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Rituals comprise formalised, usually repeatable and ceremonial
actions, often intended to express some fundamental truth or meaning. The word ritual, when used as an
adjective, relates to the noun 'rite', as in rite of passage.
Religion
A ritual can comprise a prescribed form of performing worship in
a particular religion or religious denomination. Rituals can express a part of a larger social doctrine, or of a personal
one.
Although ritual is often used in context with worship performed in a church, the
actual relationship between any religion's doctrine and its ritual(s) can vary considerably from religion to religion.
Ritual often has a close connection with reverence, thus a ritual in many cases expresses reverence for a
deity.
Religious rituals have also included human sacrifice and other
forms of ritual murder.
Sociology
Outside worship and reverence, rituals can have a more basic sociological
function in expressing, inculcating and re-inforcing the shared values and beliefs of a society. Rituals range from the grand and
ceremonial (such as royal coronations) to the trite and everyday (such as the
outbursts of hand-shaking which may occur when people meet).
Rituals have formed a part of human culture for tens of thousands of years. The
earliest known evidence of burial rituals dates from around 20,000 years ago. (Older
skeletons show no signs of deliberate 'burial', and as such lack ritual.)
Psychology
In psychology, the term ritual sometimes refers to a specific action or series of actions that a person performs in a
given context which otherwise has no apparent reason or purpose. The term may refer especially to compulsive behaviors of people
afflicted with obsessive compulsive
disorder (OCD).
See also
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