Intelligent Design and Religion as a Natural Phenomenon
eBook - ePub

Intelligent Design and Religion as a Natural Phenomenon

Volume V

John S. Wilkins, John S. Wilkins

Share book
  1. 534 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Intelligent Design and Religion as a Natural Phenomenon

Volume V

John S. Wilkins, John S. Wilkins

Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

Over the past decade a strident public debate has arisen about the nature and origin of religions. Controversies include how exactly religion evolved, whether by individual or group selection, if it is adaptive, and if not, whether and how it is a side effect of evolution. This volume focuses on the issue of naturalizing religion: on the ways in which cognitive science and social sciences have treated religion as a natural phenomenon. It questions whether religious behaviour, institutions, and experiences can be explained in natural terms.The editor brings together some of the best published work on the definition of 'religion', intelligent design and the evolution of religion.

Frequently asked questions

How do I cancel my subscription?
Simply head over to the account section in settings and click on “Cancel Subscription” - it’s as simple as that. After you cancel, your membership will stay active for the remainder of the time you’ve paid for. Learn more here.
Can/how do I download books?
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
What is the difference between the pricing plans?
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlego’s features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan you’ll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
What is Perlego?
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Do you support text-to-speech?
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Is Intelligent Design and Religion as a Natural Phenomenon an online PDF/ePUB?
Yes, you can access Intelligent Design and Religion as a Natural Phenomenon by John S. Wilkins, John S. Wilkins in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Biological Sciences & Evolution. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2017
ISBN
9781351927109
Edition
1

Part I
Adaptation

[1]
The cognitive and evolutionary psychology of religion

JOSEPH BULBULIA
Religious Studies, Victoria University P.O. Box 600, Wellington, New Zealand (e-mail: [email protected])
Key words: cognitive psychology, costly signalling, evolution, evolutionary psychology, God, religion, ritual
Abstract. The following reviews recent developments in the cognitive and evolutionary psychology of religion, and argues for an adaptationist stance.

Introduction

Religious cognition presents significant explanatory questions to those interested in the evolutionary biology of our species.1 Suppose the function of cognition, in the widest sense, is to help an organism deal, in the widest sense, with environmental complexity (Godfrey-Smith 2002). It is easy to appreciate how the ability to construct mental maps or for colour vision emerged in complex organisms given the enhancements to reproduction these bring. However, a functional explanation for religious cognition is less obvious. Assume that gods do not figure as genuine aspects of environmental complexity. Given the costs of religious cognition – misperceiving reality as phantom infested, frequent prostrations before icons, the sacrifice of livestock, repetitive terrifying or painful rituals, investment in costly objects and architecture, celibacy, religious violence and non-reciprocal altruism, to name a few – it seems selection should have weeded out any religious tendency. But religious conviction and practice is extremely commonplace. It is universal among hunter gathers and emerges in all modem societies (Rappaport 1999). Archaeologists trace religion back to our earliest Sapiens progenitors (Trinkhaus and Shipman 1993; Mithen 1999). Atheism seems to be a relatively recent and rare phenomenon, and though secular pundits have long predicted the demise of religion, it continues to flourish. It seems the human mind is especially prone to religion, in spite of the associated costs. Why?
To a crude approximation, there are two dominant research strands in the naturalistic study of religion.2 In one camp are those that see religious cognition as a by-product of the evolved mind. For these spandrelists, religion has no adaptive value per se. The psychological architecture that produces god-related thought and activity has evolved for other purposes, and religion falls out of it as relatively harmless noise. On the other side are the adaptationists, who view religion as exquisitely functional, an elegant mechanism best explained as the target of natural selection, and best discovered by reverse-engineering its design. Below I highlight recent developments in both camps and suggest (i) why I think the evidence is stronger on the adaptationist side, and (ii) how I think adaptationism matters to the study of religion.

Strand 1: Spandrel explanations

Given the universality of religion, its strong motivational aspects, and behavioural consequences, venturing a functionalist explanation may seem irresistible. Viewing our species as one among many, an alien scientist might compare our strong and elaborate religious tendencies to the migratory instincts, territorial defence rituals, and intricate sexual displays of other animals [compare (Laughlin and McManus 1979; Smith 1979)]. Noticing a discrepancy between the outlay of nature on the one side, and how religious persons understand and interact with their world on the other, the scientist might conclude that selection outfitted our species with internal god-projectors – systems that distort experience to generate supernatural conviction, emotion, and behaviour. Here the poverty of stimulus could not be more extreme, nor could religious responses be more robust. Consider adolescent Khoisa males in Southern Africa who endure excruciating ritual circumcision only to live in exile in a desert environment without any food or water until they heal. The initiates risk infection, dehydration, exposure, and willingly submit to certain agony. The Khoisa claim the gods demand this ordeal of them. But how can chopping bits of genitals before the heavens improve survival?
Traditional theories of religion provide a suite of candidate functions – enhanced solidarity and co-ordination among the faithful, an answer book to life’s riddles, an existential purpose generator, a means for providing hope and solace to the suffering, an adaptation for inter-group warfare, or for morality, and various combinations thereof (Preus 1987). In an effort to understand the god-projector, what it does beyond warping the outlay of reality, the alien naturalist might look to how these distortions enable the religious to relate to and manipulate their world, and other people, in ways that bolster reproduction. Though supernatural beings cannot improve survival – they don’t exist – perhaps through religion we somehow do.
But need religion enhance reproduction to evolve? Interestingly, Darwin didn’t think so. In the The Descent of Man, Darwin devoted only several paragraphs to the subject of human religious tendencies, amazingly little given the place of religion in human life (Darwin 1871/1981). Darwin concluded that our religious inclinations are best explained as spandrels of consciousness. He noticed that:
(i) religious cognition isn’t a natural or psychological kind, but rather a composite of many distinct and overlapping elements: “the feeling of religious devotion is a highly complex one, consisting of love, complete submission to an exalted and mysterious superior, a strong sense of dependence, fear, reverence, gratitude, hope for the future, and perhaps other elements” (p. 68).
(ii) these elements yield to apparent cultural variation and many cultures lack any concept of “God” known to the Abrahamic faiths: “there is ample evidence, derived … from men who have long resided with savages, that numerous races have existed and still exist, who have no idea of one or more gods, and who have no words in their languages to express such an idea” (p. 64). Darwin suggested that varieties of religious thought and behaviour materialize through the influence of social and institutional structures, by way of nurture’s effects on common human nature. The broad spectrum of religiosity – savage through noble (to use Darwin’s categories) – suggests that the best explanation of religion comes through an understanding of how culture assembles religious elements.
(iii) religious elements are not localised to our species:
The tendency in savages to imagine that natural objects and agencies are animated by spiritual or living essences, is perhaps illustrated by a little fact which I once noticed: my dog, a full-grown and very sensible animal, was lying on the lawn during a hot and still day; but at a little distance a slight breeze occasionally moved an open parasol, which would have been wholly disregarded by the dog, had any one stood near it. As it was, every time that the parasol slightly moved, the dog growled fiercely and barked. He must, I think, have reasoned to himself in a rapid and unconscious manner that movement without any apparent cause indicated the presence of some strange living agent, and no stranger had a right to be on his territory (p. 67).
Contemplating blood rituals, trials by poison and fire, witchcraft and other “superstitions” Darwin summed up his spandrelist view: “These miserable and indirect consequences of our highest faculties may be compared with the incidental and occasional mistakes of the instincts of the lower animals” (p. 69). For Darwin, the elemental strands of religiosity can be seen in other animals very clearly as the by-products of ordinary cognition. Given that environmental complexity really is complex, religious “mistakes” should not be surprising. Different cultures generate distinctive religious doctrines, practices, and institutions because the inhabitants of those cultures are prone to supernatural errors.
In Darwin’s classic statement religion serves no adaptive function. But if Darwin wasn’t tempted to Darwinize religion, why should we?
Starting in the 1990s cognitive psychologists began to seriously explore specific features of religious cognition. Following in Darwin’s footsteps, they argued that the aspects of religious cognition are most fruitfully understood not as parts to a globally adaptive system but as spandrels of other systems. Once we understand how these other integrated, modular, information processors work, we’ll understand how they wind up accidentally generating supernatural thought as noise.
One of the first theorists to apply cognitive psychology to religion was Stewart Guthrie who in his 1993 monograph Faces in the Clouds argued that religion is mainly a by-product of agency detection systems (Guthrie 1993). Guthrie understood that the cornerstone of any religious life is religious experience. You can’t throw a brick at a church or temple without hitting someone who has had a powerful religion-affirming encounter with the supernatural. Otherwise, without evidence, why commit to the gods? What makes religion plausible, for Guthrie, is our experience of the world as filled with animate beings.3
Contrary to the methodological assumptions of late 20th century anthropology, Guthrie didn’t think that anthropomorphic tendencies could be explained solely as products of local culture and context. You don’t “learn” to read gods into the fabric of reality. Rather god-mongering is a panhuman tendency; even secularists do it, for example when we perceive faces in clouds or a man on the moon. Guthrie explained anthropomorphism as resulting from perceptual hypersensitivity to persons. We animate the world with human life because we need to find other people whenever they are there, and faced with vague reality, perception gambles cautiously. In doing so, we lose little if they are not there and gain much if they are. Religious experience emerges from a hyperactive agent detection device, what the Justin Barrett calls “HADD” (Barrett 2000).
Assume that selection could have enhanced accuracy in the perception of persons. For Guthrie the payoff for enhanced accuracy did not warrant the costs of more a discriminating detection system. Because selection conserves HADD, religious beings spring from our minds like jack-in-the-boxes. They are projected everywhere because our brains overcompensate when facing vague reality. Like Darwin’s dog, our cognitive organisation leads us to attribute natural effects to intentional causes, and so to project human-like beings into the world. We do this in our rapid unconscious inferences to the best explanation for what we perceive. Because these inferences are to human-like beings, we get worked up in ways that activate the social mind.
Chart 1. Guthrie’s wager
Seeing person when it is unlikely that a person is there (odds = 0.1), but where payoffs for perception are high (+10,000 utiles). Assume a cost of false perception is −10 utiles. Selection will favour HADD, if evolving perfect perception is difficult or more costly than to an organism than running HADD.
Perception Reality: person there Reality: person not there
Benefit of HADD = 901 +10,000 (0.1) or −10 (0.9) or
+1000 −9
Opportunity cost of no −10,000 (0.1) or 0 (0.9) or
HADD = −1000 −1000 (opportunity cost) 0
Notice that on this approach, evolution didn’t design us to be religious any more than it designed us to love cinema or fast food. Once HADD is in place, religiosity falls out as an innocuous after-effect.
But why should we perceive only human-like beings and not also dangerous predators, food, potential mates and other reproductively important distractions (crouching with fear before clouds, exhibiting Pavlovian responses to the moon, or erotic responses to shadows?) And “human-like” needs to be disambiguated. In important ways, the gods are not at all humanlike. They possess supernatural traits and powers. Given the “human” in “HADD,” why are the gods conceived – always – as not humanl And how does HADD explain religious rituals and institutions? While it is understandable how Darwin’s dog could have responded to a moving gate by barking, it is not obvious why we would respond to vague reality with a Sistine Chapel, or a Mecca, or with painful rituals? – “I detect an agent, therefore, off with my foreskin.”
Around the time Guthrie was publishing Faces in the Clouds, Pascal Boyer, a young French anthropologist then at Cambridge, began what was arguably a more rigorous application of cognitive psychology to religion. Like Guthrie, Boyer was impressed with the pervasiveness of religious thought and behaviour and unimpressed with standard anthropological explanations that we learn religion from culture. For Boyer, anthropological locutions about “learning” fail to elucidate the processes by which we acquire religious representations, obscuring this extremely perplexing dimension of human nature. Boyer wanted to better understand, at the level of cognitive architecture, just how the mechanisms for the acquisition and dispersion of religious understandings and practices work. His early research and subsequent career has been grounded in the view that religious ideas are attractive and spread because they activa...

Table of contents