Looking at our past in terms of scientific evolution and comparing it with the past in terms of religious evolution, I have to wonder:
1) How much of modern society (culture, politics,economics, etc) can be explained by our evolutionary past (evolutionary economics etc) as opposed to our religious past?
2) How much of modern behavior is explained by evolutionary history (nature vs nurture) as opposed to religious history?
Evolution vs Religion in modern behavior
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Evolution vs Religion in modern behavior
Post #1What we do for ourselves dies with us,
What we do for others and the world remains
and is immortal.
-Albert Pine
Never be bullied into silence.
Never allow yourself to be made a victim.
Accept no one persons definition of your life; define yourself.
-Harvey Fierstein
What we do for others and the world remains
and is immortal.
-Albert Pine
Never be bullied into silence.
Never allow yourself to be made a victim.
Accept no one persons definition of your life; define yourself.
-Harvey Fierstein
- Cathar1950
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Re: Evolution vs Religion in modern behavior
Post #2All of it.Confused wrote:Looking at our past in terms of scientific evolution and comparing it with the past in terms of religious evolution, I have to wonder:
1) How much of modern society (culture, politics,economics, etc) can be explained by our evolutionary past (evolutionary economics etc) as opposed to our religious past?
2) How much of modern behavior is explained by evolutionary history (nature vs nurture) as opposed to religious history?
It makes perfect sense in terms of eveolution and history. After all evolution is history.
Re: Evolution vs Religion in modern behavior
Post #3How can we consider evolution a factor in modern behavior. I know developmental evolutionists still can't decide which is more: nature vs nurture. If nature is the primary determinant in human behavior, then our genetic makeup combined with all of our ancestors makeup contributes to our current behaviors as well as our societal structure (ie: wanderers to hunters and gatherers to settled tribes etc...). This all would contribute to current sociological patterns. However, if nurture is the primary determinant, then we must consider the religious influence in our current behaviors as well as societies simply because at one point, religion dictated society.Cathar1950 wrote:All of it.Confused wrote:Looking at our past in terms of scientific evolution and comparing it with the past in terms of religious evolution, I have to wonder:
1) How much of modern society (culture, politics,economics, etc) can be explained by our evolutionary past (evolutionary economics etc) as opposed to our religious past?
2) How much of modern behavior is explained by evolutionary history (nature vs nurture) as opposed to religious history?
It makes perfect sense in terms of evolution and history. After all evolution is history.
What we do for ourselves dies with us,
What we do for others and the world remains
and is immortal.
-Albert Pine
Never be bullied into silence.
Never allow yourself to be made a victim.
Accept no one persons definition of your life; define yourself.
-Harvey Fierstein
What we do for others and the world remains
and is immortal.
-Albert Pine
Never be bullied into silence.
Never allow yourself to be made a victim.
Accept no one persons definition of your life; define yourself.
-Harvey Fierstein
Re: Evolution vs Religion in modern behavior
Post #4Consider the evolution of human consciousness. The stages match pretty well with the development of human consciousness over time in an individual as described by modern developmental psychology.Confused wrote: How can we consider evolution a factor in modern behavior. I know developmental evolutionists still can't decide which is more: nature vs nurture. If nature is the primary determinant in human behavior, then our genetic makeup combined with all of our ancestors makeup contributes to our current behaviors as well as our societal structure (ie: wanderers to hunters and gatherers to settled tribes etc...). This all would contribute to current sociological patterns. However, if nurture is the primary determinant, then we must consider the religious influence in our current behaviors as well as societies simply because at one point, religion dictated society.
Religion can be seen as a integral in the evolution of society and, in fact, has itself evolved.
The full discussion can be found here
c. 100,000+ years ago
- An individual uses instincts and habits just to survive
The distinct self is barely awakened or sustained
Food, water, warmth, sex, and safety have priority over anything else
- Thinking is animistic; magical spirits—both good and bad
Obeying the desires of spirit beings and mystical signs
Showing allegiance to chief, elders, ancestors, and the clan
Preserving sacred objects, places, events, and memories
Observing rites of passage, seasonal cycles, and tribal customs
- The world is seen as a jungle full of threats and predators
The individual breaks free from any constraints to please self as self desires
The individual stands tall, expects attention, demands respect, calls the shots
The individual enjoys himself to the fullest, right now without guilt or remorse
The individual conquers, out-foxes, and dominates other aggressive characters
An overly developed ethnic identity can lead to genocidal wars, slavery, and racism
The individual believes that: "I am special, I'll live forever, I am immortal, not like the others."
- Sacrificing of the self to the transcendent Cause, Truth, or righteous Pathway.
Allowing the Order to enforce a code of conduct based on eternal, absolute unvarying principles of "right" and "wrong"—there is one right way to live and deviations punished from the path are punished.
Following the right path produces security now and guarantees future reward; if you don't follow the path, well, you've made your choices.
Displaying missionary zealotry, which can be short on evidence and long on belief and faith, as well as closed minds.
Engaging in pleasurable acts is seen as frivolous; humor is rare; actions are based in judgment not compassion, although there is a lot of talk about compassion.
Operating from a fundamentalist, conventional, traditional, and conformist worldview.
- Strongly expressed individualism; Developed human rights, legal freedoms, free markets, capitalistic democracies
Strong faith in science and rationality, which eclipse superstition
Seeking to live the "good life" with material abundance
Believe that optimistic, risk-taking, and self-reliant people deserve their success
Play to win and enjoy competition; very success driven
Basing principles on ethics, not religion
Ignoring of inner spirituality to a high degree; the subsequent loss of the sacred
- Becomes more aware of the suffering of the world, of other sentient beings
The human spirit must be freed from greed, dogma, and divisiveness
Feelings, sensitivity, and caring supersede cold rationality
Share the Earth's resources and opportunities equally among all
Reach decisions through consensus processes
Anti-authoritarian and against hierarchy; establishes lateral bonding and linking
All values are pluralistic and relativistic; no one should be marginalized
Environmentalism becomes a socio-political movement
A fundamental belief is "All people are good; it's society that makes them bad." Highly idealistic.
Can create cults of victims and censorship through politically correct thinking; can also be politically dogmatic.
"Whatever you are totally ignorant of, assert to be the explanation of everything else"
William James quoting Dr. Hodgson
"When I see I am nothing, that is wisdom. When I see I am everything, that is love. My life is a movement between these two."
Nisargadatta Maharaj
William James quoting Dr. Hodgson
"When I see I am nothing, that is wisdom. When I see I am everything, that is love. My life is a movement between these two."
Nisargadatta Maharaj
Post #5
Wow. Bernee. You summed it all up in one post. This is a first. I am stumped to find a flaw in your post. Of course I will have to try, but, wow.
What we do for ourselves dies with us,
What we do for others and the world remains
and is immortal.
-Albert Pine
Never be bullied into silence.
Never allow yourself to be made a victim.
Accept no one persons definition of your life; define yourself.
-Harvey Fierstein
What we do for others and the world remains
and is immortal.
-Albert Pine
Never be bullied into silence.
Never allow yourself to be made a victim.
Accept no one persons definition of your life; define yourself.
-Harvey Fierstein
Post #6
Thanks M. The concept of Spiral Dynamics is one that I initially developoed an interest in a few years ago.Confused wrote:Wow. Bernee. You summed it all up in one post. This is a first. I am stumped to find a flaw in your post. Of course I will have to try, but, wow.
I might as well add what has happened over the past 50 years...
50 years (or so) ago...
- Pursuit of learning for its own sake.
Systems thinking.
Viewing life as a kaleidoscope of natural hierarchies, systems, and forms
Valuing the magnificence of existence over material possessions
Prioritizing flexibility, spontaneity, and functionality
Valuing knowledge and competency over rank, power, and status
Integrating complex systems with ease
- Experiencing the world as a single, dynamic organism with its own collective mind
Acknowledging the Self as both distinct and a blended part of a larger, compassionate whole
Viewing everything connected to everything else as incredibly beautiful ecological alignments
Experiencing energy and information as permeating the Earth's total environment
Thinking that is holistic and intuitive, with an expectation of cooperative actions
Synthesizing science and religion into a universal spirituality
"Whatever you are totally ignorant of, assert to be the explanation of everything else"
William James quoting Dr. Hodgson
"When I see I am nothing, that is wisdom. When I see I am everything, that is love. My life is a movement between these two."
Nisargadatta Maharaj
William James quoting Dr. Hodgson
"When I see I am nothing, that is wisdom. When I see I am everything, that is love. My life is a movement between these two."
Nisargadatta Maharaj
Post #7
I am going to have to look up more about this theory of spiral dynamics. Sounds interesting. Thanks.bernee51 wrote:Thanks M. The concept of Spiral Dynamics is one that I initially developoed an interest in a few years ago.Confused wrote:Wow. Bernee. You summed it all up in one post. This is a first. I am stumped to find a flaw in your post. Of course I will have to try, but, wow.
I might as well add what has happened over the past 50 years...
50 years (or so) ago...
the last 30 years.....
- Pursuit of learning for its own sake.
Systems thinking.
Viewing life as a kaleidoscope of natural hierarchies, systems, and forms
Valuing the magnificence of existence over material possessions
Prioritizing flexibility, spontaneity, and functionality
Valuing knowledge and competency over rank, power, and status
Integrating complex systems with ease
It is interesting to note that sociocentric monothesitic religions like christianity are stuck in a mindset that originated 5000 years ago. While aspects may have evolved to be more inclusive the basic premises have not.
- Experiencing the world as a single, dynamic organism with its own collective mind
Acknowledging the Self as both distinct and a blended part of a larger, compassionate whole
Viewing everything connected to everything else as incredibly beautiful ecological alignments
Experiencing energy and information as permeating the Earth's total environment
Thinking that is holistic and intuitive, with an expectation of cooperative actions
Synthesizing science and religion into a universal spirituality
What we do for ourselves dies with us,
What we do for others and the world remains
and is immortal.
-Albert Pine
Never be bullied into silence.
Never allow yourself to be made a victim.
Accept no one persons definition of your life; define yourself.
-Harvey Fierstein
What we do for others and the world remains
and is immortal.
-Albert Pine
Never be bullied into silence.
Never allow yourself to be made a victim.
Accept no one persons definition of your life; define yourself.
-Harvey Fierstein
Post #8
I'm surprised that there's been no mention so far here of Evolutionary Psychology. Nature and nurture would be inextricably linked in any phenotype expressing a nervous system primed from birth with a psychological inheritance.
Richard Dawkins (in The God Delusion - which I've somewhat grudgingly picked up as I don't particularly like his tone) and others have suggested that Religion is a by-product of some other evolved imperative. He explains how the apparently suicidal tendency of Moths to spiral into candle flames (an apparent puzzle if Darwinian selection is the cause) is better understood as a by-product of higher order selection effects by way of an evolved vision system allowing the Moth to navigate by the sun and moon. One suggestion is that children are predisposed to accept instruction from elders in a world where there is much important stuff for a human to learn. With only natural selection ultimately able to separate superstition from the real facts about the world culture would inevitably pick up a certain amount of "junk" along the way.
Richard Dawkins (in The God Delusion - which I've somewhat grudgingly picked up as I don't particularly like his tone) and others have suggested that Religion is a by-product of some other evolved imperative. He explains how the apparently suicidal tendency of Moths to spiral into candle flames (an apparent puzzle if Darwinian selection is the cause) is better understood as a by-product of higher order selection effects by way of an evolved vision system allowing the Moth to navigate by the sun and moon. One suggestion is that children are predisposed to accept instruction from elders in a world where there is much important stuff for a human to learn. With only natural selection ultimately able to separate superstition from the real facts about the world culture would inevitably pick up a certain amount of "junk" along the way.
Post #9
I'm surprised that there's been no mention so far here of Evolutionary Psychology. Nature and nurture would be inextricably linked in any phenotype expressing a nervous system primed from birth with a psychological inheritance.
Richard Dawkins (in The God Delusion - which I've somewhat grudgingly picked up as I don't particularly like his tone) and others (e.g Steven Pinker) have suggested that Religion is a by-product of some other evolved imperative. He explains how the apparently suicidal tendency of Moths to spiral into candle flames (an apparent puzzle if Darwinian selection is the cause) is better understood as a by-product of higher order selection effects by way of an evolved vision system allowing the Moth to navigate by the sun and moon. One suggestion is that children are predisposed to accept instruction from elders in a world where there is much important stuff for a human to learn. With only natural selection ultimately able to separate superstition from the real facts about the world culture would inevitably pick up a certain amount of "junk" along the way.
Richard Dawkins (in The God Delusion - which I've somewhat grudgingly picked up as I don't particularly like his tone) and others (e.g Steven Pinker) have suggested that Religion is a by-product of some other evolved imperative. He explains how the apparently suicidal tendency of Moths to spiral into candle flames (an apparent puzzle if Darwinian selection is the cause) is better understood as a by-product of higher order selection effects by way of an evolved vision system allowing the Moth to navigate by the sun and moon. One suggestion is that children are predisposed to accept instruction from elders in a world where there is much important stuff for a human to learn. With only natural selection ultimately able to separate superstition from the real facts about the world culture would inevitably pick up a certain amount of "junk" along the way.
Re: Evolution vs Religion in modern behavior
Post #10Since, as QED so deftly points out, religion is a by-product of evolutionary psychological development, the correct answer is that the two are inextricably linked. You can't pick out the religious motive and say that it isn't an evolution-driven motive because evolution favored hominids that treated the world as if there were more to it than what could be perceived.Confused wrote:1) How much of modern society (culture, politics,economics, etc) can be explained by our evolutionary past (evolutionary economics etc) as opposed to our religious past?
2) How much of modern behavior is explained by evolutionary history (nature vs nurture) as opposed to religious history?
However, an interesting question might be what the difference is between the evolution-driven need for spirituality and the religions that popped up because of it?
Every concept that can ever be needed will be expressed by exactly one word, with its meaning rigidly defined and all its subsidiary meanings forgotten. -- George Orwell, 1984