Beschreibung:
Martin Lang is Assistant Professor at LEVYNA: Laboratory for the Experimental Research of Religion at Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic. His work focuses on the question of whether and how religious beliefs and behaviours facilitate cooperation.
The volume draws on a unique dataset from 15 field sites to answer pressing questions about human religiosity. Building upon the first volume, it presents results from the second phase of Evolution of Religion and Morality project.
Introducing a special issue on phase two of the Evolution of Religion and Morality project1. Material insecurity predicts greater commitment to moralistic and less commitment to local deities: a cross-cultural investigation 2. The religiosity gender gap in 14 diverse societies 3. The moralization bias of gods' minds: a cross-cultural test 4. When god is watching: dictator game results from the Sursurunga of New Ireland, Papua New Guinea 5. Moralistic and local god beliefs and the extent of prosocial preferences on Tanna Island,Vanuatu 6. Moralizing gods, local gods, and complexity in Hindu god concepts: evidence from South India 7. Cigarettes for the dead: effects of sorcery beliefs on parochial prosociality in Mauritius 8. Perceptions of moralizing agents and cooperative behavior in Northeastern Brazil 9. Prosociality and Pentecostalism in the D.R. Congo 10. Do religious and market-based institutions promote cooperation in Hadza hunter-gatherers? 11. The Evolution of Religion and Morality project: reflections and looking ahead 12. Cultural lessons missed and learnt about religion and culture 13. Two questions for the cultural evolutionary science of religion 14. Big comparison 15. Depth vs. breadth: lessons from the Evolution of Religion and Morality project 16. The Evolution of Religion and Morality project: some modest reservations 17. Guiding the evolution of the evolutionary sciences of religion: a discussion