The cultural evolution of prosocial religions
University of British Columbia Hospital · University of British Columbia · +4 more institutions
Abstract
We develop a cultural evolutionary theory of the origins of prosocial religions and apply it to resolve two puzzles in human psychology and cultural history: (1) the rise of large-scale cooperation among strangers and, simultaneously, (2) the spread of prosocial religions in the last 10-12 millennia. We argue that these two developments were importantly linked and mutually energizing. We explain how a package of culturally evolved religious beliefs and practices characterized by increasingly potent, moralizing, supernatural agents, credible displays of faith, and other psychologically active elements conducive to social solidarity promoted high fertility rates and large-scale cooperation with co-religionists,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 136.72
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 446
Authors
7- ANAra NorenzayanCorresponding
University of British Columbia Hospital, University of British Columbia
- ASAzim Shariff
University of Oregon
- WMWill M. Gervais
University of Kentucky
- AKAiyana K. Willard
The University of Texas at Austin
- RARita Anne McNamara
University of British Columbia Hospital, University of British Columbia
Topics & keywords
- Prosocial behavior
- Faith
- Social psychology
- Solidarity
- Psychology
- Competition (biology)
- Sociology
- Epistemology