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The science of religious beliefs
Authors:Justin L. Barrett  Jonathan A. Lanman
Affiliation:Centre for Anthropology and Mind, Oxford University, 58A Banbury Road, Oxford, OX2 6QS, UK
Abstract:Why have humans, throughout history and across cultures, shown a strong tendency to believe in the existence of superhuman intentional agents and attached this belief to notions of morality, misfortune, and the creation of the world? The answer emerging from the cognitive science of religion appears to be that explicit beliefs are informed and constrained by the natural and cross-culturally recurrent operation of implicit cognitive systems. Successful god concepts resonate with the expectations of these implicit systems but also have attention-demanding and inferentially-rich properties that allow their integration into various areas of human concern. Theological concepts may deviate from these natural cognitive moorings but require special cultural scaffolding, such as Whitehouse's two Modes of Religiosity, to do so and constitute additions to, rather than replacements of the religious beliefs supported by implicit cognitive systems.
Keywords:Beliefs   Cognitive science   Concepts   Culture   Theism
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