T
Touchstone
Guest
A brain that is capable of imaging things like God, and many of the other superstitions that man is inclined toward is a huge selective advantage. In order to entertain and articulate such superstitions, that brain needs an advanced “theory of mind”, a meta-representational facility for complex and abstract forms of intentionality.Ahhh but what if God had evolved - or ‘produced’ would be another way of putting it - this brain to be able to grasp his existence?
I mean, why make a brain capable of grasping God when we would exist just fine like all the other animals without it?
That means, the brain that has the horsepower to indulge in imaginations of gods and faeries and demons, etc. is a brain that is also capable of developing and applying models of design and intentionality for real things in the world, and this is an advantage that is so huge, it’s hard to overstate in terms of its evolutionary value. If you can imagine abstract relationships like sacrificing a child as propitiation for the “rain god”, you are necessarily capable of thinking in abstract ways about strategies for successful crops in the coming growing season. It’s tragic for the kids that may get butchered in a mistaken perception about killing and future rewards, but that, overall, is a trifling cost compared to what a brain like that can do when it isn’t wandering so far from reasoning and disciplined thinking.
Or, if you reverse it, it’s very hard to imagine a brain that has the evolutionary adaptations that ours do that would not produce superstitions as a matter of course. Superstitions are for the most part low cost/low risk in terms of evolutionary success. They are a trivial tax to pay for having a brain that can plan, identify plans, contrast plans and adjust plans, and identify complex and subtle patterns that are crucial to survival and fecundity. A brain that will dominate the planet will be a brain given to a good amount of superstition, for the same reason a deer lineage that survives to the present day will be very nervous and skittish – bugging out of the meadow even when no practical threat obtains: false positives, in the natural scheme of things, are a great bargain compared to suffering a false negative.
-TS