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Belief in the Supernatural as an Adaptation. David Viitala November 29, 2006. Supernatural Belief. Religion or spiritual beliefs are found all over the world, in almost every culture About 3/4 of the world’s population follows one of the following four: Christianity (33%) Islam (21%)
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Belief in the Supernatural as an Adaptation David Viitala November 29, 2006
Supernatural Belief • Religion or spiritual beliefs are found all over the world, in almost every culture • About 3/4 of the world’s population follows one of the following four: • Christianity (33%) • Islam (21%) • Hinduism (14%) • Buddhism (6%)
Supernatural Belief • Supernatural experiences include: • Religious experiences • Spiritual experiences • Near-death experiences • Out-of-body / astral projection • Feeling the presence of spirits • Feeling possessed by spirits, demons • Auditory and visual hallucinations • and so on • These experiences are found world-wide
Beginnings of Supernatural Belief • Early humans had been performing mortuary practices as long as 120 000 years ago • Neanderthals and early humans placed the deceased in a sleeping position, with objects surrounding • This does not necessarily indicate a religious belief, or the idea of having a god • However this does show an awareness of death, perhaps what could come after death, as well as feelings of loss, love, and mysticism
Beginnings of Supernatural Belief • Thousands of years go by, and rituals become more diverse and detailed • Beliefs represented in paintings, artifacts • Eventually organized religion emerges
Some say… • Some say we believe in God, or a god, because there truly is a God • There very well could be? • The universe is very mystical!
However… • In terms of evolution, the belief in supernatural beings or worlds may have been an adaptive trait, increasing the fitness of early humans • How?
Belief in supernatural as an adaptation • Early humans would have benefited from living in groups • Avoiding predators • Hunting and gathering • Investments in kin • Sharing of resources • These groups would have been in competition with other groups for resources and habitats, thereby increasing the need for a strong, united group • Cooperation and cohesion would have been important
Belief in supernatural as an adaptation • Humans are self-interested • In a group of cooperators, a cheater could thrive • However, collective action and cooperation can be increased if there is a credible threat of punishment • Cooperation has costs, but a threat of punishment can have higher costs
Belief in supernatural as an adaptation • It would have became harder to cheat with the arrival of two abilities: • Capacity to infer the contents of other minds • Language • These new selection pressures would have been entirely novel • Much greater social transparency
Belief in supernatural as an adaptation • The belief in supernatural beings and a threat of punishment, either immediate or in the after-life, may have increased unity and deterred transgression • A god could dictate what is good, and what is bad • Cooperation requires some level of morality
Some supportive evidence… • Sosis (2000) found that cooperation is higher among those who are more devout • Roes and Raymond (2003) found that there is a modest but significant correlation between size of society and likelihood to be characterized by a belief in moralizing gods • Johnson (2005) found that in a sample of 186 human societies, high gods are significantly associated with larger societies
It could also be in part… • It is important in nature for organisms to find patterns and develop expectancies • It was perhaps a “natural consequence of human brains fearful of invoking the calamities of nature upon themselves as a result of their actions” • Belief in the supernatural could have been an effective coping mechanism
Some argue… • There are no brain regions specifically for religious practices • No animal precursors • Deficiency in religiosity does not seem to impede ability to survive (at least in today’s world) • No evidence that religiosity is heritable
Biological basis • The regions of the brain that have been linked to spiritual experiences when activated include: • The amygdala • The hippocampus • The temporal lobe • These experiences can include: • trance-like states, astral projection, dreaming, near-death experiences, and hallucinations of ghosts, spirits, demons, angels, etc • As well as intense experiences involving sexuality, fear, and rage • Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon have been found to have well developed inferior temporal lobes and limbic systems
Biological basis • Particularly the right side of the brain seems to be involved in dreaming and hallucinations • The right temporal lobe is more active during REM, and the left is more-so during non-REM sleep • LSD-induced hallucinations are more greatly reduced with the damage of the right temporal lobe
Conclusions • Evolution… it’s complicated • It is possible that the belief in supernatural agents would have been the result of a number of selective pressures • Evolutionary theory explains why religion is found everywhere
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