A passing analysis from an evolutionary standpoint would say NO! Throughout the last few hundred thousand years natural selection has favored genes for tribalism/religion within our species. This has obvious advantages: those with the "tribalism genes" survived and reproduced better than those that didn't. Group selection can easily explain this. Tribalistic groups cooperated better and eradicated rival groups so that their genes spread more quickly.
But what about today? Can we predict that genes for making people religious/tribalistic (genes that promote credulity, divisiveness, etc.) will spread faster than the rival alleles for humanism, skepticism, etc?
On the surface we could say YES! Credulity and blind faith would seem like obviously negative traits but in modern societies there exists "welfare states" in which even individuals who are highly "unfit" naturally can still spread their genes just as easily as those that nature would normally select. We all know that religious, tribalistic, ignorant populations on this planet tend to have radically higher birthrates than populations that exhibit traits that we might find favorable (intelligence, skepticism, humanism, etc.)
So it would seem that alleles for religiosity are here to stay, right? But WAIT!
Religion seems to be dwindling today... why should that be? Well, first of all, it would be very naive to think that a phenomenon as complex as religious propensity is only a product of genetic selection. Let me get that out of the way right now! Today we have global communication and the internet. This allows "memes" to spread far quicker than genes ever could. What this means is that memes for skeptisicm and rationality seem to be winning over the rival memes for religion EVEN THOUGH THIS MIGHT BE GOING AGAINST BIOLOGY!
This is an interesting thought. We humans might eventually grow completely out of religion because of the unrivaled spread of nonreligious memes in our culture but we will likely still carry the genes for religiosity! But religious people today might overpopulate themselves to extinction... Or they might all kill each other in religious wars. Or maybe the genes will still survive and even spread faster.
This makes me wonder: will something else replace religion as the primary vehicle for tribalism in the future? Or will our highly evolved brains help us overcome ignorance and tribalism completely?
What do you guys think?
I personally think that religion is like the genes that cause sickle cell anemia. They used to be advantageous because they give an immunity to malaria but in modern, civilized societies they do more harm than good.
But what about today? Can we predict that genes for making people religious/tribalistic (genes that promote credulity, divisiveness, etc.) will spread faster than the rival alleles for humanism, skepticism, etc?
On the surface we could say YES! Credulity and blind faith would seem like obviously negative traits but in modern societies there exists "welfare states" in which even individuals who are highly "unfit" naturally can still spread their genes just as easily as those that nature would normally select. We all know that religious, tribalistic, ignorant populations on this planet tend to have radically higher birthrates than populations that exhibit traits that we might find favorable (intelligence, skepticism, humanism, etc.)
So it would seem that alleles for religiosity are here to stay, right? But WAIT!
Religion seems to be dwindling today... why should that be? Well, first of all, it would be very naive to think that a phenomenon as complex as religious propensity is only a product of genetic selection. Let me get that out of the way right now! Today we have global communication and the internet. This allows "memes" to spread far quicker than genes ever could. What this means is that memes for skeptisicm and rationality seem to be winning over the rival memes for religion EVEN THOUGH THIS MIGHT BE GOING AGAINST BIOLOGY!
This is an interesting thought. We humans might eventually grow completely out of religion because of the unrivaled spread of nonreligious memes in our culture but we will likely still carry the genes for religiosity! But religious people today might overpopulate themselves to extinction... Or they might all kill each other in religious wars. Or maybe the genes will still survive and even spread faster.
This makes me wonder: will something else replace religion as the primary vehicle for tribalism in the future? Or will our highly evolved brains help us overcome ignorance and tribalism completely?
What do you guys think?
I personally think that religion is like the genes that cause sickle cell anemia. They used to be advantageous because they give an immunity to malaria but in modern, civilized societies they do more harm than good.
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