Publication

Social Mobility: Mithraism and Cosmography in the 2nd-5th Centuries CE

Downloadable Content

Persistent URL
Last modified
  • 06/25/2025
Type of Material
Authors
    Sandra Blakely, Emory University
Language
  • English
Date
  • 2019
Publisher
  • Acta ad archaeologiam et artium historiam pertinentia
Publication Version
Copyright Statement
  • Open Journal Systems
License
Final Published Version (URL)
Title of Journal or Parent Work
Volume
  • 31
Issue
  • 17
Start Page
  • 11
End Page
  • 41
Abstract
  • Pragmatic cognitive science, rooted in Dewey's epistemology and models of distributed cognition, offers new hypotheses for the emergence and decline of the Mithraic rites. These models foreground the responsiveness of the rites to their economic and social environment, generating new form-meaning pairs through multimodal engagements inside the Mithraic caves. These moments of cognitive blending answered the needs of the early social catchment of the rites, which was predominantly freedmen and soldiers benefitting from the upward mobility of the thriving second century CE. Within the caves, multimodal engagements with the triumph of light over dark physical movement, imagery, gesture, role playing, and interaction with cult equipment - aligned the experience of the initiate with Mithras' cosmological triumph. The caves are also a confluence of mechanisms for social mobility that were broadly familiar in the imperial period, including patronage, symposia, engagement with exotic cultural forms and philosophical speculation. The decline of the rites was coincident with the dissolution of the economic opportunities that enabled the rise of the Roman middle class and of the social currency of these practices. The language of euergetism yielded to the language of service to the poor, and the cosmological imagery that characterized the caves shifted into the restricted spheres of exchange among competing princes. This model of the rites suggests dynamics with Christianity focused less on theology than on responsiveness to the economic and social transformations.
Author Notes
Keywords
Research Categories
  • Psychology, Cognitive
  • History, Ancient

Tools

Relations

In Collection:

Items