February 12 is Darwin Day, the birthday of Charles Darwin. In honor of Darwin’s 203rd birthday, let’s look into a term that’s related to both evolution and religion.
Imagine an early hominid in the grasslands of Africa. He hears a rustling in the bushes—is that a cheetah or just the wind? Should he run away or ignore it?
There are two kinds of errors. Suppose our friend thinks it’s a cheetah and runs away … but he’s wrong. This is a false positive. He’s crying wolf. There can be a cost to this—our timid hominid might have been frightened away from a water hole.
But consider the other error. The hominid might think it’s the wind in the tall grass … but he’s wrong. This is a false negative. The cost is obvious—he likely becomes a predator’s lunch.
Given the disproportionate consequences for guessing wrongly, natural selection seems to have selected for caution. As a result, early man may have developed a “hyperactive agency detection device”—an overactive tendency to see agency (that is, intelligence) in nature, even where there is none. The HADD may also be where we detect patterns in things—superstition, concluding that odd events are more than coincidence, or even conspiracy theories.
If this gave early man the ideas of spirits of the dead and gods, this may help explain where early religion came from.
Photo credit: Simon Varwell
Related posts:
- Word of the Day: Irreducible Complexity
- See all the definitions in the Cross Examined Glossary.
Related links:
- “Agent detection,” Wikipedia.
- “Hyperactive Agency Detection Devices and Horny Antelopes,” Genealogy of Religion blog, 5/30/10.
- “Hyperactive Agency Detection,” Neurologica blog, 5/22/10.
- “Type I and type II errors,” Wikipedia.
- “Evolutionary psychology of religion,” Wikipedia.