Religion and cultural evolution

Zygon 26 (1):27-47 (1991)
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Abstract

The end of the twentieth century marks the slow disintegration of both the Marxist and capitalist socioeconomic theories, inasmuch as both have proven inadequate to meet basic issues of human existence. Their inadequacy rests on the tendency to use the criteria of extrinsic rewards, quantification, production, and consumption to evaluate human personhood and human activity. What is needed is a third alternative to these two systems, one that is based on intrinsic rewards and cultivates internal values rather than production, consumption, and quantification. Religious communities have traditionally been such an alternative and seem to represent an ordered nucleus of information that can counter the inadequacies of Marxism and capitalism. To carry out this function, religions must (1) minimize the trivial differences that set belief systems against one another; (2) support bimodal cultural evolution that allows the old and the new to coexist; and (3) discover the unifying factors that cut across human groups.

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The Selfish Gene. [REVIEW]Gunther S. Stent & Richard Dawkins - 1977 - Hastings Center Report 7 (6):33.
Flow in everyday life: A cross-national comparison.F. Massimini, A. Delle Fave & M. Carli - 1988 - In Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi & Isabella Selega Csikszentmihalyi (eds.), Optimal experience: psychological studies of flow in consciousness. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 288--306.

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