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Roots of Religion From the Evolutionary Perspective

Throughout history and across all cultures why have humans been so prone to believe in
higher powers and to be religious? Religion has many aspects but for this article the basic
idea is related to supernatural powers with agencies to affect human behaviour.
It is clear that these beliefs and practices have appeared in some form since we became
species, primarily on evidence from burial rituals, existing about a hundred and twenty five
thousand years ago. Much more elaborate organisation of religious practices emerged with
the advent of agriculture and civilization, around ten to twelve thousand years ago. All known
societies have been permeated with religion, even in secular countries like India and
America, where over 90% of the general public believes in Higher Powers.
The sentences to follow does not want to deal with the controversial topic of whether there is
or not a Higher Being, and if there is, then of what sort or what your believes may or may not
be. Let us consider this universal human tendency to have such believes and associated
religious practices.
Now number one, from the perspective of evolution, what capacities would be needed to hold
such religious believes: one would be symbolic communications, including language and
narrative; second would be the ability to have a sense of continuity between past, present and
future; third is the tendency to attribute causes and intentionality to events in the world and
more specifically to sense some mysterious force operating behind every day events; fourth
would be the ability to ascribe mental states of others, even in inanimate objects and perhaps
fifth would be complex emotions like awe.
We know that primates have abilities in some of these areas; indeed chimps have incredible
cognitive abilities and capacities. They and other primates have elements of empathy and
theory of mind. But the question here, as in other areas of the mind, is how continuous or
discontinuous the jump is with the advent of modern homo sapiens.
Language, symbolisation and abstraction and our huge tendencies to attribute mind and
intentions to others, even to inanimate objects are major contenders for uniquely human
skills, which may have helped to propel religious beliefs, practices and behaviours.
Let us focus more specifically on agency detection and causal attribution: all human children
begin to do this as early as one and a half years of age. In other words, we are a species that
sees personal meaning, control, and agency, a sense of action in lots of natural events and we
instinctively do so from very young ages. When faced with the wonders of nature, the terror
of death, it may be natural for such a species to attribute human like qualities to objects in the
world and to acts of nature.
Consider this, another huge point, human commitment to group living may have played a key
role. So as social group size increased, from roughly 50 in chimps to the more common mean
number of 150 in humans, there was a great need for means of exerting social control.
Religious powers can serve as a true Higher Power to enforce restrains of selfishness,

identification with an in-group to promote strong social bonds, to incur a moral imperative to
follow rules.
Now with the more recent advent of agriculture and permanent settlements, in the past 10,000
to 12,000 years, hierarchical societies emerged based on division of labour. More elaborated
religion served in part the objectives of maintaining social order and sometimes justifying
hugely powerful royalty.
And we cannot forget the humans narrative abilities. The mythic skills, which not only
convey meaning through story-telling but also have given humans the ability to project
backwards and forwards in time, confront us directly with the suffering prospect of our own
death.
Can we consider religious beliefs to be a true adaptation which have been naturally selected,
some evolutionary psychologists believe so, given that religion has played a key role in social
bonding among hunter-gatherers and early humans; but others consider religion to be a byproduct, what is sometimes called an Exaptation.
Stephen Pinker, for example, considers religious beliefs just such an exaptation. Perhaps a
by-product of our ability have a theory of mind, imputing intentions of beliefs to others and
even to inanimate objects kind of gone wild.
The proneness to be religious is, at least, moderately heritable. So there is some genetic
tendency underlying individual differences in religious conviction and belief of some kind of
Higher Power. But the particular form of religious believes one has are virtually zero in terms
of heritability. These differences are clearly a result of socialization and family practice.
In the early 21st century, there was a flash of controversy concerning the hypothesis that there
might be a specific God gene; a specific gene related to neurotransmission, which was
proposed to predict mystical feelings leading to religious, spiritual beliefs. Recent science has
provided a lot of scepticism about such a single gene idea. But a tendency to have such
beliefs does appear partly heritable; perhaps related to multiple genes linked to imagination,
and attribution of intent to natural forces and other mental capacities.
Recently, in 2007, Barbara Kings book Creating God argues that religion emerged from
primates intense attachment bonds to early caregivers, feeling empathy and deep need for
belongingness. In 2009, Robert Wright wrote The Evolution of God and he argued that
despite the clear evidence for evolutionary origins of religious tendencies, over the period of
recorded history humans have created deistic entities less and less revengeful and more and
more tolerant and compassionate as the direct result of social structures that tended to favour
cooperation.
Another idea that is highly ignored is that having a belief system i.e., religion helps people in
feeling better and making them fit. It also encouraged them to literally go the distance in
search of food because the hunter knows that his life is in the Hand(s) of God(s).

Having a religions, evolutionary psychologists say, strengthens social bonding among


members of the same group. This, in turn, helps them fight the outside the clan or tribe.
Religions also teach to cooperate, hence those who were religious were better in adaptation
and therefore they survived!
by Aiman Reyaz
References:
1. King, Evolving God
2. Wright, The Evolution of God
3. Hinshaw, Human Mind
4. http://www.newageislam.com/spiritual-meditations/roots-of-religion-fromthe-evolutionary-perspective/d/34764

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