Archaeology of Religon In the Light of Searching the Last Rituals
Archeology is a complex science, and the archeology of religion is far more complex, suspicious, and questionable; a proposition that prefers the book's discourse and its approach is theoretical critique and evaluation of the potential of archaeological knowledge in abandoned religions.
Archeology of religions and rituals is a new approach and is the product of the archaeological discovery and search of history. Who knows what has gone on in the secrets of the prehistoric human mind and conscience? The insurmountable abysses and epistemological failures of the archeology of religion although more than any other field, studies such as this book are a struggle to cross its impassable areas. In five chapters and two articles, this collection explores archeology in the applications of religion and its derivatives and related concepts, and proposes theoretical discussions and explanations of material body layers of religion and the behavioral archeology of religion, the role of complementary documents and sources, the relationship between archeology and hermeneutics and the relationship between the art of pottery with the mysteries of human creation. It is a book, as a sight lantern seeking lost religions.