Center for Human Evolution and Behavior, UCM-ISCIII, Madrid, Spain.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2013 Sep;1299:84-90. doi: 10.1111/nyas.12265.
The reasons behind the cultural persistence of religious beliefs throughout human history and prehistory still generate unanswered questions requiring scientific explanations. Within the framework of the cognitive science of religion, this article reviews experimental evidence supporting human predisposition for religious thinking and focuses on the hypothesis that a reason why religious beliefs are successful is their minimal counterintuitiveness. According to this hypothesis, religious concepts or stories would be characterized by containing only a small number of world-knowledge violations, which attracts attention while improving memorizability. We conclude this review by summarizing recent findings from our group using brain electrical activity and delving further into these questions. Our research suggests parallels between the natural tendency of the human cognitive system to use metaphors and the minimal counterintuitiveness of religious beliefs.
宗教信仰在人类历史和史前时期得以文化延续的原因仍存在许多未解之谜,需要科学解释。本文在宗教认知科学的框架内,回顾了支持人类宗教思维倾向的实验证据,并重点关注了这样一种假设,即宗教信仰之所以成功,是因为它们具有最小的反直觉性。根据这一假设,宗教概念或故事的特点是只包含少量的世界知识违背,这在提高可记性的同时引起了人们的注意。我们在总结中还概述了我们小组使用脑电活动的最新发现,并进一步探讨了这些问题。我们的研究表明,人类认知系统使用隐喻的自然倾向与宗教信仰的最小反直觉性之间存在相似之处。