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Religion, the social brain and the mystical stance

Abstract:
This article explores the implications of the social brain and the endorphin-based bonding mechanism that underpins it for the evolution of religion. I argue that religion evolved as one of the behavioural mechanisms designed to facilitate community bonding when humans first evolved the larger social groups of ~150 that now characterise our species. This is not a matter of facilitating cooperation, but of engineering social cohesion – a very different problem. Analysis of the size of C19th utopian communities suggests that a religious basis both allowed larger groups to form and greatly enhanced their longevity. I suggest that religion evolved in two stages: an early immersive form with no formal structure based on trance-dancing (a form still evident in the rituals and practices of many hunter-gatherers) and a later form which had more formal structures and gave rise to our modern doctrinal religions. I argue that the modern doctrinal religions did not replace ancestral immersive religions but rather that the doctrinal component was overlaid on the ancient immersive form, thereby giving rise to the mystical stance that underlies all world religions. I suggest that it is this mystical stance that causes the constant upwelling of cults and sects within world religions.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1177/0084672419900547

Authors

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Experimental Psychology
Role:
Author


Publisher:
SAGE Publications
Journal:
Archive for Psychology of Religion More from this journal
Volume:
42
Issue:
1
Pages:
46–62
Publication date:
2020-01-29
Acceptance date:
2019-12-11
DOI:
EISSN:
1573-6121
ISSN:
0084-6724


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:1080605
UUID:
uuid:259dc012-8806-4ca6-92f2-2eaf1ff6c002
Local pid:
pubs:1080605
Source identifiers:
1080605
Deposit date:
2019-12-31
ARK identifier:

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