Léo Fitouchi, Manvir Singh, Jean-Baptiste André, Nicolas Baumard
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引用次数: 0
摘要
为什么人类要相信有道德的神?主流观点认为,这些信念的进化是因为它们有助于社会发展和促进群体合作。然而,最近的证据表明,对道德神的信仰并不局限于大型社会,也可能不会对合作产生强烈影响。在这里,我们提出,对道德神的信仰的发展,因为个人塑造超自然的信仰,以实现群体内互动的战略目标。人们在控制他人的合作中具有战略利益,或者从他们那里勒索利益,或者为了保护公共利益而获得声誉利益。此外,根据他们的民间心理学,他们认为,如果别人害怕超自然的惩罚,他们就不太可能作弊。因此,人们认同通过教化神来操纵他人合作的信仰。亲社会宗教产生于一种相互监督的动态,在这种动态中,每个个体对同类的合作缺乏信心,试图通过赞同超自然惩罚的信仰来激励他人的合作。我们展示了这种激励结构的变化如何解释了超自然惩罚趋同的各种文化吸引力,包括榨取性宗教,即从被剥削的个人那里榨取利益,亲社会宗教以互利为导向,以及亲社会宗教的形式,即信仰教化神本身就是一种道德责任。我们回顾了这一说法的九个预测的证据,并用它来解释现代社会中亲社会宗教的衰落。只要人们相信超自然惩罚是确保他人合作的必要手段,无论其客观效果如何,这种信念似乎都得到了认可。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
Prosocial religions as folk-technologies of mutual policing.
Why do humans believe in moralizing gods? Leading accounts argue that these beliefs evolved because they help societies grow and promote group cooperation. Yet recent evidence suggests that beliefs in moralizing gods are not limited to large societies and might not have strong effects on cooperation. Here, we propose that beliefs in moralizing gods develop because individuals shape supernatural beliefs to achieve strategic goals in within-group interactions. People have a strategic interest in controlling others' cooperation, either to extort benefits from them or to gain reputational benefits for protecting the public good. Moreover, they believe, based on their folk-psychology, that others would be less likely to cheat if they feared supernatural punishment. Thus, people endorse beliefs in moralizing gods to manipulate others into cooperating. Prosocial religions emerge from a dynamic of mutual monitoring, in which each individual, lacking confidence in the cooperativeness of conspecifics, attempts to incentivize others' cooperation by endorsing beliefs in supernatural punishment. We show how variations of this incentive structure explain the variety of cultural attractors toward which supernatural punishment converges, including extractive religions that extort benefits from exploited individuals, prosocial religions geared toward mutual benefit, and forms of prosocial religion where belief in moralizing gods is itself a moral duty. We review evidence for nine predictions of this account and use it to explain the decline of prosocial religions in modern societies. Supernatural punishment beliefs seem endorsed as long as people believe them necessary to ensure others' cooperation, regardless of their objective effectiveness in doing so. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
Psychological Review publishes articles that make important theoretical contributions to any area of scientific psychology, including systematic evaluation of alternative theories.