Great expectations for Ara Norenzayan's Big Gods |
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Authors: | Luther H. Martin |
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Affiliation: | 1. Emeritus of Religion, The University of Vermont, 161 St. Paul Street, #304, Burlington, VT 05401, USAluther.martin@uvm.edu |
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Abstract: | In Big Gods (2013), Ara Norenzayan argues that the rise of large-scale societies was made possible by an extension of small-scale religious prosociality, presided over (and enforced) by Big moralizing watchful Gods. While religious prosociality is, of course, a redundant characterization of any small-scale religious group, it is doubtful that its extension can account for the historical emergence of large-scale societies, nor can cooperation be explained as an effect of surveillance. Rather, the archaeological and historical record indicates that such large-scale expansions of human societies are better explained by economic factors, political power, and/or military force. Difficulties with Norenzayan's theory are explored and several alternative theories to his ‘neglect of history’ are suggested. |
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Keywords: | assortative sociality consequences of surveillance fictive kinship relations of power effects of geography neglect of history cultural evolution interdisciplinary research |
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