Religious rituals are found all over the world. Some cultures engage in extreme religious rituals in which individuals take on forms of bodily harm to demonstrate their devotion. Such rituals entail excessive costs in terms of physical pain and effort, but the equivalent societal benefits remain unclear. The field experiment reported here examined the interplay between extreme rituals and moral behavior. Using a die-roll task to measure honest behavior, we tested whether engaging or observing others engaging in extreme ritual activities affects subsequent moral behavior. Strikingly, the results showed that extreme rituals promote moral behavior among ritual observers, but not among ritual performers. The discussion centres on the moral effe...
Recent evidence indicates that priming participants with religious concepts promotes prosocial shari...
A common finding across many cultures has been that religious people behave more prosocially than l...
Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Moralizing religions encourage people to anticipate supernatural punis...
Although scientists agree that replications are critical to the debate on the validity of religious ...
Reputation monitoring and the punishment of cheats are thought to be crucial to the viability and ma...
We examine empirical evidence for religious prosociality, the hypothesis that religions facilitate c...
Debates about the causal relationship between religion and morality continue to be inconclusive, des...
The study of ritual has focused on its ability to facilitate feelings of connection, enhancing the s...
Extreme ritual practices involving pain and suffering pose significant risks such as injury, trauma,...
The emergence of large-scale cooperation during the Holocene remains a central problem in the evolut...
There are compelling reasons to expect that cognitively representing any active, powerful deity moti...
Does moral culture contribute to the evolution of cooperation? Here, we examine individuals' and com...
Anthropologists have long speculated that collective group rituals endure due to their functional ca...
Previous work on religion’s potential to suppress behaviours that threaten sustained cooperation is ...
Recent evidence indicates that priming participants with religious concepts promotes prosocial shari...
A common finding across many cultures has been that religious people behave more prosocially than l...
Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Moralizing religions encourage people to anticipate supernatural punis...
Although scientists agree that replications are critical to the debate on the validity of religious ...
Reputation monitoring and the punishment of cheats are thought to be crucial to the viability and ma...
We examine empirical evidence for religious prosociality, the hypothesis that religions facilitate c...
Debates about the causal relationship between religion and morality continue to be inconclusive, des...
The study of ritual has focused on its ability to facilitate feelings of connection, enhancing the s...
Extreme ritual practices involving pain and suffering pose significant risks such as injury, trauma,...
The emergence of large-scale cooperation during the Holocene remains a central problem in the evolut...
There are compelling reasons to expect that cognitively representing any active, powerful deity moti...
Does moral culture contribute to the evolution of cooperation? Here, we examine individuals' and com...
Anthropologists have long speculated that collective group rituals endure due to their functional ca...
Previous work on religion’s potential to suppress behaviours that threaten sustained cooperation is ...
Recent evidence indicates that priming participants with religious concepts promotes prosocial shari...
A common finding across many cultures has been that religious people behave more prosocially than l...
Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Moralizing religions encourage people to anticipate supernatural punis...