Survival of the sacred, with commentary
October 23, 2007
Why religion is winning
D. D'Souza
The vigorous, the healthy and the happy survive and multiply.
– Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species
Religion continues to grow worldwide, and atheists in America and the West
are having a difficult time explaining why. These nonbelievers, most of them
Darwinists, are convinced there must be some biological explanation for why, in
every culture since the beginning of history, man has found and continues to
find solace in religion. Biologist Richard Dawkins confesses that religion poses
a “major puzzle to anyone who thinks in a Darwinian way.”
Here, from the evolutionary point of view, is the problem. Scholars such as
anthropologist Scott Atran presume that religious beliefs are nothing more than
illusions. Atran contends that religious belief requires taking “what is
materially false to be true” and “what is materially true to be false.” For
Atran and others, religion requires a commitment to “factually impossible
worlds.” The question, then, is why would humans evolve in such a way that they
come to believe in things that don't exist?
Philosopher Daniel Dennett states the problem clearly: “The ultimate measure
of evolutionary value is fitness – the capacity to replicate more successfully
than the competition does.” Yet on the face of it religion seems useless from an
evolutionary point of view. It costs time and money, and it induces its members
to make sacrifices that undermine their well-being for the benefit of others,
sometimes total strangers.
Religious people build cathedrals and pyramids that have very little utility
except as houses of worship and burial. The ancient Hebrews sacrificed their
fattest calves to Yahweh, and even today people slaughter goats and chickens on
altars. Religious people sometimes forgo certain foods; the cow is holy to the
Hindus, and the pig unholy to the Muslims. Christians give tithes and financial
offerings in church. The Jews keep holy the Sabbath, as Christians keep Sunday
for church. Religious people recite prayers and go on pilgrimages. Some become
missionaries or devote their lives to serving others. Some are even willing to
die for their religious beliefs.
A critical question
The evolutionary biologist wonders: Why would evolved creatures like human
beings bent on survival and reproduction do things that seem unrelated, even
inimical, to those objectives? This is a critical question, not only because
religion poses an intellectual dilemma for Darwinists, but also because
Darwinists are hoping that by explaining the existence of religion they can
expose its natural roots and undermine its supernatural authority. Biologist
E.O. Wilson writes that “we have come to the crucial stage in the history of
biology when religion itself is subject to the explanations of the natural
sciences.” He expresses the hope that sometime soon “the final decisive edge
enjoyed by scientific naturalism will come from its capacity to explain
traditional religion, its chief competitor, as a wholly material phenomenon.”
So how far have these evolutionary theories progressed in accounting for the
success of religion? In “The God Delusion” Dawkins writes, “The proximate cause
of religion might be hyperactivity in a particular node of the brain.” He also
speculates that “the idea of immortality survives and spreads because it caters
to wishful thinking.” But it makes no evolutionary sense for minds to develop
comforting beliefs that are evidently false. Explains cognitive psychologist
Steven Pinker: “A freezing person finds no comfort in believing he is warm. A
person face to face with a lion is not put at ease by the conviction that he is
a rabbit.” Wishful thinking of this sort would quickly have become extinct as
its practitioners froze or were eaten.
Yet Pinker's own solution to the problem is no better than that of Dawkins.
He suggests there might be a “God module” in the brain that predisposes people
to believe in the Almighty. Such a module, Pinker writes, might serve no
survival purpose but could have evolved as a byproduct of other modules with
evolutionary value. This is another way of saying there is no Darwinian
explanation. After all, if a “God module” produces belief in God, how about a
“Darwin module” that produces belief in evolution?
Still, the question raised by the Darwinists is not a foolish one. Biologists
such as Dawkins and Wilson say there simply must be some natural and
evolutionary explanation for the universality and persistence of religious
belief, and they are right. There is such an explanation, and as a religious
believer I am happy to provide one.
Two creation stories
The Rev. Randy Alcorn, founder of Eternal Perspective Ministries in Oregon,
sometimes presents his audiences with two creation stories and asks them whether
it matters which one is true. In the secular account, “You are the descendant of
a tiny cell of primordial protoplasm washed up on an empty beach
three-and-a-half-billion years ago. You are the blind and arbitrary product of
time, chance and natural forces. You are a mere grab-bag of atomic particles, a
conglomeration of genetic substance. You exist on a tiny planet in a minute
solar system in an empty corner of a meaningless universe. You are a purely
biological entity, different only in degree but not in kind from a microbe,
virus or amoeba. You have no essence beyond your body, and at death you will
cease to exist entirely. In short, you came from nothing and are going nowhere.”
In the Christian view, by contrast, “You are the special creation of a good
and all-powerful God. You are created in his image, with capacities to think,
feel and worship that set you above all other life forms. You differ from the
animals not simply in degree but in kind. Not only is your kind unique, but you
are unique among your kind. Your creator loves you so much and so intensely
desires your companionship and affection that he has a perfect plan for your
life. In addition, God gave the life of his only son that you might spend
eternity with him. If you are willing to accept the gift of salvation, you can
become a child of God.”
Now imagine two groups of people – let's call them the Secular Tribe and the
Religious Tribe – who subscribe to these two world views. Which of the two
tribes is more likely to survive, prosper and multiply? The Religious Tribe is
made up of people who have an animating sense of purpose. The Secular Tribe is
made up of people who are not sure why they exist at all. The Religious Tribe is
composed of individuals who view their every thought and action as
consequential. The Secular Tribe is made up of matter that cannot explain why it
is able to think at all.
Should evolutionists such as Dennett, Dawkins, Pinker and Wilson be
surprised, then, to see that religious tribes are flourishing? Throughout the
world, religious groups attract astounding numbers of followers and religious
people are showing their confidence in their way of life and in the future by
having more children. Despite the sales figures of atheist best-sellers, atheism
remains a minority lifestyle and the largest atheist organizations have only a
few thousand members.
The important point is not just that atheism is unable to compete with
religion in attracting followers, but also that the lifestyle of practical
atheism seems to produce listless tribes that cannot even reproduce themselves.
Sociologists Pippa Norris and Ron Inglehart note that many richer, more secular
countries are “producing only about half as many children as would be needed to
replace the adult population” while many poorer, more religious countries are
“producing two or three times as many children as would be needed to replace the
adult population.” The consequence, so predictable that one might almost call it
a law, is that “the religious population is growing fast, while the secular
number is shrinking.”
Country by country
Russia is one of the most atheist countries in the world and abortions there
out-number live births by a 2-to-1 ratio. Russia's birthrate has fallen so low
that the nation is now losing 700,000 people a year. Japan, perhaps the most
secular country in Asia, is also on a kind of population diet: its 130 million
people are expected to drop to around 100 million in the next few decades.
Canada, Australia and New Zealand find themselves in a similar predicament.
Then there is Europe. The most secular continent on the globe is decadent in
the quite literal sense that its population is rapidly shrinking. Birthrates are
abysmally low in France, Italy, Spain, the Czech Republic and Sweden. The
nations of Western Europe today show some of the lowest birthrates ever
recorded, and Eastern European birthrates are comparably low. Historians have
noted that Europe is suffering the most sustained reduction in its population
since the Black Death in the 14th century, when one in three Europeans succumbed
to the plague. Lacking the strong religious identity that once characterized
Christendom, atheist Europe seems to be a civilization on its way out. The
philosopher Nietzsche predicted that European decadence would produce a
miserable “last man” devoid of any purpose beyond making life comfortable and
making provision for regular fornication. Well, Nietzsche's “last man” is
finally here, and his name is Sven.
Eric Kaufmann has noted that in America, where high levels of immigration
have helped to compensate for falling native birthrates, birthrates among
religious people are nearly twice as high as those for secular people. This
trend has also been noticed in Europe. What this means is that, by a kind of
natural selection, the West is likely to evolve in a more religious direction.
This tendency will likely accelerate if Western societies continue to import
immigrants from more religious societies, whether they are Christian or Muslim.
Thus we can expect even the most secular regions of the world, through the sheer
logic of demography, to become less secular over time.
In previous decades, scholars have tried to give a purely economic
explanation for demographic trends. The general idea was that population was a
function of affluence. Sociologists noted that as people and countries became
richer, they had fewer children. Presumably, primitive societies needed children
to help in the fields, and more prosperous societies no longer did. Poor people
were also believed to have more children because sex provided one of their only
means of recreation. Moreover, poor people are often ignorant about birth
control or don't have access to it. From this perspective, large families were
explained as a phenomenon of poverty and ignorance.
The economic explanation is partly true, but it falls short of the full
picture. Poor people reproduce at higher rates despite having access to birth
control and movie tickets; it turns out they generally want larger families.
Sure, they are more economically dependent on their children, but on the other
hand rich people can afford more children. Wealthy people in America today tend
to have one child or none, but wealthy families in the past tended to have three
or more children. The real difference is not merely in the level of income, it
is that in the past children were valued as gifts from God, and traditional
cultures still view them that way.
Muslim countries, with their oil revenues, are by no means the poorest in the
world and yet they have among the highest birth rates. Practicing Catholics,
orthodox Jews, Mormons and evangelical Protestants are by no means the poorest
groups in America, and yet they have large families. Clearly, religious factors
are at work here. The declining birthrates in the West as a whole are, in
considerable part, due to secularization. The religious motive for childbearing
has been greatly attenuated, and children are now viewed by many people as
instruments of self-gratification. The old biblical principle was “Be fruitful
and multiply.” The new one is “Have as many children as will enhance your lifestyle.”
False prophets
The economic forecasters of the disappearance of religion have proven
themselves to be false prophets. Not only is religion thriving, it is thriving
because it helps people adapt and survive in the world. In his book “Darwin's
Cathedral,” evolutionary biologist David Sloan Wilson argues that religion
provides something that secular society doesn't: a vision of transcendent
purpose. Consequently, religious people develop a zest for life that is, in a
sense, unnatural. They exhibit a hopefulness about the future that may exceed
what is warranted by how the world is going. And they forge principles of
morality and charity that simply make their group more cohesive, adaptive and
successful than groups whose members lack this binding and elevating force. My conclusion is that it is not religion but atheism that requires a
Darwinian explanation. It seems perplexing why nature would breed a group of
people who see no higher purpose to life or the universe. Here is where the
biological expertise of Dawkins, Pinker and Wilson could prove illuminating.
Maybe they can turn their Darwinian lens on themselves and help us understand
how atheism, like the human tailbone and the panda's thumb, somehow survived as
an evolutionary leftover of our primitive past.
COMMENTARY...
Religion 'victory' ignores overpopulation
Regarding “Survival of the sacred/Why religion is winning”
Dinesh D'Souza's commentary cites two opposing views of creation:
evolutionist (“you came from nothing and are going nowhere”) and creationist
(“above all other life forms ... can become a child of God”). The first has
enough archeological and DNA evidence to make viewing primates in the zoo
disturbingly uncomfortable. The second offers the promise of eternal bliss. It
prevails.
Whether D'Souza acknowledges evolution or not, some other facts are
indisputable. Early humans survived on this hostile planet, not through speed or
camouflage or claw. Their advantages were intelligence and tools, and these were
wildly successful. We quickly rose to the top of the food chain. The burden of
intelligence, however, was a nagging fore-knowledge of death. Religion provided
a work-around. We simply believed that for us, death was not permanent, and
buried our loved ones with provisions to go on. Incredible? No. Just as the
lottery demonstrates the triumph of faith over mathematics, religion
demonstrates the triumph of faith over fact.
Most of us will spend our entire existence believing this life is merely the
preliminary round. Religion, the comforting byproduct of intelligence,
sanctifies everything. We go about devoutly over-populating and subduing this
temporary planet, while dreaming of some exclusive paradise. Apparently, D'Souza
approves.
MERLE BORG
San Diego
The thrust of Dinesh D'Souza's commentary proclaiming the coming victory of
religion seems to be that religiosity leads the afflicted to breed in astounding
numbers. Thus the religious will overwhelm the secularists and the human species
will go forward as a divinely inspired community. This presumes quite a bit:
whether the species may ultimately survive, for starters.
Successful species strike a balance between their fecundity and the environment
upon which they depend for their existence. In context of our belated
understanding of the effect humans have had upon this planet, D'Souza's cheering
for sacred propagation may show that religion is greatly counter to the best
interests of humankind. Rather the reverse of what I think he was attempting.
I don't really believe we are headed for extinction. But I know we can make
all of our lives better through an ongoing commitment to understanding the
observed workings of this world and our place in it without reference to a God.
Religion can be wonderful and inspiring but let's not forget it was the very
religious folks at the Spanish Inquisition who brought us water boarding.
JEFF FIELD
San Diego
Your humble Ace Reporter
Bob