# The Rhetoric of Disenchantment: Ghost Belief and Secular Critique in Early Twentieth‐Century China

**Authors:** Ze Hong, Yuqi Chen

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/cogs.70158 · 2026-01-19

## TL;DR

This study explores how debates about ghosts and spirits in early 20th-century China reflected broader shifts toward secularism and science.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a novel dataset and mixed-methods approach to analyze supernatural belief debates during China's secular transformation.

## Key findings

- Critics of ghost belief emphasized science and rationality, while defenders used anecdotes and empirical claims.
- The rise of science as an epistemology and psychological explanations influenced how belief was framed as superstition.
- Agnostic and reconciliatory positions also emerged, showing diverse responses to supernatural belief.

## Abstract

This study presents the first large‐scale empirical analysis of how ghosts and spirits were debated during China's early twentieth‐century secular transformation. Using a novel dataset of over 2000 digitized texts—including newspapers, periodicals, and essays from 1890 to 1949—we combine close reading, AI‐assisted annotation, and statistical modeling to examine rhetorical strategies surrounding supernatural belief. We find a clear asymmetry: critics emphasized theoretical arguments (e.g., science, rationality, education), while defenders relied more on empirical or anecdotal evidence. These patterns reflect broader institutional and cognitive shifts, including the rise of science as a dominant epistemology and the increasing use of psychological explanations to pathologize belief. While reformist elites often cast ghost belief as superstition, we also identify agnostic, cautious, and reconciliatory positions. By situating these debates within the broader context of Chinese cultural modernization, the study sheds new light on how supernatural belief became a contested domain and offers fresh tools for studying the cultural evolution of religious cognition.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** death (MESH:D003643), plague (MESH:D010930), infectious diseases (MESH:D003141), pain (MESH:D010146), anxiety (MESH:D001007)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12815379/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12815379