Ann Taves (born 1952) is Distinguished Professor of Religious Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She is a former president of the American Academy of Religion (2010). Past presidents of the AAR (Accessed 4 July 2014) From July 2005–December 2017, she held the Cordana Chair in Catholic Studies at UC Santa Barbara. Taves is especially known for her work Religious Experience Reconsidered (2009), stressing the importance of the findings and theoretical foundations of cognitive science for modern religionists.
Taves married Raymond Paloutzian on 29 December 2007, in Santa Barbara.Claremont Graduate University, School of Behavioral and Organizational Sciences, Spring 2008 Newsletter , "Faculty Student and Alumni Milestones", page 15 (accessed 4 July 2014).
In 2013, Taves received a Guggenheim Fellowship in the field of religion.John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, Fellowships to Assist Research and Artistic Creation. Ann Taves (accessed 4 July 2014).
In March 2018, she gave the Gunning lecture at New College, Edinburgh on the topic "Religion as worldviews and as ways of life."
It charts the synonymic language of trance in the American Christian traditions: power or presence or indwelling of God, or Christ, or the Spirit, or spirits. Typical expressions include "the indwelling of the Spirit" (Jonathan Edwards), "the witness of the Spirit" (John Wesley), "the power of God" (early American Methodists), being "filled with the Spirit of the Lord" (early Adventists; see charismatic Adventism), "communing with spirits" (Spiritualists), "the Christ within" (New Thought), "streams of holy fire and power" (Methodist holiness), "a religion of the Spirit and Power" (the Emmanuel Movement), and "the baptism of the Holy Spirit" (early ).
It focuses on a class of seemingly involuntary acts alternately explained in religious and secular terminology. These involuntary experiences include uncontrolled bodily movements (Seizure, bodily exercises, falling as dead, catalepsy, convulsions); spontaneous vocalizations (crying out, shouting, speaking in tongues); unusual sensory experiences (trances, hallucination, voices, clairvoyance, out-of-body experiences); and alterations of consciousness and/or memory (dreams, , somnambulism, mesmeric trance, mediumistic trance, hypnotism, possession, alternating personality).
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