Skip to content

Perceiving Minds and Gods: How Mind Perception Enables, Constrains, and Is Triggered by Belief in Gods.

Will M Gervais

Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science July 1, 2013 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1177/1745691613489836 via PubMed

Summary

Belief in gods arises partly as a by-product of the human ability to perceive minds. People naturally represent gods as intentional agents with humanlike mental lives. This mind-perception ability both enables and constrains religious beliefs, influencing individual differences in belief, implicit representations of supernatural agents, and nonreligious experiences. Reminders of gods and cues of social surveillance, such as audiences or cameras, produce similar effects on prosocial behavior, socially desirable responding, and self-awareness. Mind perception is both a cause and a consequence of many religious beliefs.

Study at a glance

Design review
Key finding Mind perception is both a cause and consequence of many religious beliefs.

Abstract

Most people believe in the existence of empirically unverifiable gods. Despite apparent heterogeneity, people's conceptions of their gods center on predictable themes. Gods are overwhelmingly represented as intentional agents with (more or less) humanlike mental lives. This article reviews converging evidence suggesting that this regularity in god concepts exists in part because the ability to represent gods emerges as a cognitive by-product of the human capability to perceive minds. Basic human mind-perception abilities both facilitate and constrain belief in gods, with profound implications for individual differences in religious beliefs, implicit representations of supernatural agents, and the varieties of nonreligious experience. Furthermore, people react similarly to both reminders of gods and cues of social surveillance (e.g., audiences or video cameras), leading to interesting consequences in the domains of prosocial behavior, socially desirable responding, and self-awareness. Converging evidence indicates that mind perception is both cause and consequence of many religious beliefs.

Tags

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment