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Evolutionary origin of religion

The evolutionary origin of religion and religious behavior is a field of study related to evolutionary psychology, the origin of language and mythology, and cross-cultural comparison of the anthropology of religion. Some subjects of interest include Neolithic religion, evidence for spirituality or cultic behavior in the Upper Paleolithic, and similarities in great ape behavior.

Nonhuman religious behavior

Humanity's closest living relatives are common chimpanzees and bonobos.[1][2] These primates share a common ancestor with humans who lived between six and eight million years ago. It is for this reason that chimpanzees and bonobos are viewed as the best available surrogate for this common ancestor. Barbara King argues that while non-human primates are not religious, they do exhibit some traits that would have been necessary for the evolution of religion. These traits include high intelligence, a capacity for symbolic communication, a sense of social norms, and realization of "self" continuity.[3][4] There is inconclusive evidence that Homo neanderthalensis may have buried their dead, which would be evidence of mortuary ritual.[citation needed] The use of burial rituals is thought to be evidence of religious activity, but there is no other evidence that religion existed in human culture before humans reached behavioral modernity.[5] Other lines of evidence have revealed that Homo neanderthalensis made cave art, which would require a high level of symbolic thinking paralleling religious thought.[6]

Elephants perform rituals for their dead. They demonstrate long periods of silence and mourning at the point of death; later, elephants return to grave sites and caress the remains.[7][8] Some evidence suggests that many species grieve death and loss.[9]

Relevant prerequisites for human religion

Increased brain size

In this set of theories, the religious mind is one consequence of a brain that is large enough to formulate religious and philosophical ideas.[10] During human evolution, the hominid brain tripled in size, peaking 500,000 years ago. Much of the brain's expansion took place in the neocortex. The cerebral neocortex is presumed to be responsible for the neural computations underlying complex phenomena such as perception, thought, language, attention, episodic memory and voluntary movement.[11] According to Dunbar's theory, the relative neocortex size of any species correlates with the level of social complexity of the particular species.[12] The neocortex size correlates with a number of social variables that include social group size and complexity of mating behaviors.[13] In chimpanzees the neocortex occupies 50% of the brain, whereas in modern humans it occupies 80% of the brain.[14]

Robin Dunbar argues that the critical event in the evolution of the neocortex took place at the speciation of archaic Homo sapiens about 500,000 years ago. His study indicates that only after the speciation event is the neocortex large enough to process complex social phenomena such as language and religion. The study is based on a regression analysis of neocortex size plotted against a number of social behaviors of living and extinct hominids.[15]

Stephen Jay Gould suggests that religion may have grown out of evolutionary changes which favored larger brains as a means of cementing group coherence among savanna hunters, after that larger brain enabled reflection on the inevitability of personal mortality.[16]

Tool use

Lewis Wolpert argues that causal beliefs that emerged from tool use played a major role in the evolution of belief. The manufacture of complex tools requires creating a mental image of an object which does not exist naturally before actually making the artifact. Furthermore, one must understand how the tool would be used, that requires an understanding of causality.[17] Accordingly, the level of sophistication of stone tools is a useful indicator of causal beliefs.[18] Wolpert contends use of tools composed of more than one component, such as hand axes, represents an ability to understand cause and effect. However, recent studies of other primates indicate that causality may not be a uniquely human trait. For example, chimpanzees have been known to escape from pens closed with multiple latches, which was previously thought could only have been figured out by humans who understood causality. Chimpanzees are also known to mourn the dead, and notice things that have only aesthetic value, like sunsets, both of which may be considered to be components of religion or spirituality.[19][unreliable source?] The difference between the comprehension of causality by humans and chimpanzees is one of degree. The degree of comprehension in an animal depends upon the size of the prefrontal cortex: the greater the size of the prefrontal cortex the deeper the comprehension.[20][unreliable source?]

Development of language

Religion requires a system of symbolic communication, such as language, to be transmitted from one individual to another. Philip Lieberman states "human religious thought and moral sense clearly rest on a cognitive-linguistic base".[21] From this premise science writer Nicholas Wade states:

"Like most behaviors that are found in societies throughout the world, religion must have been present in the ancestral human population before the dispersal from Africa 50,000 years ago. Although religious rituals usually involve dance and music, they are also very verbal, since the sacred truths have to be stated. If so, religion, at least in its modern form, cannot pre-date the emergence of language. It has been argued earlier that language attained its modern state shortly before the exodus from Africa. If religion had to await the evolution of modern, articulate language, then it too would have emerged shortly before 50,000 years ago."[22]

Another view distinguishes individual religious belief from collective religious belief. While the former does not require prior development of language, the latter does. The individual human brain has to explain a phenomenon in order to comprehend and relate to it. This activity predates by far the emergence of language and may have caused it. The theory is, belief in the supernatural emerges from hypotheses arbitrarily assumed by individuals to explain natural phenomena that cannot be explained otherwise. The resulting need to share individual hypotheses with others leads eventually to collective religious belief. A socially accepted hypothesis becomes dogmatic backed by social sanction.

Language consists of digital contrasts whose cost is essentially zero. As pure social conventions, signals of this kind cannot evolve in a Darwinian social world—they are a theoretical impossibility.[23][24] Being intrinsically unreliable, language works only if one can build up a reputation for trustworthiness within a certain kind of society—namely, one where symbolic cultural facts (sometimes called 'institutional facts') can be established and maintained through collective social endorsement.[25] In any hunter-gatherer society, the basic mechanism for establishing trust in symbolic cultural facts is collective ritual.[26]

Transcending the continuity-versus-discontinuity divide, some scholars view the emergence of language as the consequence of some kind of social transformation[27] that, by generating unprecedented levels of public trust, liberated a genetic potential for linguistic creativity that had previously lain dormant.[28][29][30] "Ritual/speech coevolution theory" exemplifies this approach.[31][32] Scholars in this intellectual camp point to the fact that even chimpanzees and bonobos have latent symbolic capacities that they rarely—if ever—use in the wild.[33] Objecting to the sudden mutation idea, these authors argue that even if a chance mutation were to install a language organ in an evolving bipedal primate, it would be adaptively useless under all known primate social conditions. A very specific social structure—one capable of upholding unusually high levels of public accountability and trust—must have evolved before or concurrently with language to make reliance on "cheap signals" (words) an evolutionarily stable strategy. The animistic nature of early human language could serve as the handicap-like cost that helped to ensure the reliability of communication. The attribution of spiritual essence to everything surrounding early humans served as a built-in mechanism that provided instant verification and ensured the inviolability of one's speech.[34]

Animal vocal signals are, for the most part, intrinsically reliable. When a cat purrs, the signal constitutes direct evidence of the animal's contented state. The signal is trusted, not because the cat is inclined to be honest, but because it just cannot fake that sound. Primate vocal calls may be slightly more manipulable, but they remain reliable for the same reason—because they are hard to fake.[35] Primate social intelligence is "Machiavellian"—self-serving and unconstrained by moral scruples. Monkeys and apes often attempt to deceive each other, while at the same time remaining constantly on guard against falling victim to deception themselves.[36][37] Paradoxically, it is theorized that primates' resistance to deception is what blocks the evolution of their signalling systems along language-like lines. Language is ruled out because the best way to guard against being deceived is to ignore all signals except those that are instantly verifiable. Words automatically fail this test.[31]

Morality and group living

Frans de Waal and Barbara King both view human morality as having grown out of primate sociality. Although morality awareness may be a unique human trait, many social animals, such as primates, dolphins and whales, have been known to exhibit pre-moral sentiments. According to Michael Shermer, the following characteristics are shared by humans and other social animals, particularly the great apes:

attachment and bonding, cooperation and mutual aid, sympathy and empathy, direct and indirect reciprocity, altruism and reciprocal altruism, conflict resolution and peacemaking, deception and deception detection, community concern and caring about what others think about you, and awareness of and response to the social rules of the group.[38]

De Waal contends that all social animals have had to restrain or alter their behavior for group living to be worthwhile. Pre-moral sentiments evolved in primate societies as a method of restraining individual selfishness and building more cooperative groups. For any social species, the benefits of being part of an altruistic group should outweigh the benefits of individualism. For example, a lack of group cohesion could make individuals more vulnerable to attack from outsiders. Being part of a group may also improve the chances of finding food. This is evident among animals that hunt in packs to take down large or dangerous prey.

All social animals have hierarchical societies in which each member knows its own place. Social order is maintained by certain rules of expected behavior and dominant group members enforce order through punishment. However, higher order primates also have a sense of fairness. [39]

Chimpanzees live in fission-fusion groups that average 50 individuals. It is likely that early ancestors of humans lived in groups of similar size. Based on the size of extant hunter-gatherer societies, recent Paleolithic hominids lived in bands of a few hundred individuals. As community size increased over the course of human evolution, greater enforcement to achieve group cohesion would have been required. Morality may have evolved in these bands of 100 to 200 people as a means of social control, conflict resolution and group solidarity. According to Dr. de Waal, human morality has two extra levels of sophistication that are not found in primate societies.

Psychologist Matt J. Rossano argues that religion emerged after morality and built upon morality by expanding the social scrutiny of individual behavior to include supernatural agents. By including ever-watchful ancestors, spirits and gods in the social realm, humans discovered an effective strategy for restraining selfishness and building more cooperative groups.[40] The adaptive value of religion would have enhanced group survival.[41][42] Rossano is referring here to collective religious belief and the social sanction that institutionalized morality. According to Rossano's teaching, individual religious belief is thus initially epistemological, not ethical, in nature.

Evolutionary psychology of religion

Cognitive scientists underlined that religions may be explained as a result of the brain architecture that developed early in the genus Homo in the course of the evolutionary history of life. However, there is disagreement on the exact mechanisms that drove the evolution of the religious mind. The two main schools of thought hold:

  • either that religion evolved due to natural selection and has selective advantage
  • or that religion is an evolutionary byproduct of other mental adaptations.

Stephen Jay Gould, for example, saw religion as an exaptation or a spandrel, in other words: religion evolved as byproduct of psychological mechanisms that evolved for other reasons.[43][44][unreliable source?][45]

Such mechanisms may include the ability to infer the presence of organisms that might do harm (agent detection), the ability to come up with causal narratives for natural events (etiology), and the ability to recognize that other people have minds of their own with their own beliefs, desires and intentions (theory of mind). These three adaptations (among others) allow human beings to imagine purposeful agents behind many observations that could not readily be explained otherwise, e.g. thunder, lightning, movement of planets, complexity of life.[46] The emergence of collective religious belief identified such agents as deities that standardized the explanation.[47]

Some scholars have suggested that religion is genetically "hardwired" into the human condition. One controversial proposal, the God gene hypothesis, states that some variants of a specific gene, the VMAT2 gene, predispose to spirituality.[48]

Another view builds on the concept of the triune brain: the reptilian brain, the limbic system, and the neocortex, proposed by Paul D. MacLean. Collective religious belief draws upon the emotions of love, fear, and gregariousness and is deeply embedded in the limbic system through socio-biological conditioning and social sanction. Individual religious belief utilizes reason based in the neocortex and often varies from collective religion. The limbic system is much older in evolutionary terms than the neocortex and is, therefore, stronger than it – much in the same way as the reptilian is stronger than both the limbic system and the neocortex.

Yet another view is that the behavior of people who participate in a religion makes them feel better and this improves their biological fitness, so that there is a genetic selection in favor of people who are willing to believe in a religion. Specifically, rituals, beliefs, and the social contact typical of religious groups may serve to calm the mind (for example by reducing ambiguity and the uncertainty due to complexity) and allow it to function better when under stress.[49] This would allow religion to be used[by whom?] as a powerful survival mechanism, particularly in facilitating the evolution of hierarchies of warriors, which if true, may be why many modern religions tend to promote fertility and kinship.

Still another view, proposed by Fred H. Previc, sees human religion as a product of an increase in dopaminergic functions in the human brain and of a general intellectual expansion beginning around 80 thousand years ago (kya).[50][51][52] Dopamine promotes an emphasis on distant space and time, which can correlate with religious experience.[53] While the earliest extant shamanic cave-paintings date to around 40 kya, the use of ocher for rock art predates this and there is clear evidence for abstract thinking along the coast of South Africa 80 kya.

Paul Bloom suggests that "certain early emergent cognitive biases ... make it natural to believe in Gods and spirits".[54]

Prehistoric evidence of religion

The exact time when humans first became religious remains unknown, however research in evolutionary archaeology shows credible evidence of religious-cum-ritualistic behavior from around the Middle Paleolithic era (45–200 thousand years ago).[55]

Paleolithic burials

The earliest evidence of religious thought is based on the ritual treatment of the dead. Most animals display only a casual interest in the dead of their own species.[56][unreliable source?] Ritual burial thus represents a significant change in human behavior. Ritual burials represent an awareness of life and death and a possible belief in the afterlife. Philip Lieberman states "burials with grave goods clearly signify religious practices and concern for the dead that transcends daily life."[21]

The earliest evidence for treatment of the dead comes from Atapuerca in Spain. At this location the bones of 30 individuals believed to be Homo heidelbergensis have been found in a pit.[57]Neanderthals are also contenders for the first hominids to intentionally bury the dead. They may have placed corpses into shallow graves along with stone tools and animal bones. The presence of these grave goods may indicate an emotional connection with the deceased and possibly a belief in the afterlife. Neanderthal burial sites include Shanidar in Iraq and Krapina in Croatia and Kebara Cave in Israel.[58][59]

The earliest known burial of modern humans is from a cave in Israel located at Qafzeh. Human remains have been dated to 100,000 years ago. Human skeletons were found stained with red ocher. A variety of grave goods were found at the burial site. The mandible of a wild boar was found placed in the arms of one of the skeletons.[60] Philip Lieberman states:

Burial rituals incorporating grave goods may have been invented by the anatomically modern hominids who emigrated from Africa to the Middle East roughly 100,000 years ago

Matt Rossano suggests that the period between 80,000 and 60,000 years before present, following the retreat of humans from the Levant to Africa, was a crucial period in the evolution of religion.[61]

Use of symbolism

The use of symbolism in religion is a universal established phenomenon. Archeologist Steven Mithen contends that it is common for religious practices to involve the creation of images and symbols to represent supernatural beings and ideas. Because supernatural beings violate the principles of the natural world, there will always be difficulty in communicating and sharing supernatural concepts with others. This problem can be overcome by anchoring these supernatural beings in material form through representational art. When translated into material form, supernatural concepts become easier to communicate and understand.[62][unreliable source?] Due to the association of art and religion, evidence of symbolism in the fossil record is indicative of a mind capable of religious thoughts. Art and symbolism demonstrates a capacity for abstract thought and imagination necessary to construct religious ideas. Wentzel van Huyssteen states that the translation of the non-visible through symbolism enabled early human ancestors to hold beliefs in abstract terms.[63]

Some of the earliest evidence of symbolic behavior is associated with Middle Stone Age sites in Africa. From at least 100,000 years ago, there is evidence of the use of pigments such as red ocher. Pigments are of little practical use to hunter gatherers, thus evidence of their use is interpreted as symbolic or for ritual purposes. Among extant hunter gatherer populations around the world, red ocher is still used extensively for ritual purposes. It has been argued that it is universal among human cultures for the color red to represent blood, sex, life and death.[64]

The use of red ocher as a proxy for symbolism is often criticized as being too indirect. Some scientists, such as Richard Klein and Steven Mithen, only recognize unambiguous forms of art as representative of abstract ideas. Upper paleolithic cave art provides some of the most unambiguous evidence of religious thought from the paleolithic. Cave paintings at Chauvet depict creatures that are half human and half animal.

Origins of organized religion

Social evolution of humans[38][65]
Period years ago Society type Number of individuals
100,000–10,000 Bands 10s–100s
10,000–5,000 Tribes 100s–1,000s
5,000–3,000 Chiefdoms 1,000s–10,000s
3,000–1,000 States 10,000s–100,000s
2,000*–present Empires 100,000–1,000,000s

Organized religion traces its roots to the neolithic revolution that began 11,000 years ago in the Near East but may have occurred independently in several other locations around the world. The invention of agriculture transformed many human societies from a hunter-gatherer lifestyle to a sedentary lifestyle. The consequences of the neolithic revolution included a population explosion and an acceleration in the pace of technological development. The transition from foraging bands to states and empires precipitated more specialized and developed forms of religion that reflected the new social and political environment. While bands and small tribes possess supernatural beliefs, these beliefs do not serve to justify a central authority, justify transfer of wealth or maintain peace between unrelated individuals. Organized religion emerged as a means of providing social and economic stability through the following ways:

  • Justifying the central authority, which in turn possessed the right to collect taxes in return for providing social and security services.
  • Bands and tribes consist of small number of related individuals. However, states and nations are composed of many thousands of unrelated individuals. Jared Diamond argues that organized religion served to provide a bond between unrelated individuals who would otherwise be more prone to enmity. In his book Guns, Germs, and Steel he argues that the leading cause of death among hunter-gatherer societies is murder.[65]
  • Religions that revolved around moralizing gods may have facilitated the rise of large, cooperative groups of unrelated individuals.[66]

The states born out of the Neolithic revolution, such as those of Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, were theocracies with chiefs, kings and emperors playing dual roles of political and spiritual leaders.[38] Anthropologists have found that virtually all state societies and chiefdoms from around the world have been found to justify political power through divine authority. This suggests that political authority co-opts collective religious belief to bolster itself.[38]

Invention of writing

Following the neolithic revolution, the pace of technological development (cultural evolution) intensified due to the invention of writing 5,000 years ago. Symbols that became words later on made effective communication of ideas possible. Printing invented only over a thousand years ago increased the speed of communication exponentially and became the main spring of cultural evolution. Writing is thought to have been first invented in either Sumeria or Ancient Egypt and was initially used for accounting. Soon after, writing was used to record myth. The first religious texts mark the beginning of religious history. The Pyramid Texts from ancient Egypt are one of the oldest known religious texts in the world, dating to between 2400 and 2300 BCE.[67][68][69][unreliable source?] Writing played a major role in sustaining and spreading organized religion. In pre-literate societies, religious ideas were based on an oral tradition, the contents of which were articulated by shamans and remained limited to the collective memories of the society's inhabitants. With the advent of writing, information that was not easy to remember could easily be stored in sacred texts that were maintained by a select group (clergy). Humans could store and process large amounts of information with writing that otherwise would have been forgotten. Writing therefore enabled religions to develop coherent and comprehensive doctrinal systems that remained independent of time and place.[70] Writing also brought a measure of objectivity to human knowledge. Formulation of thoughts in words and the requirement for validation made mutual exchange of ideas and the sifting of generally acceptable from not acceptable ideas possible. The generally acceptable ideas became objective knowledge reflecting the continuously evolving framework of human awareness of reality that Karl Popper calls 'verisimilitude' – a stage on the human journey to truth.[71]

See also

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Bibliography

  • Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought, New York: Basic Books 2001.

External links

  • "Religion as an Evolutionary Organism" with David Sloan Wilson, The Religious Studies Project Podcast Series,
  • Robert Wright´s "The Evolution of God"
  • at Binghamton University, An introduction to the study of religion from an evolutionary perspective.
  • A 1998 speech at Biota 2 by Douglas Adams on the Origin of God on YouTube
  • Wilhelm Schmidt and the origin of religion – an opposing viewpoint

evolutionary, origin, religion, origin, religion, redirects, here, other, uses, origin, religion, disambiguation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, . Origin of religion redirects here For other uses see Origin of religion disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article September 2015 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Evolutionary origin of religion news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The evolutionary origin of religion and religious behavior is a field of study related to evolutionary psychology the origin of language and mythology and cross cultural comparison of the anthropology of religion Some subjects of interest include Neolithic religion evidence for spirituality or cultic behavior in the Upper Paleolithic and similarities in great ape behavior Contents 1 Nonhuman religious behavior 2 Relevant prerequisites for human religion 2 1 Increased brain size 2 2 Tool use 2 3 Development of language 2 4 Morality and group living 3 Evolutionary psychology of religion 4 Prehistoric evidence of religion 4 1 Paleolithic burials 4 2 Use of symbolism 4 3 Origins of organized religion 4 4 Invention of writing 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksNonhuman religious behavior EditHumanity s closest living relatives are common chimpanzees and bonobos 1 2 These primates share a common ancestor with humans who lived between six and eight million years ago It is for this reason that chimpanzees and bonobos are viewed as the best available surrogate for this common ancestor Barbara King argues that while non human primates are not religious they do exhibit some traits that would have been necessary for the evolution of religion These traits include high intelligence a capacity for symbolic communication a sense of social norms and realization of self continuity 3 4 There is inconclusive evidence that Homo neanderthalensis may have buried their dead which would be evidence of mortuary ritual citation needed The use of burial rituals is thought to be evidence of religious activity but there is no other evidence that religion existed in human culture before humans reached behavioral modernity 5 Other lines of evidence have revealed that Homo neanderthalensis made cave art which would require a high level of symbolic thinking paralleling religious thought 6 Elephants perform rituals for their dead They demonstrate long periods of silence and mourning at the point of death later elephants return to grave sites and caress the remains 7 8 Some evidence suggests that many species grieve death and loss 9 Relevant prerequisites for human religion EditIncreased brain size Edit In this set of theories the religious mind is one consequence of a brain that is large enough to formulate religious and philosophical ideas 10 During human evolution the hominid brain tripled in size peaking 500 000 years ago Much of the brain s expansion took place in the neocortex The cerebral neocortex is presumed to be responsible for the neural computations underlying complex phenomena such as perception thought language attention episodic memory and voluntary movement 11 According to Dunbar s theory the relative neocortex size of any species correlates with the level of social complexity of the particular species 12 The neocortex size correlates with a number of social variables that include social group size and complexity of mating behaviors 13 In chimpanzees the neocortex occupies 50 of the brain whereas in modern humans it occupies 80 of the brain 14 Robin Dunbar argues that the critical event in the evolution of the neocortex took place at the speciation of archaic Homo sapiens about 500 000 years ago His study indicates that only after the speciation event is the neocortex large enough to process complex social phenomena such as language and religion The study is based on a regression analysis of neocortex size plotted against a number of social behaviors of living and extinct hominids 15 Stephen Jay Gould suggests that religion may have grown out of evolutionary changes which favored larger brains as a means of cementing group coherence among savanna hunters after that larger brain enabled reflection on the inevitability of personal mortality 16 Tool use Edit Lewis Wolpert argues that causal beliefs that emerged from tool use played a major role in the evolution of belief The manufacture of complex tools requires creating a mental image of an object which does not exist naturally before actually making the artifact Furthermore one must understand how the tool would be used that requires an understanding of causality 17 Accordingly the level of sophistication of stone tools is a useful indicator of causal beliefs 18 Wolpert contends use of tools composed of more than one component such as hand axes represents an ability to understand cause and effect However recent studies of other primates indicate that causality may not be a uniquely human trait For example chimpanzees have been known to escape from pens closed with multiple latches which was previously thought could only have been figured out by humans who understood causality Chimpanzees are also known to mourn the dead and notice things that have only aesthetic value like sunsets both of which may be considered to be components of religion or spirituality 19 unreliable source The difference between the comprehension of causality by humans and chimpanzees is one of degree The degree of comprehension in an animal depends upon the size of the prefrontal cortex the greater the size of the prefrontal cortex the deeper the comprehension 20 unreliable source Development of language Edit See also Origin of language and Religion and mythology Religion requires a system of symbolic communication such as language to be transmitted from one individual to another Philip Lieberman states human religious thought and moral sense clearly rest on a cognitive linguistic base 21 From this premise science writer Nicholas Wade states Like most behaviors that are found in societies throughout the world religion must have been present in the ancestral human population before the dispersal from Africa 50 000 years ago Although religious rituals usually involve dance and music they are also very verbal since the sacred truths have to be stated If so religion at least in its modern form cannot pre date the emergence of language It has been argued earlier that language attained its modern state shortly before the exodus from Africa If religion had to await the evolution of modern articulate language then it too would have emerged shortly before 50 000 years ago 22 Another view distinguishes individual religious belief from collective religious belief While the former does not require prior development of language the latter does The individual human brain has to explain a phenomenon in order to comprehend and relate to it This activity predates by far the emergence of language and may have caused it The theory is belief in the supernatural emerges from hypotheses arbitrarily assumed by individuals to explain natural phenomena that cannot be explained otherwise The resulting need to share individual hypotheses with others leads eventually to collective religious belief A socially accepted hypothesis becomes dogmatic backed by social sanction Language consists of digital contrasts whose cost is essentially zero As pure social conventions signals of this kind cannot evolve in a Darwinian social world they are a theoretical impossibility 23 24 Being intrinsically unreliable language works only if one can build up a reputation for trustworthiness within a certain kind of society namely one where symbolic cultural facts sometimes called institutional facts can be established and maintained through collective social endorsement 25 In any hunter gatherer society the basic mechanism for establishing trust in symbolic cultural facts is collective ritual 26 Transcending the continuity versus discontinuity divide some scholars view the emergence of language as the consequence of some kind of social transformation 27 that by generating unprecedented levels of public trust liberated a genetic potential for linguistic creativity that had previously lain dormant 28 29 30 Ritual speech coevolution theory exemplifies this approach 31 32 Scholars in this intellectual camp point to the fact that even chimpanzees and bonobos have latent symbolic capacities that they rarely if ever use in the wild 33 Objecting to the sudden mutation idea these authors argue that even if a chance mutation were to install a language organ in an evolving bipedal primate it would be adaptively useless under all known primate social conditions A very specific social structure one capable of upholding unusually high levels of public accountability and trust must have evolved before or concurrently with language to make reliance on cheap signals words an evolutionarily stable strategy The animistic nature of early human language could serve as the handicap like cost that helped to ensure the reliability of communication The attribution of spiritual essence to everything surrounding early humans served as a built in mechanism that provided instant verification and ensured the inviolability of one s speech 34 Animal vocal signals are for the most part intrinsically reliable When a cat purrs the signal constitutes direct evidence of the animal s contented state The signal is trusted not because the cat is inclined to be honest but because it just cannot fake that sound Primate vocal calls may be slightly more manipulable but they remain reliable for the same reason because they are hard to fake 35 Primate social intelligence is Machiavellian self serving and unconstrained by moral scruples Monkeys and apes often attempt to deceive each other while at the same time remaining constantly on guard against falling victim to deception themselves 36 37 Paradoxically it is theorized that primates resistance to deception is what blocks the evolution of their signalling systems along language like lines Language is ruled out because the best way to guard against being deceived is to ignore all signals except those that are instantly verifiable Words automatically fail this test 31 Morality and group living Edit Main articles Evolution of morality and Morality Evolution Frans de Waal and Barbara King both view human morality as having grown out of primate sociality Although morality awareness may be a unique human trait many social animals such as primates dolphins and whales have been known to exhibit pre moral sentiments According to Michael Shermer the following characteristics are shared by humans and other social animals particularly the great apes attachment and bonding cooperation and mutual aid sympathy and empathy direct and indirect reciprocity altruism and reciprocal altruism conflict resolution and peacemaking deception and deception detection community concern and caring about what others think about you and awareness of and response to the social rules of the group 38 De Waal contends that all social animals have had to restrain or alter their behavior for group living to be worthwhile Pre moral sentiments evolved in primate societies as a method of restraining individual selfishness and building more cooperative groups For any social species the benefits of being part of an altruistic group should outweigh the benefits of individualism For example a lack of group cohesion could make individuals more vulnerable to attack from outsiders Being part of a group may also improve the chances of finding food This is evident among animals that hunt in packs to take down large or dangerous prey All social animals have hierarchical societies in which each member knows its own place Social order is maintained by certain rules of expected behavior and dominant group members enforce order through punishment However higher order primates also have a sense of fairness 39 Chimpanzees live in fission fusion groups that average 50 individuals It is likely that early ancestors of humans lived in groups of similar size Based on the size of extant hunter gatherer societies recent Paleolithic hominids lived in bands of a few hundred individuals As community size increased over the course of human evolution greater enforcement to achieve group cohesion would have been required Morality may have evolved in these bands of 100 to 200 people as a means of social control conflict resolution and group solidarity According to Dr de Waal human morality has two extra levels of sophistication that are not found in primate societies Psychologist Matt J Rossano argues that religion emerged after morality and built upon morality by expanding the social scrutiny of individual behavior to include supernatural agents By including ever watchful ancestors spirits and gods in the social realm humans discovered an effective strategy for restraining selfishness and building more cooperative groups 40 The adaptive value of religion would have enhanced group survival 41 42 Rossano is referring here to collective religious belief and the social sanction that institutionalized morality According to Rossano s teaching individual religious belief is thus initially epistemological not ethical in nature Evolutionary psychology of religion EditMain article Evolutionary psychology of religion Cognitive scientists underlined that religions may be explained as a result of the brain architecture that developed early in the genus Homo in the course of the evolutionary history of life However there is disagreement on the exact mechanisms that drove the evolution of the religious mind The two main schools of thought hold either that religion evolved due to natural selection and has selective advantage or that religion is an evolutionary byproduct of other mental adaptations Stephen Jay Gould for example saw religion as an exaptation or a spandrel in other words religion evolved as byproduct of psychological mechanisms that evolved for other reasons 43 44 unreliable source 45 Such mechanisms may include the ability to infer the presence of organisms that might do harm agent detection the ability to come up with causal narratives for natural events etiology and the ability to recognize that other people have minds of their own with their own beliefs desires and intentions theory of mind These three adaptations among others allow human beings to imagine purposeful agents behind many observations that could not readily be explained otherwise e g thunder lightning movement of planets complexity of life 46 The emergence of collective religious belief identified such agents as deities that standardized the explanation 47 Some scholars have suggested that religion is genetically hardwired into the human condition One controversial proposal the God gene hypothesis states that some variants of a specific gene the VMAT2 gene predispose to spirituality 48 Another view builds on the concept of the triune brain the reptilian brain the limbic system and the neocortex proposed by Paul D MacLean Collective religious belief draws upon the emotions of love fear and gregariousness and is deeply embedded in the limbic system through socio biological conditioning and social sanction Individual religious belief utilizes reason based in the neocortex and often varies from collective religion The limbic system is much older in evolutionary terms than the neocortex and is therefore stronger than it much in the same way as the reptilian is stronger than both the limbic system and the neocortex Yet another view is that the behavior of people who participate in a religion makes them feel better and this improves their biological fitness so that there is a genetic selection in favor of people who are willing to believe in a religion Specifically rituals beliefs and the social contact typical of religious groups may serve to calm the mind for example by reducing ambiguity and the uncertainty due to complexity and allow it to function better when under stress 49 This would allow religion to be used by whom as a powerful survival mechanism particularly in facilitating the evolution of hierarchies of warriors which if true may be why many modern religions tend to promote fertility and kinship Still another view proposed by Fred H Previc sees human religion as a product of an increase in dopaminergic functions in the human brain and of a general intellectual expansion beginning around 80 thousand years ago kya 50 51 52 Dopamine promotes an emphasis on distant space and time which can correlate with religious experience 53 While the earliest extant shamanic cave paintings date to around 40 kya the use of ocher for rock art predates this and there is clear evidence for abstract thinking along the coast of South Africa 80 kya Paul Bloom suggests that certain early emergent cognitive biases make it natural to believe in Gods and spirits 54 Prehistoric evidence of religion EditSee also Paleolithic religion and Prehistoric religion The exact time when humans first became religious remains unknown however research in evolutionary archaeology shows credible evidence of religious cum ritualistic behavior from around the Middle Paleolithic era 45 200 thousand years ago 55 Paleolithic burials Edit The earliest evidence of religious thought is based on the ritual treatment of the dead Most animals display only a casual interest in the dead of their own species 56 unreliable source Ritual burial thus represents a significant change in human behavior Ritual burials represent an awareness of life and death and a possible belief in the afterlife Philip Lieberman states burials with grave goods clearly signify religious practices and concern for the dead that transcends daily life 21 The earliest evidence for treatment of the dead comes from Atapuerca in Spain At this location the bones of 30 individuals believed to be Homo heidelbergensis have been found in a pit 57 Neanderthals are also contenders for the first hominids to intentionally bury the dead They may have placed corpses into shallow graves along with stone tools and animal bones The presence of these grave goods may indicate an emotional connection with the deceased and possibly a belief in the afterlife Neanderthal burial sites include Shanidar in Iraq and Krapina in Croatia and Kebara Cave in Israel 58 59 The earliest known burial of modern humans is from a cave in Israel located at Qafzeh Human remains have been dated to 100 000 years ago Human skeletons were found stained with red ocher A variety of grave goods were found at the burial site The mandible of a wild boar was found placed in the arms of one of the skeletons 60 Philip Lieberman states Burial rituals incorporating grave goods may have been invented by the anatomically modern hominids who emigrated from Africa to the Middle East roughly 100 000 years ago Matt Rossano suggests that the period between 80 000 and 60 000 years before present following the retreat of humans from the Levant to Africa was a crucial period in the evolution of religion 61 Use of symbolism Edit The use of symbolism in religion is a universal established phenomenon Archeologist Steven Mithen contends that it is common for religious practices to involve the creation of images and symbols to represent supernatural beings and ideas Because supernatural beings violate the principles of the natural world there will always be difficulty in communicating and sharing supernatural concepts with others This problem can be overcome by anchoring these supernatural beings in material form through representational art When translated into material form supernatural concepts become easier to communicate and understand 62 unreliable source Due to the association of art and religion evidence of symbolism in the fossil record is indicative of a mind capable of religious thoughts Art and symbolism demonstrates a capacity for abstract thought and imagination necessary to construct religious ideas Wentzel van Huyssteen states that the translation of the non visible through symbolism enabled early human ancestors to hold beliefs in abstract terms 63 Some of the earliest evidence of symbolic behavior is associated with Middle Stone Age sites in Africa From at least 100 000 years ago there is evidence of the use of pigments such as red ocher Pigments are of little practical use to hunter gatherers thus evidence of their use is interpreted as symbolic or for ritual purposes Among extant hunter gatherer populations around the world red ocher is still used extensively for ritual purposes It has been argued that it is universal among human cultures for the color red to represent blood sex life and death 64 The use of red ocher as a proxy for symbolism is often criticized as being too indirect Some scientists such as Richard Klein and Steven Mithen only recognize unambiguous forms of art as representative of abstract ideas Upper paleolithic cave art provides some of the most unambiguous evidence of religious thought from the paleolithic Cave paintings at Chauvet depict creatures that are half human and half animal Origins of organized religion Edit See also Neolithic religion Social evolution of humans 38 65 Period years ago Society type Number of individuals100 000 10 000 Bands 10s 100s10 000 5 000 Tribes 100s 1 000s5 000 3 000 Chiefdoms 1 000s 10 000s3 000 1 000 States 10 000s 100 000s2 000 present Empires 100 000 1 000 000sOrganized religion traces its roots to the neolithic revolution that began 11 000 years ago in the Near East but may have occurred independently in several other locations around the world The invention of agriculture transformed many human societies from a hunter gatherer lifestyle to a sedentary lifestyle The consequences of the neolithic revolution included a population explosion and an acceleration in the pace of technological development The transition from foraging bands to states and empires precipitated more specialized and developed forms of religion that reflected the new social and political environment While bands and small tribes possess supernatural beliefs these beliefs do not serve to justify a central authority justify transfer of wealth or maintain peace between unrelated individuals Organized religion emerged as a means of providing social and economic stability through the following ways Justifying the central authority which in turn possessed the right to collect taxes in return for providing social and security services Bands and tribes consist of small number of related individuals However states and nations are composed of many thousands of unrelated individuals Jared Diamond argues that organized religion served to provide a bond between unrelated individuals who would otherwise be more prone to enmity In his book Guns Germs and Steel he argues that the leading cause of death among hunter gatherer societies is murder 65 Religions that revolved around moralizing gods may have facilitated the rise of large cooperative groups of unrelated individuals 66 The states born out of the Neolithic revolution such as those of Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia were theocracies with chiefs kings and emperors playing dual roles of political and spiritual leaders 38 Anthropologists have found that virtually all state societies and chiefdoms from around the world have been found to justify political power through divine authority This suggests that political authority co opts collective religious belief to bolster itself 38 Invention of writing Edit See also History of writing Following the neolithic revolution the pace of technological development cultural evolution intensified due to the invention of writing 5 000 years ago Symbols that became words later on made effective communication of ideas possible Printing invented only over a thousand years ago increased the speed of communication exponentially and became the main spring of cultural evolution Writing is thought to have been first invented in either Sumeria or Ancient Egypt and was initially used for accounting Soon after writing was used to record myth The first religious texts mark the beginning of religious history The Pyramid Texts from ancient Egypt are one of the oldest known religious texts in the world dating to between 2400 and 2300 BCE 67 68 69 unreliable source Writing played a major role in sustaining and spreading organized religion In pre literate societies religious ideas were based on an oral tradition the contents of which were articulated by shamans and remained limited to the collective memories of the society s inhabitants With the advent of writing information that was not easy to remember could easily be stored in sacred texts that were maintained by a select group clergy Humans could store and process large amounts of information with writing that otherwise would have been forgotten Writing therefore enabled religions to develop coherent and comprehensive doctrinal systems that remained independent of time and place 70 Writing also brought a measure of objectivity to human knowledge Formulation of thoughts in words and the requirement for validation made mutual exchange of ideas and the sifting of generally acceptable from not acceptable ideas possible The generally acceptable ideas became objective knowledge reflecting the continuously evolving framework of human awareness of reality that Karl Popper calls verisimilitude a stage on the human journey to truth 71 See also EditAnimal faith Cognitive science of religion Gobekli Tepe History of religion Neurotheology Theories about religions Timeline of religionReferences Edit Gibbons Ann June 13 2012 Bonobos Join Chimps as Closest Human Relatives Archived from the original on June 20 2018 Retrieved July 19 2018 Ajit Varki Daniel H Geschwind Evan E Eichler October 1 2008 Explaining human uniqueness genome interactions with environment behaviour and culture Nature Reviews Genetics 9 10 3 51 54 doi 10 1038 nrg2428 PMC 2756412 PMID 18802414 King Barbara 2007 Evolving God A Provocative View on the Origins of Religion Doubleday Publishing ISBN 0 385 52155 3 Barbara J King 2007 Excerpted from Evolving God archived from the original on January 18 2008 Palmer Douglas Simon Lamb Guerrero Angeles Gavira and Peter Frances Prehistoric Life the Definitive Visual History of Life on Earth New York N Y DK Pub 2009 Hoffmann D L Standish C D Garcia Diez M Pettitt P B Milton J A Zilhao J Alcolea Gonzalez J J Cantalejo Duarte P Collado H de Balbin R Lorblanchet M Ramos Munoz J Weniger G Ch Pike A W G February 23 2018 U Th dating of carbonate crusts reveals Neandertal origin of Iberian cave art PDF Science American Association for the Advancement of Science AAAS 359 6378 912 915 Bibcode 2018Sci 359 912H doi 10 1126 science aap7778 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 29472483 S2CID 206664238 Bhattacharya Shaoni October 26 2005 Elephants may pay homage to dead relatives Biology Letters 2 1 26 28 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2005 0400 PMC 1617198 PMID 17148317 Retrieved March 11 2016 McComb K Baker L Moss C March 22 2006 African elephants show high levels of interest in the skulls and ivory of their own species Biology Letters Biology Letters 2 1 26 28 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2005 0400 PMC 1617198 PMID 17148317 Bekoff Marc October 29 2009 Grief in animals It s arrogant to think we re the only animals who mourn Psychology Today Ehrlich Paul 2000 Human Natures Genes Cultures and the Human Prospect Washington D C Island Press p 214 ISBN 978 1 55963 779 4 Religious ideas can theoretically be traced to the evolution of brains large enough to make possible the kind of abstract thought necessary to formulate religious and philosophical ideas Molnar Zoltan Pollen Alex January 1 2014 How unique is the human neocortex Development 141 1 11 16 doi 10 1242 dev 101279 PMID 24346696 David Barrett T Dunbar R I M August 22 2013 Processing power limits social group size computational evidence for the cognitive costs of sociality Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B Biological Sciences 280 1765 20131151 doi 10 1098 rspb 2013 1151 ISSN 0962 8452 PMC 3712454 PMID 23804623 Dunbar Robin I M Shultz Susanne June 1 2010 Bondedness and sociality Behaviour 147 7 775 803 doi 10 1163 000579510X501151 ISSN 1568 539X 9 Brainy Facts About the Neocortex mentalfloss com November 17 2016 Retrieved March 20 2018 Dunbar R I M 2003 The Social Brain Mind Language and Society in Evolutionary Perspective PDF Annual Review of Anthropology Annual Reviews 32 1 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Retrieved April 8 2007 Lionel Tiger and Michael McGuire 2010 God s Brain Prometheus Books pp 202 204 ISBN 978 1 61614 164 6 Previc F H 2009 The dopaminergic mind in human evolution and history New York Cambridge University Press Previc F H 2011 Dopamine altered consciousness and distant space with special reference to shamanic ecstasy In E Cardona amp M Winkelman eds Altering consciousness Multidisciplinary perspectives Vol 1 pp 43 60 Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO LLC Previc Fred H 2006 The role of the extrapersonal brain systems in religious activity Consciousness and Cognition 15 3 500 39 doi 10 1016 j concog 2005 09 009 PMID 16439158 S2CID 16239814 Previc Fred H 2006 The role of the extrapersonal brain systems in religious activity Consciousness and Cognition 15 3 500 539 doi 10 1016 j concog 2005 09 009 PMID 16439158 S2CID 16239814 Hyperreligiosity is a major feature of mania obsessive compulsive disorder schizophrenia temporal lobe epilepsy and related disorders in which the ventromedial dopaminergic systems are highly activated and exaggerated attentional or goal directed behavior toward extrapersonal space occurs The evolution of religion is linked to an expansion of dopaminergic systems in humans brought about by changes in diet and other physiological influences Shah Timothy Samuel Friedman Jack eds January 11 2018 Homo Religiosus Exploring the Roots of Religion and Religious Freedom in Human Experience Cambridge Studies in Religion Philosophy and Society Cambridge Cambridge University Press published 2018 p 1 ISBN 9781108422352 Retrieved September 4 2021 cognitive scientist Paul Bloom holds that there are certain early emergent cognitive biases that make it natural to believe in Gods and spirits in an afterlife and in the divine creation of the universe Culotta Elizabeth November 6 2009 On the Origin of Religion Science 326 5954 784 787 Bibcode 2009Sci 326 784C doi 10 1126 science 326 784 PMID 19892955 Elephants may pay homage to the dead Greenspan Stanley 2006 How Symbols Language and Intelligence Evolved from Early Primates to Modern Human Cambridge MA Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 81449 5 The Neanderthal dead exploring mortuary variability in Middle Palaeolithic Eurasia PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 10 2008 clarification needed BBC article on the Neanderthals Neanderthals buried their dead and one burial at Shanidar in Iraq was accompanied by grave goods in the form of plants All of the plants are used in recent times for medicinal purposes and it seems likely that the Neanderthals also used them in this way and buried them with their dead for the same reason Grave goods are an archaeological marker of belief in an afterlife so Neanderthals may well have had some form of religious belief Uniquely Human page 163 Rossano Matt 2009 The African Interregnum The Where When and Why of the Evolution of Religion PDF The Frontiers Collection pp 127 141 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 00128 4 9 ISBN 978 3 642 00127 7 Symbolism and the Supernatural Human Uniqueness and Symbolization Archived from the original on May 27 2009 Retrieved August 24 2008 This coding of the non visible through abstract symbolic thought enabled also our early human ancestors to argue and hold beliefs in abstract terms In fact the concept of God itself follows from the ability to abstract and conceive of person Rossano Matt J 2006 The Religious Mind and the Evolution of Religion PDF Review of General Psychology SAGE Publications 10 4 346 364 doi 10 1037 1089 2680 10 4 346 ISSN 1089 2680 S2CID 8490298 a b Diamond Jared 1997 Chapter 14 From Egalitarianism to Kleptocracy Guns Germs and Steel New York NY Norton p 277 ISBN 978 0 393 03891 0 Norenzayan A Shariff A F 2008 The origin and evolution of religious prosociality Science 322 5898 58 62 Bibcode 2008Sci 322 58N CiteSeerX 10 1 1 659 6887 doi 10 1126 science 1158757 PMID 18832637 S2CID 28514 Budge Wallis 1997 An Introduction to Ancient Egyptian Literature Mineola N Y Dover Publications p 9 ISBN 978 0 486 29502 2 Allen James 2007 The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts Atlanta Ga Scholars Press ISBN 978 1 58983 182 7 The beginning of religion at the beginning of the Neolithic Archived September 10 2008 at the Wayback Machine Pyysiainen Ilkka 2004 Holy Book The Invention of writing and religious cognition Magic Miracles and Religion A Scientist s Perspective Walnut Creek CA AltMira Press ISBN 978 0 7591 0663 5 Objective Knowledge An Evolutionary Approach 1972 Rev ed 1979 ISBN 0 19 875024 2Bibliography EditPascal Boyer Religion Explained The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought New York Basic Books 2001 External links Edit Religion as an Evolutionary Organism with David Sloan Wilson The Religious Studies Project Podcast Series Robert Wright s The Evolution of God Evolutionary Religious Studies at Binghamton University An introduction to the study of religion from an evolutionary perspective A 1998 speech at Biota 2 by Douglas Adams on the Origin of God on YouTube Wilhelm Schmidt and the origin of religion an opposing viewpoint Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evolutionary origin of religion amp oldid 1138326141, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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