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By Massimo Pigliucci | October 10th 2008 11:04 AM | 8 comments

About Massimo Pigliucci

Massimo Pigliucci is Professor in the Departments of Ecology & Evolution and of Philosophy at Stony Brook University, NY.

His research is on the evolution of genotype-environment interactions... Full Bio

More from Massimo Pigliucci

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As promised in my previous post, I would like to bring to people’s attention one of the best reviews of scientific investigations of religion as a social phenomenon, a paper published in Science (3 October 2008) by Ara Norenzayan and Azim Shariff of the University of British Columbia.

The article is chock full of fascinating, empirically based, insights into the relationship between religion and prosocial behavior, and is a must read for anyone seriously interested in this topic. Here, I will point to some of the highlights that will hopefully stimulate discussion and direct reading of Norenzayan and Shariff’s paper.

First off, let me clear the field of an obvious source of what I think is rather fruitless discussion. The authors begin by summarizing three models of the evolution of religion: the evolutionary group selection scenario (religion as an adaptation for group living), the cultural by-product scenario (religion derives from the necessity of a theory of others’ mind and sensitivity to one’s reputation), and the cultural group selection scenario (where competition among social groups favors the spread of costly practices to maintain in-group cohesion).

I have said repeatedly that we simply do not have the empirical data to seriously test genetic-evolutionary explanations for most human behaviors, so I am completely neutral about alternative scenarios that deal with that aspect of the problem. Moreover, following Jablonka and Lamb (2005), I count cultural inheritance as a legitimate form of evolutionarily relevant inheritance. This means that any of the above scenarios (or a combination thereof) may have occurred without major involvement of genes, by direct transmission of cultural practices.

Ok, that being out of the way, let’s take a look at what Norenzayan and Shariff say. To begin with, they debunk the oft-repeated claim that religiosity increases charitability. It turns out studies that have made that link are entirely based on self-reporting, a notoriously unreliable source of behavioral evidence. When one looks into experimental studies of the issue, the picture changes dramatically. A series of “Good Samaritan” studies found that people’s actual (as opposed to self-reported) charitable behavior shows no correspondence whatsoever with the degree of religious belief. Secular people are just as likely (or not) to help someone in distress as are religious people.

Interestingly, however, researchers have been able to show that a strong link between religiosity and prosocial behavior does emerge, but only when there is a self-reputation enhancing egoistic motivation: religious people are more likely to engage in prosocial behavior if they know that there is a good chance that their reputation in the group will be positively affected.

Perhaps one of the most interesting sets of experiments reported by Norenzayan and Shariff concerns what happens when people are reminded of a morally watchful authority -- religious or secular. In a control group that was not “primed” with a god-like concept, people behaved selfishly (most pocketed an available sum of money without sharing). When participants were primed with a god reminder, however, the modal behavior switched to fairness (they split the money).

So, does religion trigger altruistic behavior after all? Nope. Here’s the kicker: people that were primed with reminders of a secular moral authority were just as altruistic as the religiously primed ones! It isn’t religion, it is the presence of a moral authority that does the trick.

Another spectacular finding deals with the effect of religiosity on group survival. Researchers have mined historical information on hundreds of communes that were started in the United States during the 19th century, some religious, some secular (mostly of socialist inspiration).

Once again, a prima facie interpretation of the data would seem to give credence to the idea that religion is good for sociality: at any given point in time, religious communes were four times as likely to survive to the following year as their secular counterparts. However, more in-depth analyses revealed that one needs to be weary before jumping to conclusions: it turns out that the real predictor of commune longevity was not religiosity, but the number of costly requirements for membership! The more costly it is to belong, the more likely members are to stick with it (that’s also why it’s better to subscribe to an expensive gym if you really want to motivate yourself…). The overall difference between religious and non-religious communes was simply due to the fact that the latter, on average, imposed much less costly requirements. (Note that “requirements” here does not just mean monetary ones, but also engaging in rituals, church attendance, constrained sexual practices, and so on.

Still, perhaps atheist organizations should start asking their membership for a sizable percentage of their income, just as many fundamentalist denominations do.)

Finally, Norenzayan and Shariff looked into another interesting prediction that people have made about the relationship between religion and prosociality.

According to standard theory, the two original sources of moral behavior are kin selection (you help your relatives because they carry some of your genes) and reciprocal altruism (where there is an expectation of favors being returned). The problem is that these two mechanisms begin to break down for groups that are much larger than about 150 individuals (all that our neocortex can keep track of). What then? The hypothesis here is that gods kick in as a supplementary and increasingly important moral lever. If so, then there should be a positive relationship between the size of a society and the moralizing of their gods. Sure enough, researchers found that although most societies do not, in fact, worship gods that dictate morality, all large groups switch to moral-dictating deities.

Does that mean that religion is, after all, necessary for the stability of human groups? Again, no, because modern secular social contract-enforcing institutions (police, courts, etc.) efficiently replace the original function of “big gods,” as plainly demonstrated by the case of most western societies, which are both highly secular and stable.

Norenzayan and Shariff end with one further cautionary statement to people who insist that religion must be good for society, and a direct quote here is best: “Religious prosociality is not extended indiscriminately; the ‘dark side’ of within-group cooperation is between-group competition and conflict.”

In this age of holy wars and cross-cultural clashes, it is indeed hard to underestimate the destructive power of religion.

Citations:

Ara Norenzayan and Azim F. Shariff,'The Origin and Evolution of Religious Prosociality', Science 3 October 2008: Vol. 322. no. 5898, pp. 58 - 62 DOI: 10.1126/science.1158757

Jablonka, E. and M. J. Lamb (2005). Evolution in Four Dimensions: Genetic, Epigenetic, Behavioral, and Symbolic Variation in the History of Life. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press.

Comments

Beautiful. Thanks. I would tend to not to overestimate the desructive power of religion because of my life experience. Hence, I question the source of the destructive powers in the history of life. What are those sources -- focusing outside religion? Afterall, there was history before religion, right?
tkkenyon's picture
This is a really great essay. Bravo. Thanks for bringing this article to our attention. TK
"In this age of holy wars and cross-cultural clashes, it is indeed hard to underestimate the destructive power of religion." And yet some of the worst atrocities have been committed by the ideologically atheist. Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, it would seem destructive potential lies within us all. How would we transcend this? Rejection of religion has been tried and found wanting. Something deeper is required.
I thank the researchers who investigated this topic, and Massimo Pigliucci, the genius who wrote this article. Has religion helped Jews and Muslims live in peace? My only religion is to do whatever I can to help life and civilization outlast this planet, and to do my best to live according to my own instincts and conscience, regardless of how I am treated, and no matter what people think of me. I believe that compassion is a breedable genetic characteristic that can be influenced by one’s social environment, and that humans are not the only animals that behave compassionately. For example, I once saw a bird defend an injured bird against the attack of another bird. None of these wild birds were of the same species. Have some animals been bred to enhance their spiritual instincts, e.g., dogs? During World War II, the most civilized nations on earth behaved like savages. If you think that Germany's enemies did not, please watch World War II historian David Irving’s interviews on Youtube.com. Although a civilized person is more likely to treat others compassionately if she/he is treated compassionately, a savage will think, feel and behave like a savage no matter how compassionately she/he has been treated.
Absolutely fantastic article. I get so fed up with christians and muslims who constantly force that stuff about religion stabilising society down my throat. And best of all, it all makes logical sense.
STEWARTW's picture
HITLER A CHRISTIAN?
I SAY: MY FEELING AS A CHRISTIAN POINTS ME TO MY LORD AND SAVIOUR AS A FIGHTER. IT POINTS ME TO THE MAN WHO ONCE IN LONELINESS, SURROUNDED ONLY BY A FEW FOLLOWERS, RECOGNIZED THESE JEWS FOR WHAT THEY WERE AND SUMMONED MEN TO THE FIGHT AGAINST THEM AND WHO, GOD'S TRUTH! WAS GREATEST NOT AS SUFFERER BUT AS FIGHTER. In boundless love as a Christian and as a man I read through the passage which tells us how the Lord at last rose in His might and seized the scourge to drive out of the Temple the brood of vipers and of adders. How terrific was His fight for the world against the Jewish poison. Today, after two thousand years, with deepest emotion I recognize more profoundly than ever before - the fact that it was for this that He had to shed His blood upon the Cross. As a Christian I have no duty to allow myself to be cheated, but I have the duty to be a fighter for truth and justice. And as a man I have the duty to see to it that human society does not suffer the same catastrophic collapse as did the civilization of the ancient world some two thousand years ago - a civilization which was driven to its ruin through this same Jewish people. Then indeed when Rome collapsed there were endless streams of new German bands flowing into the Empire from the North; but, if Germany collapses today, who is there to come after us? German blood upon this earth is on the way to gradual exhaustion unless we pull ourselves together and make ourselves free! And if there is anything which could demonstrate that we are acting rightly, it is the distress which daily grows. For as a Christian I have also a duty to my own people. And when I look on my people I see it work and work and toil and labor, and at the end of the week it has only for its wage wretchedness and misery. When I go out in the morning and see these men standing in their queues and look into their pinched faces, then I believe I would be no Christian, but a very devil, if I felt no pity for them, if I did not, as did our Lord two thousand years ago, turn against those by whom today this poor people is plundered and exploited.
The source of the excerpt above is http://www.hitler.org/speeches/04-12-22.html The source of the following excerpt is the program of the N.S.D.A.P., Point 24:
WE ADVOCATE FREEDOM OF ALL RELIGIONS PROVIDED THEY DO NOT ENDANGER THE STATE OR VIOLATE THE ETHICS AND MORALITY OF THE GERMANIC RACE. OUR PARTY SUPPORTS A POSITIVE CHRISTIANITY WITHOUT ALLYING ITSELF WITH ANY PARTICULAR CONFESSION. OUR PARTY OPPOSES THE JEWISH-MATERIALISTIC SPIRIT. WE BELIEVE THAT A LASTING RECOVERY CAN COME ONLY FROM WITHIN OUR NATION ACCORDING TO THE GUIDING PRINCIPLE OF "COMMUNAL GOOD BEFORE INDIVIDUAL GOOD.
The following Joseph Goebbels quote is from "Communism with the Mask Off".
Bolshevism denies religion as a principle, fundamentally and entirely. It recognizes religion only as an "opium for the people". For the help and support of religious belief, however, National Socialism absolutely places in the foreground of its programme a belief in God and that transcendental idealism which has been destined by Nature to bring to expression the racial soul of a nation.
Very "Scientific" - prove some one else wrong to prove one's right !! --
rholley's picture
STEWARTW,

of course one naturally believes anything put out by Hitler and Goebbels, who so cogently identified the Jews and Churchill as the authors and originators of the Big Lie technique.

My own perspective on those two gentlemen is forcefully expressed HERE.

Robert H. Olley
Physics Department
University of Reading
England

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