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Religion and Cognitive Science: Cognitive Constraints and Top-down Causation James A. Van Slyke Fuller Theological Seminary Cognitive Science of Religion 1990s – Decade of the Brain – Success of Cognitive Sciences – New Discoveries in Neuroscience Evolutionary Theory – Strong research program – Insights from evolution applied to human behavior Cognitive Science of Religion Evolutionary Psychology Brain consists of cognitive modules – Solve adaptive problems of our ancient ancestors – Swiss army knife – Each module is a ‘tool’ Agency Detection Device Theory of Mind – “Stone Age Mind” Evolutionary Psychology Evolutionary ancestors – Pleistocene Era – 1.8 to 11,000 years before recorded history – Adaptive problems faced Sexual selection – Facial symmetry – Waist to hip Ratio Kin Selection – Altruism Predator Detection Minimally Counterintuive Hypothesis (MCI) Boyer (2001) – Religion Explained – Process information according to “intuitive ontology” contained in templates PERSON NATURAL OBJECT TOOL ANIMAL PLANT Minimally Counterintuitive Hypothesis (MCI) Religious concepts retain intuitive ontological categories while violating certain expectations – Omniscient God = [PERSON] + special cognitive powers – Visiting ghosts = [PERSON] + no material body – Reincarnation = [PERSON] + no death + extra body available – Listening statue = [TOOL] + cognitive functions – Guardian River = [NATURAL OBJECT] + incest abhorrence Minimally Counterintuitive Hypothesis (MCI) Religious concepts share a similar conceptual structure across cultures They are minimally counterintuitive (MCI) – Natural kinds with a limited number of unusual properties (i.e. expectation-violations) Being MCI makes them attention-grabbing, easy to remember, and thus “fit” for cultural transmission. Theological Incorrectness But concepts with many unusual properties (expectation violations) are hard to recall. This is the case with theological concepts, which are “maximally counterintuitive” (MXCI) : – “God is an omnipresent, omnipotent, omnisicent essence with multiple forms derived from the same substance that has no creation or cessation point.” Theological Incorrectness Hypothesis Definition – Barrett (1999) Religious cognition which requires quick recall relies on intuitive knowledge Intuitive Knowledge Theology Doctrine Basic Concepts Theological Concepts Concrete/Simple Decreasing Cognitive Demands Abstract/Complex Theological Incorrectness Hypothesis Example narrative: – A boy was swimming alone in a swift and rocky river. The boy got his left leg caught between two large, gray rocks and couldn’t get out. Branches of trees kept bumping into him as they hurried past. He thought he was going to drown and so he began to struggle and pray. Though God was answering another prayer in another part of the world when the boy started praying, before long God responded by pushing one of the rocks so the boy could get his leg out. The boy struggled to the river bank and fell over exhausted. Cognitive Science of Religion Explicit religious beliefs do not reflect actual beliefs – Implicit cognitive systems – by-product of unconscious, implicit cognitive systems Problems of Reduction Bottom-up account of religious cognition Explicit Processing Theology/Doctrine Theological Concepts Basic Concepts Implicit Processing Intuitive Knowledge Bottom-up Causation Cognitive Modules Intuitive Ontology Emergent Cognitive Systems Rather than a Swiss Army knife, cognitive systems are flexible means of representation Representational systems dependent on environmental feedback Formation of patterns of neuronal activation Stone Age Mind or Symbolic Mind? Terrence Deacon (“Symbolic Species” – 1997) – Human cognitive processing has become “front heavy” – Brain structure evolved connections from the prefrontal cortex throughout the brain – Enabled the symbolic nature of human processing, abstract concepts, and intelligence Co-evolutionary Processes Language Development involved changes in cultural transmission and the brain – Languages became “user-friendly” – easy to learn by children – The brain has adapted in order to make it easy to learn language – “front heavy” Parallel Distributed Processing Word meaning and Inputs language structure are internalized patterns in PDP networks Neurons in the brain connect with one another to form networks Outputs The brain learns by modifying certain connections in response to feedback Religious cognition is not based on intuitive ontology, but association networks – Networks built up over time Top-down Causation Top-down Processing – information processing guided by higher-level mental processes – as when we construct perceptions drawing on our experience and expectations Top-down Causation – Using higher level mental processes (i.e. memories, concepts, etc.) to direct behavior Top-down Processes Ambiguous Figure – Old or Young Woman? Top-down Processes Dr. Emily Grossman – Form from motion Mind Externalized “Being There” – Andy Clark (1997) – Cognition is not just “in the head” but relies on “external scaffolding” Social institutions, religious traditions, texts act as a form of external memory that we rely on for religious cognition Partial Programs – Cognitive Programs are the product of initial parameters set by genetics and normal brain development – But, also develop according to environmental feedback, which helps to “write” the program A Different Model Cognitive Scaffolding Theology/Doctrine Symbolic Processing Religious Traditions Top-down Causation Theological Concepts Emergence Basic Concepts Partial Programs Bottom-up Causation Implications Implicit cognitive systems are only part of the story of human cognition Higher level semantic systems (concepts, beliefs, etc.) also have a role to play in behavior and cognition Cognitive Science of Religion only provides a partial picture