Geertz used an ontological lens to comparatively study groups and their respective behaviors, actions, and organization. He approached this with a “thick description” lens, which was characterized by incorporating a group’s ethos into the interpretation of their worldview and its respective implications. By doing this, Geertz explained that the anthropologist would not just be describing the group through their own lens, but describing how the people who live within that respective group view their own life experience and orient it to their own ethos and worldview. By incorporating these paramount social contexts, anthropologists can actually involve the realities of the insider to the research and findings of the outsider. By understanding the meanings that symbols convey to those who see them in that manner, a less biased perception can be had and a truer understanding can be had. This “thick description” involves not just the researcher’s view of the life experience, but also the ones living the actual experience.
Ultimately, I think Geertz feels that myth is more important for the sudy of religious cultures because he focuses on the significance of symbols within a culture. In fact, I think Geertz would see the ritual as symbolic of the myth, which alludes to the idea of the former being more important to him regarding religions. He stated, “...that which is set apart as more than mundane is inevitably considered to have far-reaching implications for the direction of human conduct” (Geertz, 126). This statement highlights Geertz’s outlook on the importance of myth. A sacred myth dictates human conduct, of which rituals definitely are. If myths dictate human conduct, then Geertz would likely say that myth is more religiously important than the ritual. Although, the ritual and myth are reciprocal binders of a groups values, morals, and ideals to their perspective of the world and their role within it. In this manner, ritual binds the ethos and the worldview together through human interaction. Geertz explained this concept by presenting the Javanese example of tjotjog stating, “...two items tjotjog when their coincidence forms a coherent pattern which gives to each a significance and a value it does not in itself have” (Geertz, 129). However, Geertz claimed this concept was universal and found throughout all cultures, but varies wildly. This is why he called for the “thick description”, in the first place.
I feel like Geertz had many strengths in his approach. First and foremost, and quite possibly the most obvious– is that took an initiative to advocate for incorporating the actual ethos and worldview of the people living within these religious and social contexts into account. So many of our previous theorists this semester not only failed to do that, but outright refused to acknowledge their own lens was tainting their perception, and thereby their findings. This is progress for anthropology, if you ask me. This is the game-changer. You cannot observe another group of people precisely and report on them, without incorporating their beliefs in some fashion. Yes, many of the theorists we’ve read incorporated the beliefs of the people they studied, but in a condescending, patronizing, condemning way. I have always argued that symbols play such a huge role in religion and will continue to do so. Geertz knew that symbols wield most of the power in a religious concept. His theory that rituals held together ethos and worldview through use of symbolism is monumentally important when studying all religions. This is especially true when you’re studying one of which you’re not a part of. I feel like this was an effort to call for the discarding of your own personal bias, beliefs, and lenses when studying other religions and cultures. This is a step toward scientific study, in the sense of quality of research. However, I found several ideas scattered among the good ones that I did not care too much for. His appreciation of Paul Radin is cool, because I feel like Radin’s efforts were genuine, even though their were some Eurocentric concepts there, as well. Referring to Radin without mentioning that, is somewhat sketchy, in my book. You can appreciate Radin and his extensive efforts while also mentioning his lenses clouded his findings and the reporting thereof. The work he referenced was literally titled “Primitive Man as a Philosopher”. So, again- I find this contradictory for both Radin and now, Geertz. If you’re truly trying to incorporate the ethos and worldview of the culture you’re researching and reporting on, you must discard that literal and industrial lens. Judging and labeling a culture/religion based on their location on some literate/illiterate or industrial/preindustrial spectrum is taking the long route at disagreeing with yourself in the case of both Radin and Geertz. These people were literate in their own sense and ways of literacy. These people were industrial in their own sense of industry. While I confirm that Geertz was trying to head the right way in arguing the necessity of doing away with all of this, he wasn’t exactly taking his own advice. In addition, Geertz considered the Indigenous people in a way that most scholars we’ve read thus far significantly failed to. When he was discussing Radin’s findings of the symbolic relationship between the circle and their ethos and worldview, he missed something very important. He may have been taking the very long route at finding the point, but he failed to come to a grand conclusion, if you ask me. He stated, “Here is a subtle formulation of the relation between good and evil, and of their grounding in the very nature of reality” (Geertz, 128). He goes on and on about how important the circle is and why it’s found through nature, etc. Yet, he doesn’t acknowledge that these people think nature is sacred. Yes, he claimed the circular patterns in life dictate symbols that dictate ritual that dictate order and worldview that reinforce the symbol. Yet, he should’ve just came out with it; these people saw nature as the sacred. He was coming to the point, but never fully made it there. Instead, he concluded that these rituals were performed, “...to construe mythologically the peculiar paradoxes and anomalies of moral experience…” (Geertz, 128). I just think of the commercial with the old-timer fisherman hanging the dollar in front of the individual and they keep trying to grab it, but he yanks it away saying, “You almost had it”. Geertz almost had it. In fact, he went full circle around the notion, but never stopped to make his point. However, he had so many great points that it’s hard to be too critical of him. I feel like he hit the nail on the head when he explained that not incorporating these religious subjects’ ethos and worldview and their experience within them was akin to, “...not so much as as stupid, insensitive, unlearned…mad” (Geertz, 129). I like a scholar who has conviction. Yet, once again– I found him contradicting himself a couple pages later calling Navajo tradition obsessive and Aztec tradition cruel. These people who were/are within these traditions didn’t see those traditions as cruel. So, I feel like he was making a conscious effort to overcome the problems, but still had some unlearning to do.
Clifford Geertz, “Ethos, World View, and the Analysis of Sacred Symbols,” in Geertz, The Interpretation of Cultures (Basic Books, 1973), 126-141.