Games Scientists and Theologians Play

Last week the debate between evolutionary biologists who promote adaptive explanations of belief in God/Gods and those who understand it as a by-product was introduced in a 2-in1 post. Besides the differences between the two approaches, both sides necessarily share a naturalistic approach to religion in order to make its phenomenon experimentally accessible to scientific methods. If that strategy is successful then religious beliefs about divine beings were apparently caused by natural processes rather than real divine beings or, worse for religious people, were random unnecessary by-products of other crucial biological processes. Religion is like leftover trash that can be done away with. So what is someone committed to belief in God to do? Here is the second 2-in1 post to wrap up different religious responses to the scientific data.

http://magicanimation.com/misc/SidneyHarris_MiracleWeb.jpgOne reaction to this scientific debate over religious beliefs as adaptive or evolutionary by-products has been to go over the science very carefully. One hypothesis being offered is that scientists confuse holes in scientific explanation with religion. Thus, when biologists came up against human culture and societal cooperation and could not immediately discover evolutionary causes for the phenomena, theism was turned to for a compelling story. This strikes some as ad hoc and improperly scientific. No explicit hypothesis about the evolutionary nature of religion drove such theories. Rather, theism was thrown in because it looked like a neat fit with other scientific data. Thus, religion has not been explained away and theism has survived this explanation. Rather, scientists are just amusing themselves with their fun theories. However, it should also be noted that this line of critique, if examined on purely naturalistic terms, would favor the by-product biological theory. If those offering adaptation hypotheses have identified the wrong filler for their lack of an explanation for human cooperation, biologists researching in the by-product paradigm will have the upper hand in the future since progress in their theory refuses to rely on religion as a way of explaining biological and cultural advances. Some have noticed this open door to scientific progress against theism and have therefore suggested a reconstruction of theology rather than the defense of its current state so that it has a better chance of offering satisfying religious claims into the future.

A completely opposite approach to defending religion has been adopted by Gordon Kaufman. He cuts out the by-product critique of theology by accepting the adaptation theory in which anthropomorphic beliefs are incorrectly but understandably extended to natural phenomena. This scientific theory fits well with Kaufman’s own critique of much of Christian theology throughout history. He also understands it as an anthropocentric story in which common-sense ideas about humans were projected onto God. This God could then be focused on at the exclusion of the world and its changes. It seems the options are theological supernaturalism disconnected from but supposedly explaining the natural world or the atheistic embrace of naturalism by accepting the messiness of reality. However, there is another option.

http://www.journey.ro/images/avucici.jpgKaufman tries to give a natural interpretation of the Christian religion that is nonetheless compelling to religious believers by giving theology a different focus. He argues the source of this reconstruction is found once it is realized and accepted that humans are “biohistorical beings” who arose from these evolutionary processes (In the Beginning…Creativity, 42). Once we are conscious of this fact, we have acknowledged that “purposive patterns” exist in the world. Such patterns are usually short lived (most species resulting from evolutionary advances are now extinct) and do not denote one overarching plan given to the universe by a designer, but they are real. Thus, God should be identified with the serendipitous creativity manifest in the world of which human existence is proof, giving religion real grounding in the world as opposed to having a basis in fictitious projections onto natural events.

An implicit distinction between purposiveness and purpose is embedded in Kaufman’s affirmation of God as serendipitous creativity. Events can display directionality without having a final goal solidified from the outset. So the general character of purposive behavior exists but cannot be controlled. The purposiveness of reality can be noticed and appreciated but not coerced (This was basically Immanuel Kant’s argument in the third critique of judgment where he distinguished between noticing apparent purpose in every aspect of the world and teleology as the fulfillment of a planner’s design. The former is unavoidable in human thought, but it is not possible to know if the latter truly exists). On top of unavoidable purposiveness Kaufman places the fact of change in order to focus creation theology on mystery.

Change combined with purposiveness means the static nature of reality is not the proper theological focus. Rather, static facts are fragile and tenuous while novelty is the overarching fact of life. So Kaufman is aligned with negative theology and, by extension, negative science. Both are open to embrace and understand what is not yet in existence and thus cannot be currently described or experienced. They are open-ended research processes. God as creativity fills this negative role by being the greatest mystery of life due to novelty constantly resulting from creative processes. While beings result from creativity, it cannot be predicted what novel realities will appear in the future. Mystery and novelty together reveal many different and growing levels of reality. God identified with creativity then becomes intimately connected with the world in its current state as well as whatever it becomes in the future. Thus, novelty comes from inside the world, not from without. As a consequence, creativity already related to internal workings of the universe does not have to break physical laws or reject biological explanations to relate to that universe.

The problem facing Kaufman’s approach is that creativity is spoken of in such general terms that it may not make any difference what novelties result in the world. Creativity is so benign that is explains nothing while being found everywhere. “The concept of creativity in no way explains how or why new realities have come into being; rather, it simply gives a name to the profoundly mysterious fact that novel realities have come into existence in the course of time” (In the Beginning…Creativity, 71). If it does not matter what results from creativity, is this approach nothing more than the exhalation of evolutionary processes to the “objects” of religious worship? Is evolution deified? This appears to be the conclusion Daniel Dennett is drawing from such tactics. Watch the last 15 minutes or so of the video linked to in that story and notice the paradox in the final paragraphs of the review.

What if God was One of Us?

A hectic schedule this month means our first two posts about the science of belief formation and how it can be applied to religion will be covered in one post today. The story will be completed next week.

http://www.the-atheist.com/wp-content/themes/NewTA/God.pngWhy do so many Christians understand God in a way similar to other human agents, only infinitely more wise, powerful, and unseen? Besides what it means for religion, scientists have been figuring out how beliefs are formed in general. A specific oddity that has arisen from many studies is that we are very good at attributing agency to events we witness. To some scientists this ease of attributing events to some intelligent cause has suggested a way of explaining theistic beliefs.

I will be focusing this month’s topic on scientists, philosophers, and theologians who appear in the wonderful book The Believing Primate. The book is fair to the science, treating it on its own before bringing up those with objections. The science I am focusing on this week comes largely from Justin Barrett and Joseph Bulbulia who, in my opinion, are offering some of the better adaptation hypotheses (to be explained below) about religious belief currently available. The current scientific debate is between their approach and those who see belief in agency as a by-product of other biological mechanisms rather than an adaption (Dawkins is in this camp). I will give the information in the form of a dialogue, though. I tried a shorter version of this on colleagues once and it went over well. Besides, science can be playful and fun; it is not just boring facts.

Surprising claim #1: All life is based on selfish genes replicating at the expense of others. Or, otherwise state, there are evolutionary reasons for actions that might appear to transcended biological restrictions, such as altruism. Many animals cooperate, and the mutual benefit that results is still selfish. Kin can be favored in action, kind acts will be returned, reputation will increase, or cooperation can signify exceptional fitness. For example, the mother Stegodyphus spider commits matriphagy in which she allows offspring to consume her body so they have the energy to survive and pass on her genes. Vampire bats form buddy systems in which some bats share blood with sick bats or those unable to find food and the recipients of the gift later return the favor when the original gift giver is ill or unsuccessful at hunting.

Theology student: But humans show “strong reciprocity” (The Believing Primate, 28) and cooperate with people they will never meet again.

Scientist: Cooperation must be enforced by punishing free-riders that benefit from a group without giving back to that group. Furthermore, defectors who notice free-riders but refuse to punish them add another layer to the problem. Resources have to be spent seeking out free-riders and defectors so that other individuals will not be tempted to leech off others or let leechers off without punishment. Religion can provide a universal external norm in the form of supernatural retribution.

Theology student: So God is real and causes fear of retribution, right?

Scientist (Justin Barrett): Watch this video and then tell me what happened.

embedded by Embedded Video

It is fortunate for religious sanctions that people readily attribute intentionality to events that benefit or harm them. That is the consistent result from those who watch this famous Heider and Simmel video. A hypersensitive agency detection device (HADD) activates in the presence of ambiguous or incomplete information. This device also serves the core need of species in an evolutionary world, survival. For example, assuming a rustle of wind in the grass is a tiger and reacting by running has little cost compared to being killed.

Joseph BulbuliaSurprising claim #2 (adaptation hypothesis of Bulbulia): Religion involves “contrived fictions” with “self-deception over their reality” (The Believing Primate, 45), but such fictions are adaptive. Individuals will be motivated to please supernatural agents who support social norms.

Theology student: Well then couldn’t it be the case that cognitive endowments make it possible to understand God? Beliefs in God are common due to properties of the mind. That fact supports religion, not atheism.

Surprising claim #3 (the religious test): Religious beliefs only spread if they are not horses “born of a goldfish mated with a bullfrog” (The Believing Primate, 83).

Scientist: Minimally counter-intuitive concepts, MCI, can be embraced reflectively if they violate a minimal number of non-reflective beliefs. That is, fictitious beliefs can be embraced if they are not as outright ridiculous as horsefishfrog. Luckily for supernatural agents, it is easy for individuals to transfer mental properties to artifacts in a simple transition. Based on what we know about universals in religion, belief in supernatural agent(s) is a naturally inborn conviction. However, that is far from belief in one true God. Some religious beliefs (Trinity and God’s non-temporality) do not appear to have such non-reflective support.

Theology student: What about life after death? That should escape your empirical method.

Scientist: You might think so, but no. Humans possess common-sense substance dualism. Naïve biology relates to reasoning about bodies and theory of mind (TOM) to reasoning without bodies and trying to figure out the intentions of other people. HADD + TOM = agency after death.

Claim competing with #2 (by-product hypothesis of Dawkins): Cultural inheritance has oblique (from unrelated adults to children) and horizontal (from peers) aspects. Among these options individuals can choose information that seems attractive but is really harmful. Dawkins understands religion as parasitic. There is no reason to engage in costly rituals for illusions. So religion is a by-product of preexisting biological systems evolved for understanding the social world. We see intention when there is really “artifact or accident” (121). This means we have a tendency to pervert natural selection because of our promiscuous teleology. Natural developments are incorrectly understood as designed by God.

Theology student: Still, these claims are based on early forms of religion, not modern theology.

http://dunedinschool.files.wordpress.com/2009/11/dawkins1.jpgRichard Dawkins, after barging into the room: If religions originated as adaptations or by-products, they are false human productions. Modern theological adaptations are still based on initial nonsense and are still false!

Cowering theology student: I wonder if theology has arrived at any novel truths…