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Why Religion?
| I've been a regular
commentator at GNXP for some time, and recently I
started posting there. The question was, "If religion is
irrational, why does it exist?" My explanation is
sociological, based on the functionality of religious
belief. Razib thinks that religion might be an atavistic
error wired into the brain, the negative byproduct of
the hard-wired human tendency to ascribe events to
agents. One commentator mentioned entrepreneurship, and
I mentioned the madman-genius. I think that Donald
Campbell's "proliferation and decimation / variation and
selective retention" paradigm covers a lot of ground. (Originally
published
here. The comments are of interest.) |
Like
Razib, I'm secular and an atheist, and this forces me to ask myself,
"Why religion?" If religion is as false as it seems to be, why does
it exist?
I have three answers. These are not exclusive but overlapping, and
the fact that two of them are more or less mutually incompatible
often leads to apparently paradoxical developments.
Religious belief can be either functional or dysfunctional, either
from the social or from the individual point of view. The falsehood
of a religion does not entail its harmfulness, and in fact the
robustness of religious belief suggests that religion must be in
some way, at least socially, more functional than not.
In different ways my three explanations of religious belief all
center on "long shot" situations, where the chances of success by
routine means are low or doubtful. (This squares with Malinowski:
where routine non-magical methods work most of the time, the most
superstitious tribesman will use them). In all cases they also
involve choices which are probably not rational from the
individual's point of view, but are rational from the point of view
of the species.
Thus, these forms of religion can be called altruistic. I'm not up
to date on the evolutionary debate on innate altruism -- innate
dispositions which lead the organism to behave in a way which
reduces his or her own personal evolutionary success, while
enhancing the evolutionary success of the group (species or kingroup)
to which he or she belongs. As I understand that's been a hard case
to make even with the help of kin altruism.
Perhaps the innate trait leading to altruistic behavior is not
intrinsically altruistic, but is exapted for altruism within a
learned, conventional, non-innate social context such as religion.
Candidates for such innate dispositions might be those toward male
bonding, submissiveness, and anger against outsiders.
My first two explanations of religion are familiar and have been
given by Marx, Nietzsche, and many others. First, religion gives
comfort to people whose actual situation in life is unendurable, or
almost. Hope for an imaginary and unreal future paradoxically makes
the painful present more bearable. This is the "opiate of the
people" explanation, and is associated with exploitation, hierarchy,
and domination. Second, religion can motivate self-sacrifice, for example in war. In
some sense this might be thought of as a version of the first, but
the behaviors of the submissive peasant and the soldier are so
different that I thought I'd list them separately. Just like the
first case, this involves some degree of altruism: Religion tends to
use promises about the afterlife to sugarcoat an earthly life which
is hard to face rationally and is, in fact, a very bad deal.
My third point is by far the most interesting. New religions, crazy
as they usually are, can be compared to mutations in biology. Even
if most of them are harmful, some of them successfully move into new
niches in the historical landscape. Thus, even though most new
religions, like most new genes, are destructive or neutral, whatever
bold, successful social innovations there have been were often
religious in motivation. For most people conventional behavior
and the status quo are the robust default choices except in the very
worst situations, and in fact many people will follow the rules even
if it literally kills them.
My favorite example of this is from Polynesia. Polynesia was settled
during the Christian era by shiploads of families migrating with
their pigs and their tools. Polynesians were great navigators, but
the big discoveries -- of New Zealand from Hawaii, for example --
were made by people jumping off into the void, who could not know
where they would land or whether there was any land there at all.
The evidence I've seen suggests that these voyages were motivated by
religious visions of an apocalyptic sort. Most such expeditions must
have died miserably, but the ones who didn't succeeded gloriously
(settling Samoa, Hawaii, New Zealand, and so on.)
Thus new religions, like mutations, are high-risk high-stakes
gambles.
My premise is that serious religious belief is never individually
rational, leading as it does to self-sacrifice, submission to
exploitation, and crazy gambles. I've thought of trying to describe
the circumstances in which new religious beliefs are successful and
socially rational (after the fact), but that isn't at all easy.
The three variables I've figured out are: 1.) the worse-adapted
conventional practice becomes, the more likely it is that a new
religion will be an improvement. 2.) The more successful a
conventional practice is, the more likely it is that people will be
able to experiment, since they have more leisure and more surplus.
3.) If there's a significantly more favorable niche accessible from
the conventional niche, whichever innovator gets there first will
have an advantage. (#1, #2, and #3 are completely independent, and
#1 and #2 or more or less incompatible. I suspect that evolutionary
biologists
have worked this kind of question out more systematically.)
I should also point out that religions of submission (#1 above) readily
morph into religions of rebellion (for example, by promoting a minor
deity, or by revising the theogony.) This is historically observable
and shouldn't be thought of as problematic. In terms of my argument,
anyone in condition #1 has no good choices: either submission or
rebellion can lead to extreme misery, and seldom does either one lead to
happiness or success. For someone in these circumstances to flip
from one desperate solution to the other is nothing strange.
In my opinion, the payoff of my piece is the suggestion that new
religions, while irrational, are like mutations. Few of them
succeed, but they are part of the cruel and bloody process of
proliferation and decimation (variation and selective retention)
which constitutes both evolution and history.
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I am emersonj at gmail dot com.
Original materials copyright John J
Emerson
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