reviewBehavioral and Brain SciencesDec 1, 2004GREEN OA

Religion's evolutionary landscape: Counterintuition, commitment, compassion, communion

Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique · University of Michigan · +2 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Religion is not an evolutionary adaptation per se, but a recurring cultural by-product of the complex evolutionary landscape that sets cognitive, emotional, and material conditions for ordinary human interactions. Religion exploits only ordinary cognitive processes to passionately display costly devotion to counterintuitive worlds governed by supernatural agents. The conceptual foundations of religion are intuitively given by task-specific panhuman cognitive domains, including folkmechanics, folkbiology, and folkpsychology. Core religious beliefs minimally violate ordinary notions about how the world is, with all of its inescapable problems, thus enabling people to imagine minimally impossible supernatural…

Citation impact

755
total citations
FWCI
56.93
Percentile
100%
References
330
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Cognitive science of religion
  • Deception
  • Counterintuitive
  • Agency (philosophy)
  • Compassion
  • Epistemology
  • Psychology
  • Shame
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Peace, Justice and strong institutions
No related works found for this paper.