Ralph Burhoe's Evolutionary Theory of Religion |
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Authors: | Philip Hefner |
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Affiliation: | Lutheran School of Theology, Chicago, IL and the Chicago Center for Religion and Science, Chicago, IL |
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Abstract: | Ralph Wendell Burhoe's legacy rests on a series of interrelated theories that deal with (1) the emergence of life within physical nature; (2) the symbiosis of genes and cultures in human evolution; (3) the central importance of the brain in this symbiosis; and (4) the function of religion within this evolutionary process to carry the traditions of trans-kin altruism that make human civilization possible. These theories give rise to a number of issues that are of current importance. Burhoe's stature is enhanced when one considers that these theories were first articulated by him in the 1970s, in reliance upon the work of J. Bronowski, Alfred E. Emerson, and Donald T. Campbell. |
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Keywords: | altruism J. Bronowski Ralph Wendell Burhoe Donald T. Campbell civilization Alfred E. Emerson genes and culture symbiosis |
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