Hammonds
Keywords: chanting, enchantment, identity salience, dimensional accrual, dissociation, cognitive dimming, emotional intoxication, mortality salience, falsification, rhetoric, crowd and mass behaviour, idolic mode of being and expression, symbolic mode of being and expression, signalic mode of being and expression, forensic communication, deliberative communication, rationality, democracy

Abstract

In this first of two articles on chanting and enchantment we introduce the problem of mass synchronisation via collective communicative action that works to eliminate or lessen independent and critical assessment. Chanting forges a singular ‘collective’ identity with little to no structure that would allow for logical tests such as falsifiability. We argue that this problem can be a fundamental threat to democratic polity, and we offer the Neo-Kantian theory of dimensional accrual and dissociation as an explanation. In Part 2, we will continue with examples and a discussion of the confluence of philosophical examination and social scientific explanations.

Published
2024-08-26
Section
Epistemology and Philosophy of Science