Evolution of Religion

by rebel8 8 Replies latest jw friends

  • rebel8
    rebel8

    The Evolution of Religion

    If you buy the notion that religion is a set of beliefs, then you have to wonder how and why religion came to be, especially given the variety of religions that don't share the same beliefs. But getting at a theory of religion is no easy task.

    One idea is that religion is related to evolution, in that belief confers some survival advantage. Another idea is that as with other supernatural beliefs, religion is appealing because it offers answers to things that otherwise seem inexplicable (and before modern science, a lot of things were inexplicable, from the stars in the sky to stormy weather to human illness and death). But throughout history, just feeling better by having an explanation for things would not necessarily confer much of a survival advantage.

    As James Dow at Oakland University in Michigan sees things: "Religious people talk about things that cannot be seen, stories that cannot be verified, and beings and forces beyond the ordinary. Perhaps their gods are truly at work, or perhaps in human nature there is an impulse to proclaim religious knowledge. If so, it would have to have arisen by natural selection."

    A new simulation program by Dow tries to answer the question by delving into how a system rooted in passing along false or unverifiable information (that is, beliefs rather than plain-as-day facts) can spread and stick.

    Dow's simulation looks at whether religion exists because it is good for the individual.

    In early runs of the simulations, religion doesn't survive most scenarios, explains Massimo Pigliucci in his blog. To spread virtual religion in the simulation, non-believers have to help. The complex reasoning for why this might be so — which Pigliucci explains more fully — is that religious people inspire trust, and so the community tends to help them.

    Dow says his simulation, which he calls evogod, "shows that a central unifying feature of religion, a belief in an unverifiable world, could have evolved alongside of verifiable knowledge. ... The evogod simulation shows how a capacity to create religious ideas can evolve by social selection. It reveals a selection process that can increase genetically inherited capacities to communicate unreal, unverifiable information."

    Read full story at Scientificblogging

  • PSacramento
    PSacramento

    Fact is religion filled a need.

    Humans question, we hunger for knowledge and answers, well...some do.

    Humans also tend to look at things and say, "there must eb somethign more to this" and with Life and afterife, that is certainly the case.

    We can have many theories or views as to how religion came to be, but we may never know, we do know that Man looks for greater things to aspire to, looks for more that what "is".

    Science has become many people's religion and rightly so for it has answered some of the questions that religion tried to answer.

    Religion, and science since I mentioned it above, can get a bad rap when used and manipulted by people with less than ideal motives, it can be used to propagate hate, intolerance and so much more, funny thing is that both religion and science are opposed to those very things.

  • drwtsn32
    drwtsn32
    Science has become many people's religion

    You have been banned. ;)

    Interesting topic. I have thought about this before and agree with the ideas presented in the article. I wonder if this simulator can predict when religion will go extinct.

  • villabolo
    villabolo

    drwtsn32: "I wonder if this simulator can predict when religion will go extinct."

    Or become science centered.

    Thank you rebel8, I've always been fascinated with paleo-anthropology.

    villabolo

  • Narkissos
    Narkissos

    It is natural (that is, cultural) for us to construe "religion" after the Christian pattern -- which focuses on belief (or faith) and additionally interprets it as a sort of alternative knowledge (as if it was all about "questions" and "answers").

    A less (or different) ethnocentrical perspective, e.g. one focusing on ritual rather than belief, might account better for the diversity of the phenomenon we call "religion," and lead to wildly different conclusions.

  • rebel8
    rebel8

    I've found a number of ex-jws shared my experience while studying anthropology and the social sciences. A natural conclusion emerges--people invent explanations for things they don't understand. We do it on a small scale in our everyday lives, and as a species, we do it on a larger scale with religion and other types of beliefs.

  • BizzyBee
    BizzyBee

    Religion also functions to provide comfort in the face of the inexplicable chaos and tragedy that is part of life. The human mind, like a computer, seeks to impose order, and some organizing principle out of raw data. Religion provides answers. Religion also creates the illusion that we have some control over our lives depending on our following certain dogmatic formulas for our behavior and our thoughts. It is a buffer between our lives and the painful truth - no one is in charge of our lives or the universe.

    "Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow,Creeps in this petty pace from day to dayTo the last syllable of recorded time,And all our yesterdays have lighted foolsThe way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!Life's but a walking shadow, a poor playerThat struts and frets his hour upon the stageAnd then is heard no more: it is a taleTold by an idiot, full of sound and fury,

    Signifying nothing."

  • jaguarbass
    jaguarbass

    Read the Slave speices of God, if you want a good explanation of why we have religion.

    In a nut shell we were made by astronauts from Nibiru to be there slaves.

    Then they dived up the land and religion enables them to conduct wars, it moves the pawns into action.

    Thats what the astronuts from Nibiru do is have wars for entertainment.

    They are playing monopoly in real time with people as cannon fodder.

  • ziddina
    ziddina

    Thanks, Rebel8! Good topic! Although, when I first saw the topic title, I thought it would be a more 'nuts-and-bolts' discussion of the actual evolution of the religious beliefs currently present in the world today.

    I like "Bizzy Bee's" response... "Religion also functions to provide comfort in the face of the inexplicable chaos and tragedy that is part of life. The human mind, like a computer, seeks to impose order, and some organizing principle out of raw data. Religion provides answers. Religion also creates the illusion that we have some control over our lives depending on our following certain dogmatic formulas for our behavior and our thoughts. It is a buffer between our lives and the painful truth - no one is in charge of our lives or the universe..."

    I was thinking along those lines - my comment was going to be something to the effect that facing one's own mortality is bone-chilling to the extreme - or can be. Also, having a mental image of a big "Daddy-God" or "Mommy-Goddess" in the sky/earth/water/moon/whatever, that's exclusively on OUR side - MY side - tends to increase personal self-confidence and gives me the strength to try things that I might be too timid to try otherwise...

    Perhaps that's an evolutionary advantage to religious belief... 'Course, it can also cause one to 'fall on the grenade' or lead to other incredibly stupid acts - then it becomes an evolutionary DIS-advantage.

    Zid

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