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“[T]he choice of human groupings for cultural comparisons is not a natural or scientific choice, but a political one.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“What we mean when we say that something is "cultural" is that it is roughly similar to what we find in other members of the particular group we are considering, and unlike what we would find in members of a contrast group. This is why it is confusing to say that people share a culture, as if culture were common property. We may have strictly identical amounts of money in our respective wallets without sharing any of it!”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“If religion allays anxiety, it cures only a small part of the disease it creates.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“Having concepts of gods and spirits does not really make moral rules more compelling but it sometimes makes them more intelligible. So we do not have gods because that makes society function. We have gods in part because we have the mental equipment that makes society possible but we cannot always understand how society functions.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“Societies have religion because social cohesion requires something like religion. Social groups would fall apart if ritual did not periodically reestablish that all members are part of a greater whole.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“To sum up, then, fundamentalism is neither religion in excess nor politics in disguise. It is an attempt to preserve a particular kind of hierarchy based on coalition, when this is threatened by the perception of cheap and therefore likely defection.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“Most accounts of the origins of religion emphasize one of the following suggestions: human minds demand explanations, human hearts seek comfort, human society requires order, human intellect is illusionprone.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“There is no human society without some musical tradition. Although the traditions are very different, some principles can be found everywhere.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“The world over, people seem to be greatly interested in moralizing, regulating, and generally monitoring other people’s behaviors. This is of course very much the case in small-scale groups, where one lives under the tyranny of the cousins, as some anthropologists described it. But in large, modern societies, we also see that people are greatly interested in others’ mores, sexual preferences, the way they marry or what drugs they take. This certainly goes beyond self-interest and raises the question, Is it part of human nature to meddle?”
Pascal Boyer, Minds Make Societies: How Cognition Explains the World Humans Create
“If people feel a conflict between their inclinations and a norm that is followed by everybody else, it is a conflict within their heads.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“A common explanation is that we imagine person-like agents who rule our destinies because this produces a reassuring view of our existence and the world around us. We project human features onto nonhuman aspects of our world because that makes these aspects more familiar and therefore less frightening.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“In evolutionary terms, these explanations of course have it back to front. We do not like sugar because it tastes good and abhor vomit because it is foul smelling. Rather, one is delicious and the other repulsive because we were designed to seek the former and avoid the latter. We evolved in environments in which sugar was rare enough that taking all you could was a good strategy, and vomit was certainly full of toxins and pathogens. Individuals who showed these preferences, a bit more than others, would extract more calories and fewer dangerous substances from their environments. On average, these individuals would have an ever so slightly better chance of having offspring than those others.”
Pascal Boyer, Minds Make Societies: How Cognition Explains the World Humans Create
“If people tell you that ‘religion is faith in a doctrine that teaches us how to save our souls by obeying a wise and eternal Creator of the universe’, these people probably have not travelled or read enough. In many cultures people think that the dead come back to haunt the living but this is not universal. In some places people believe that certain special individuals can communicate with gods or dead people, but this idea is not found everywhere. In some places people assume that humans have a soul which survives after death, but this idea is not universal. When we put forward general explanations of religion, we had better make sure that they apply outside our parish.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Human Instincts That Fashion Gods, Spirits and Ancestors
“That we have evolved capacities for social interaction means that we tend to represent morality and misfortune in a very special way, which makes the connection with supernatural agents extremely easy and apparently obvious.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“Social exchange is certainly among the oldest of human behaviors, as humans have depended on sharing and exchanging resources for a very long time.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“I do not think that people have religion because they relax their usually strict criteria for evidence and accept extraordinary claims; I think they are led to relax these criteria because some extraordinary claims have become quite plausible to them.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“Consider morality. In some places people say that the gods laid down the rules people live by. In other places the gods or ancestors simply watch people and sanction their misdemeanours. In both cases people make a connection between moral understandings (intuitions, feelings and reasoning about what is ethical and what is not) and supernatural agents (gods, ancestors, spirits).”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Human Instincts That Fashion Gods, Spirits and Ancestors
“Having a normal human brain does not imply that you have religion. All it implies is that you can acquire it, which is very different.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“Consider the explanation of thunderstorms as the booming voice of ancestors venting their anger at some human misdemeanour. To explain a limited aspect of the natural world (loud, rolling, thumping sounds during storms) we have to assume a whole imaginary world with superhuman agents (Where did they come from? Where are they?) that cannot be seen (Why not?) in a distant place that cannot be reached (How does the noise come through all the way?), whose voices produce thunder (How is that possible? Do they have special mouths? Are they gigantic?).”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Human Instincts That Fashion Gods, Spirits and Ancestors
“The journalistic cliché that this is the -information age- is misleading if it suggests that in the past, either recent or distant, we did not depend on information.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“People may have finely tuned coalitional capacities, but they do not necessarily have access to how these work. The cues that make some people appear reliable and others less so are computed in ways that often escape conscious attention.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“Religion is not just about flying mountains, talking trees and biological monsters but also about agents whose mental states matter a lot, about connections with predation and death, about links with morality and misfortune.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“Our inference systems may be there because they provide solutions to problems that were recurrent in normal human environments for hundred of thousands of years.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“Humans never invented anything that goes as deep as scientific investigation into understanding why the world is the way it is, nor have we found any other way of seeking knowledge that gets it so consistently right. Doing science is also difficult and frustrating, and in many ways goes against the grain of our spontaneous ways of thinking.”
Pascal Boyer, Minds Make Societies: How Cognition Explains the World Humans Create
“...coalitional dynamics would predict that whatever outsiders do is often little concern to fundamentalists. What matters is what other members of the group are likely to do.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“...the fact that early humans did decorate corpses, lay out the bodies in particular postures or bury people with flowers, aligned horns or tools would support the notion that some ritualization of death is a very ancient human activity.”
Pascal Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought
“Humans were designed by evolution to live in societies, but they may not understand how societies work.”
Pascal Boyer, Minds Make Societies: How Cognition Explains the World Humans Create
“So there was a clear economic rationale for an ancestral division of labor, where individuals of each sex contributed more of what was comparatively advantageous to them. Women of course (and sometimes do) hunt, but men are on average more productive hunters; men can (and often do) gather and process foods, but they are not any more productive than women at the task.”
Pascal Boyer, Minds Make Societies: How Cognition Explains the World Humans Create
“The proper place to start, in order to understand the various things called religion, is in the human capacity to entertain supernatural fantasy. This vast domain of cognition includes daydreaming, fiction, myth, dreams, all produced by what classical psychology would have called the faculty of imagination.”
Pascal Boyer, Minds Make Societies: How Cognition Explains the World Humans Create
“Information is our environment, our niche, and as we are complex animals we constantly transform that niche, sometimes in ways that make it possible to acquire even more information from our surroundings.”
Pascal Boyer, Minds Make Societies: How Cognition Explains the World Humans Create

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