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<p class="gmail-p1" style="font-family:arial,helvetica,sans-serif">On Wed, Feb 21, 2018 at 8:29 PM, Keith Henson <<a href="mailto:hkeithhenson@gmail.com">hkeithhenson@gmail.com</a>> wrote:</p>
<p class="gmail-p1" style="font-family:arial,helvetica,sans-serif"><i> > was left with the impression that de Waal is just as mystified as the rest of us about the origin of religions. </i></p>
Children are born knowing nothing so there would be an obvious evolutionary advantage if they tended to believe what their parents or authority figures told them. Most people don't have hallucinations but some do and they will tell children about them and they will tend to believe that its true, particularly if the hallucination is comforting. It is obviously an evolutionary advantage to fear death but we know someday we must face it and that thought is unpleasant, but even if you only half believe there is life after death that would make you feel a little less unhappy.
<p class="gmail-p1">And it wouldn't take long for some to figure out this is a way to gain control over other people. If I can convince you that only I am in contact with the person (God) who can give you this life after death then you will do what I tell you to do. The more people who believe what I say the more powerful I become. And the best way to get people to believe what I say is to teach them it when they are very young, so I set up religious schools. And if I wish to remain in power I would need to violently persecute anybody pushing a hallucination different from the hallucination I'm pushing.</p><p class="gmail-p1"><span style="font-family:arial,sans-serif">But all this stems from the simple fact that genes that tend to make children believe what authority figures tell them propagate through the gene pool faster than genes that don’t. If this theory is correct then we would expect to find a very strong correlation between 2 things that at first sight seem completely unrelated, the particulars of religious belief and geography. And that is exactly what we do see.</span></p> John K Clark</div></div>