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From The Times

HUMANS have evolved over tens of thousands of years to be susceptible to supernatural beliefs, a psychologist has claimed.

Religion and other forms of magical thinking continue to thrive — despite the lack of evidence and advance of science — because people are naturally biased to accept a role for the irrational, said Bruce Hood, Professor of Experimental Psychology at the University of Bristol.

This evolved credulity suggests that it would be impossible to root out belief in ideas such as creationism and paranormal phenomena, even though they have been countered by evidence and are held as a matter of faith alone.

People ultimately believe in these ideas for the same reasons that they attach sentimental value to inanimate objects such as wedding rings or Teddy bears, and recoil from artefacts linked to evil as if they are pervaded by a physical “essence”.

Even the most rational people behave in irrational ways and supernatural beliefs are part of the same continuum, Professor Hood told the British Association Festival of Science in Norwich yesterday.

To demonstrate his theory he asked members of the audience if they were prepared to put on an old-fashioned blue cardigan in return for a £10 reward. He had no shortage of volunteers. He then told the volunteers that the cardigan used to belong to Fred West, the mass murderer.

“Most hands went down,” he said.

“When people did wear it people moved away from them. It’s not actually West’s jumper. But it’s the belief that it’s West’s jumper that has the effect.

“It is as if evil, a moral stance defined by culture, has become physically manifest inside the clothing.”

Similar beliefs, which are held even among the most sceptical scientists, explain why few people would agree to swap their wedding rings for replicas. The difference between attaching significance to sentimental objects and believing in religion, magic or the paranormal is only one of degree, Professor Hood said.

These tendencies, he said, were almost certainly a product of evolution. The human mind is adapted to reason intuitively, so that it can generate theories about how the world works even when mechanisms cannot be seen or easily deduced.

While this is ultimately responsible for scientific thinking, as in the discovery of invisible forces such as gravity, it also leaves people prone to making irrational errors. “In most cases, intuitive theories capture everyday knowledge, such as the nature and properties of objects, what makes something alive, or the understanding that people’s minds motivate their actions,” Professor Hood said.

“But because intuitive theories are based on unobservable properties, such theories leave open the possibility of misconceptions. I believe these misconceptions of naive intuitive theories provide the basis of many later adult magical beliefs about the paranormal.”

This innate tendency means it is futile to expect that such beliefs will die out even as our scientific understanding of the world improves, he said. “The mind is adapted to reason intuitively about the properties of the world. Because we operate intuitively, it is probably pointless to get people to abandon belief systems.

“No amount of evidence is going to get people to take it on board and abandon these ideas.”

Credulous minds may have evolved for several reasons. It was once less dangerous to accept things that were not true than it was to reject real facts, such as the threat posed by a nearby predator. This may have predisposed humans to err on the side of belief. Superstition may also give people a sense of control that can reduce stress.

“I don’t think we’re going to evolve a rational mind because there are benefits to being irrational,” said Professor Hood. “Superstitious behaviour — the idea that certain rituals and practices protect you — is adaptive.

“If you remove the appearance that they are in control, both humans and animals become stressed. During the Gulf War, in 1991, in areas attacked by Scud missiles there was a rise in superstitious belief.

“I want to challenge recent claims by Richard Dawkins, among others, that supernaturalism is primarily attributable to religions spreading beliefs among the gullible minds of the young. Rather, religions may simply capitalise on a natural bias to assume the existence of supernatural forces.”

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Blogger Harlequin said...
I've always subscribed to the idea that our predilection for religion is more to do with selective breeding by us, than evolution per se.

Look at it this way, through out history, Theists have stopped fighting each other to kill non-believers...

There's a Monty Python edge to

"...and so, The Lord said unto me..."
{voice from the back} " No he didn't. You made it up"

{Crowd turns as a man and burns un-believer with his family, the man's property reverting to the church}
Then the Preacher continues from where he left off...

All the Best

Grandpa Harley


Blogger J. C. Samuelson said...
There seems to be some substance to this research by Dr. Hood. The influence of symbolism on man's psychology is well-documented. That said, I have a few reservations.

"This evolved credulity suggests that it would be impossible to root out belief in ideas such as creationism and paranormal phenomena, even though they have been countered by evidence and are held as a matter of faith alone."

Perhaps, but while it may be impossible to completely eliminate belief in the supernatural, history suggests that reason and evidence do have a mitigating impact. For example, very few people believe that God causes rain to fall or that the Earth is flat, regardless of their personal religious convictions. Another example is in the way all but the most orthodox Christians and Jews recognize the immorality of murdering adulterers, disobedient children, homosexuals, and non-believers even though the OT contains express directives to do so.

I'm not sure I'd agree that my attachment to items of sentimental value arise from the same source as my previously held religious beliefs. However, I can see how they may be related, if indirectly so.

"'I don’t think we’re going to evolve a rational mind because there are benefits to being irrational,” said Professor Hood. “Superstitious behaviour — the idea that certain rituals and practices protect you — is adaptive.'"

Adaptive but not deterministic. Humans have already evolved a logical and rational mind, though nothing approaching what could be described as purely logical or completely rational. The fact that some of Dr. Hood's audience did wear the cardigan in spite of the perceived negative association. Perhaps some did so for a thrill, but I suspect some did because they rationally concluded that the cardigan neither was evil nor represented it.

"Rather, religions may simply capitalise on a natural bias to assume the existence of supernatural forces."

Not only do religious leaders capitalize on natural bias, they foster it. Although because of their own predilection for belief I think in most cases it happens unwittingly, a minority likely do know what they're doing on some level. In any case it's a strong argument for not listening to them, particularly fundamentalists.


Anonymous Dave said...
I'm not sure I accept a connection between the aversion to wearing the cardigan and a superstitious belief. While I do accept it being a result of evolution, I’m inclined to postulate it is the product of something different and inherently more logical. Many diseases are contagious, and those who avoided contact with items and people that exhibited some sort of abnormality were probably more likely to survive and pass their genes on to their offspring. The aversion to wearing the cardigan then becomes the result of a more logically developed evolutionary trait. While in this case it may be illogical to be unwilling to wear the cardigan, it is not necessarily superstition, but rather avoiding contact with something that is associated with danger.


Blogger Nvrgoingbk said...
okay, maybe it's just me, but i wouldnt want to wear the damn sweater simply because some sick fuck had worn it. It would make my skin crawl. I wouldn't be worried about his ickiness rubbing off on me, I wouldn't be concerned about one day soon after feeling an inclination to kill, i just wouldn't want to wear it, because it would feel just plain creepy. That in no way implies that i am superstitious. I am partial to my wedding ring, because of the memories it invokes, not because i have some superstition that says if i wear anything other than the original, my husband and i will divorce or some other equally ridiculous notion.

Religious belief fills a void for many people and works on many levels for them. Religious belief is inspired for various reasons. It fills our need for acceptance and believers experience a sense of community among other believers. Religion provides cut and dry answers for the simple minded regarding things we just don't have answers for. Belief for jews, christians, and muslims also provides them a way out of Hell. Many believers are also comforted by the thought of some omniscient God who knows them just as they are and loves them anyway while other believers cling to their religious views simply because it makes them feel morally superior to others. There are a host of contributing factors surrounding the mystery of "faith". If evolution is a link it is only that: ONE LINK in the chain.


Anonymous tigg13 said...
Create a world where logic, reason, personal responcibility and compassionate tolerance are the traits that define success and christianity will go the way of the dodo.


Anonymous Anonymous said...
"i just wouldn't want to wear it, because it would feel just plain creepy. That in no way implies that i am superstitious"

Wrong. It DOES imply you are superstitious you are associating and creating a perception around a neutral object and allowing yourself to feel "Creepy" vibes from it, as if the artifact itself is "contagion" of evil.

If someone had never told you what the man did in his life, your mind would not create the reality and associate and project "creepy" vibes with the object.

It's irrational to feel creepy about an object through superstitious association, i.e. you're associating the memory or information of something bad with an object, irrationally.


Blogger Piprus said...
Prof. Hood's ideas seem to mesh with some of the preliminary findings of research into the genome...that there may be a genetic link responsible for human "spiritual thinking". If that be true, and I don't believe that has yet been proven conclusively, it would lend support to this article.


Anonymous twincats said...
If this is true, then weaning the faithful could be harmful. This does not mean, however, that we should encourage spreading these faiths.

A lot of harm can be mitigated by simply outlawing evangalism/ prosletyzing like Turkey does.

Not that this would be easy, or even close to feasible given the power of the church in many nations today. Those churches will never give up their power willingly!


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