Javanese spirits function as pre-juridical institutions of sacral social control. Their philosophical significance lies in the claim that normativity can be topographical: place itself can command before law speaks. In the Javanese spirit-world, authority is not only spoken by elders, written into rules, or centralised in institutions; it is distributed across houses, graves, trees, watersources, village boundaries, forests, mountains, ritual sites, and zones felt as angker. Dhanyang, cikal-bakal, punden, ancestral guardians, and village rituals organise conduct by transforming space into obligation, ancestry into authority, ecological boundaries into moral limits, invisible sanction into self-regulation, and sacred atmosphere into social compliance. The method is structural-philosophical reconstruction rather than empirical genealogy: the central question is not what Javanese spirits are believed to be, but what they do as structures of normativity. Internal Javanese vocabularies—rasa, pamali, kualat, laku, eling-waspada, memayu hayuning bawana, and jagad cilik–jagad gedhe— ground the analysis in local categories while preserving its philosophical scope. Sacral social control is distinguished from Durkheim’s general theory of the sacred by specifying the mechanisms through which sacred force becomes operational: spatialised authority, atmospheric prohibition, ritual mediation, ecological hesitation, cultivated rasa, fear of kualat, and the threshold at which communal order becomes domination through monopoly of interpretation. The question is not whether spirits exist, but what kind of world becomes possible when land, ancestors, places, and prohibitions are experienced as watched, inherited, and dangerous.Download the article from SSRN at the link.
July 2, 2026
Mahardhika on The Spirit Before Law: A Philosophical Reconstuction of Javanese Spirits as Sacral Social Control
Jimmy Mahardhika, Inspired Research Collective, has published The Spirit Before Law: A Philosophical Reconstruction of Javanese Spirits as Sacral Social Control. Here is the abstract.
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