Complex societies evolved without belief in all-powerful deity
All human societies have been shaped by religion, leading psychologists
to wonder how it arose, and whether particular forms of belief have affected
other aspects of evolved social structure. According to one recent view, for
example, belief in a "big God" — an all-powerful, punitive deity who
sits in moral judgement on our actions — has been instrumental in bringing
about social and political complexity in human cultures.
But a new analysis of religious systems
in Austronesia — the network of small and island states stretching from Madagascar to Easter Island
— challenges that theory. In these states, a more general belief in
supernatural punishment did tend to precede political complexity, the research
finds, but belief in supreme deities emerged after complex cultures have
already formed.
Joseph Watts, a specialist in cultural
evolution at the University of Auckland in New Zealand , who worked on the
study, wanted evidence to examine the idea that "big Gods" drive and
sustain the evolution of big societies. Psychologist Ara Norenzayan at the
University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, has suggested that belief
in moralizing high gods (MHGs) enabled societies to outgrow their limited
ability to police moral conduct, by threatening freeloaders with retribution
even if no-one else noticed their transgressions.
The most common examples of religions with MHGs — Christianity and
Islam, the dominant representatives of so-called Abrahamic religions — are
relatively recent and obviously postdated the appearance of complex societies. But
the question is whether earlier MHGs, for example in Bronze Age civilisations,
catalysed sociopolitical complexity or resulted from it.
Rather than searching for statistical associations between social
complexity and religious beliefs, researchers need ways to untangle cause and
effect, Watts says. “Austronesian cultures
offer an ideal sample to test theories about the evolution of religions in pre-modern
societies, because they were mostly isolated from modern world religions, and
their indigenous supernatural beliefs and practices were well documented,"
he says.
Wide variety
The team considered two classes of
religion: MHGs and a broader belief in systems of supernatural punishment (or
'BSP') for social transgressions, such as those enacted through ancestral
spirits or inanimate forces such as karma. Although both schemes see religious
or supernatural agents as imposing codes of moral conduct, BSP does not assume
a single supreme deity who oversees that process.
Six of the cultures had MHGs, 37 had BSP
belief systems and 22 were politically complex, the researchers concluded. They
used trees of evolutionary connections between cultures, deduced from earlier
studies of linguistic relationships, to explore how the societies were
inter-related and exchanged ideas. That in turn allowed them to test different
hypotheses about MHGs and BSPs — for example, whether belief in MHGs precedes
(and presumably then stabilizes) the emergence of political complexity.
“Although beliefs in MHGs do coevolve
with political complexity, [the] beliefs follow rather than drive political
complexity,” the researchers say. For BSPs, however, the beliefs seem to help
political complexity to emerge, although by no means guarantee it.
“I think the ordering of events these
authors prefer is what one expects from first principles,” says evolutionary
biologist Mark Pagel of the University of Reading, UK. He says that societies
became more politically complex as networks of trade and reputation emerged,
and that the key to this process was language, not religion.
So what are MHGs for? “They are tools of
control used by purveyors of religion to cement their grip on power,” says
Pagel. “As soon as you have a large society generating lots of goods and
services, this wealth can be put to use by someone who can grab the reins of
power. The most immediate way to do this is to align yourself with a supreme
deity and then make lists of things people can and cannot do, and these become
‘morals’ when applied to our social behaviour.”
Anthropologist Hervey Peoples at the
University of Cambridge, UK, says that there is good evidence that, even if
MHGs do not drive political and social complexity, they can affect and
stabilize it. “This study is impressive and innovative, but may be hard to
generalize,” she adds.
Norenzayan agrees. "In Austronesia , social and political complexity has been
limited", he says. "There have been cases of chiefdoms but there has
not been a single state-level society. So it's not all that surprising that big
moralizing gods don't play a central role." He argues that such gods did
co-evolve with the very large, state-level societies typically found in Eurasia . The "big Gods" idea was never supposed
to hold true everywhere, he says.
Nature, 04/03/2015
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