it’s
been estimated that nearly 90% of people in the world belong to a
religion; even if you exclude the children of religious people (in many
countries, children are legally of the same religion as their parents
until they are adults), it’s clear a large percentage of people have
religious beliefs. The question is why? Is there a “god shaped hole in
our brain”? Why do people have the need to “believe fervently in the
very unlikely”?
The short answer is no-one knows for sure, but there are some aspects of
our behavior that provide some clues. Here are eight reasons that have
been given for religious behavior.
8
People are Superstitious
I’m a fan of cricket and, occasionally, I have a feeling that I suspect
many other sports fans will find familiar—if I stop watching a game for a
couple of minutes and a wicket falls, I’m tempted to stop watching
again to see if that “takes another wicket”. Football fans report a
similar feeling if they stop watching and a goal is scored, they feel
they should stop watching again to see if that scores another goal.
Although my logical mind knows that me popping out to the toilet can’t
really affect a game being played hundreds or thousands of miles away,
the feeling is there—and it’s widespread; I’ve heard plenty of stories
starting “I’m not superstitious, but…”..
What’s interesting is that superstition isn’t confined to people;
psychologist B.F. Skinner demonstrated that pigeons are also
superstitious; he put hungry pigeons in a box and delivered food at
random times—the pigeons would repeat whatever behavior they’d just been
doing to “make” the food come again.
As has been pointed out; it is very difficult to distinguish between
superstitious behavior (getting a cup of coffee to “make” a football
team score a goal) and religious behaviour (talking in a quiet voice to
“make” it rain).
7
People Can’t Help Anthropomorphism
Hands up who talks to their computer? And not because it has speech
recognition. Yep, I can see lots of hands there—including my own. We
talk to (or shout at) computers, cars, screwdrivers, almost anything we
interact with. It’s a widespread practice and children, in particular,
do it—imposing personalities on inanimate objects.
There is some evidence that this is useful behavior—for example, if
you’re looking for something you’ve lost then saying the item’s name out
loud makes it easier to find—as if “talking” to something helps people
concentrate on the item. Again, if pressed, people will confess that the
computer, car or screwdriver can’t actually hear them—even if we shout,
but also people can’t stop doing it—it’s built into our brains.
How does this tie in to religious beliefs? Religion has been described
as “trying to talk to the weather”; is talking to our cars so different?
6
Need for Purpose
We seem to have a natural ability to see purposes for things; for
example, rabbits can be seen to have lots of purposes; they eat grass,
they make holes, they make more rabbits (obviously!), they feed foxes
and so on. It seems that it’s natural to feel everything should have a
purpose—“but what use are wasps?” is a question I’ve heard plenty of
times—as if wasps have a bit of a nerve existing without a clear
purpose. It feels wrong to say, “well, some things have no purpose; they
just are.” The tendency to say “everything has a purpose” leads to
questions such as “what is the purpose of life?, of death?, of evil?”
Many philosophers would argue that these aren’t sensible
questions—partly because they’re based on an assumption that such things
have a purpose, but if you insist that things do have a purpose, then a
supernatural explanation—which can explain anything—can obviously
explain it.
5
Belief in Justice
It seems people have an innate belief in justice; particularly when
we’re young—“it’s just not fair!”—sound familiar? Although the parents’
standard response is “well, life isn’t fair”, the feeling that life
*should* be fair is deeply ingrained—as with superstition, there’s
evidence that it isn’t restricted to humans—evolutionary biologist,
Professor Marc Bekoff believes that a sense of morality is built into
the brains of all mammals—but people simply hate to see wrongdoing
unpunished and it’s a common factor in religions that there’s a *lot* of
punishment going on. It’s rather unpleasant to think that one of the
biggest “draws” of religion is the hope that “evil” people get really
punished.
4
Hope of Afterlife
The other side of the belief in justice; when someone dies, one of the
stages of grieving that people go through is anger—it just seems so
wrong, so unfair that someone we love is gone. Who would not like it to
be true that we’ll see them again? As with many of these things, our
logical mind might accept that simply living, and being conscious of
living is enough, but our logical mind isn’t the only thing that drives
our beliefs.
3
We Miss Our Silverback
The closest living relative to modern humans are gorillas—depending on
how you count the DNA, we’re up to 99% gorilla—or gorillas are 99%
human. As the naturalist and broadcaster David Attenborough has pointed
out, their vision, hearing and sense of smell is so similar to ours that
they experience the world in the same way we do.
The behavior of gorillas, however, is different from humans. Bands (or
whoops!) of gorillas live in small groups with one dominant male—called a
silverback because the fur on a male’s goes silver as the male ages.
The silverback defends the group from attacks—and, as you’d suspect, a
mature, male gorilla is *very* strong, so it’s likely to win. The
silverback also “runs” the group; making all the decisions, sorting out
fights, deciding where the group goes and so on.
Humans don’t live like this; they live in relatively large
groups—particularly compared with other apes—and they don’t have a
supremely powerful male leader, but there is a theory that until (in
evolutionary terms) recent times, we did and part of our brain misses
him; a lot of religious behavior is identical to submissive behavior to a
dominant male (eyes are downcast, there’s quiet and respect in their
presence). The difference is that our dominant male isn’t so tangible
nowadays.
2
Imbibing “Special” Plants
Indigenous people in South America have been taking ayahuasca for
centuries—European missionaries described it in in the 16th century, but
it was long established then. Ayahuasca is easy to make—assuming you’ve
access to a rain forest, and can boil water—various leaves are crushed
and boiled and consumed. It’s, apparently, quite difficult to keep the
mixture down but users describe life changing, spiritual experiences
under the influence of the psychedelic chemicals in the leaves. Other
effects reported are “becoming” prey animals—in a spirit world.
Humans are no strangers to psychedelic drugs; evidence for magic
mushroom use date back to prehistoric times and it’s believed that early
religions were an attempt to explain the psychedelic experiences of
drugs.
1
It Brings us Together
Although it’s difficult to know for sure how behavior evolves, there is
usually one of two reasons why it survives; either it provides a benefit
or it’s a side effect of something else that provides a benefit.
At first look, religion is evolutionary expensive; animal and human
sacrifice is, historically, commonplace, religious wars, to this day,
cost thousands of lives how could religious belief survive the
evolutionary process?
One theory is that religious belief brings people together—or more
precisely, that it allows lots of people to live together without
killing each other; our closest relatives—gorillas and chimps live in
small groups (150 individuals is probably the biggest chimpanzee band).
Chimpanzees and humans have a common ancestor from around 8 million
years ago, so it seems likely that early humans lived in small groups,
but started living in larger and larger groups with the invention of
agriculture forcing them to live together.Something in early humans’
brains would have to change to allow us to live in large groups without
continual fighting; a common religious belief could be that change. One
interesting point about the theory is that it doesn’t matter what the
religious beliefs are, but it is important that everyone in the
community believes the same thing. That may explain some of the bizarre
beliefs in religions.
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