3.8 Article

Modern religion as vestigial structure: an evolutionary account of secularisation

Journal

RELIGION
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/0048721X.2023.2289421

Keywords

Religion; secularisation; diversity; vestigialisation

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This article proposes a new solution to interpret the relationship between religion and secularisation in the context of biological evolution. By expanding on a certain school of thought, the authors outline a theory of religious vestiges and describe the changes in certain religious traits. The article argues that religious diversity is a predictable effect of secularisation.
This article offers a new solution to a theoretical problem facing scholars attempting to interpret religion and secularisation in light of biological evolution. Some scholars argue that the diversity of religious beliefs and rituals in contemporary societies is compatible with secularisation or even facilitates it by weakening the plausibility structures of any one religion. Other scholars argue that religious diversity is not evidence of a decrease in interest in religion but rather shows the ingenuity of religious entrepreneurs. Here we extend the former school of thought by outlining a theory of the vestigilisation of religion. We describe three key characteristics of vestigial structures (increasing variability, decreasing costliness and the appearance of novel functions) and identify shifts in these characteristics in some religious traits. We argue that this supports the idea that religious diversity is a predictable effect of secularisation.

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