• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Supernatural Beliefs Have Featured In Every Society Throughout History. New Research Helps Explain Why

April 5, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

The ConversationReligion is a human universal. For thousands of years, humans have held religious beliefs and participated in religious rituals. Throughout history, every human society has featured some kind of supernatural or religious belief.

Why is religion so prevalent? One reason is that it’s a powerful tool for explanation.

Advertisement

The world is a mysterious place, and was even more mysterious before the rise of modern science. Religion can be a way of making sense of this mystery. This idea dates back to theologians and philosophers such as Henry Drummond and Friedrich Nietzsche, who both supported the “God of the gaps” hypothesis, wherein divine intervention by God is used to explain gaps in scientific knowledge.

For example, ancient Chinese and Korean societies looked to divine intervention to justify changing their rulers, whereas Egyptians, Aztecs, Celtic, and Tiv people used the will of gods to explain celestial cycles.

In the contemporary world, many US Christians viewed the COVID pandemic as a form of divine punishment.

Yet despite these specific examples, we know little about which kinds of phenomena people try to explain using religion. If religion helps us fill gaps in knowledge, what kind of gaps is it most likely to fill?

Advertisement

Our international research team has pursued this question over the past five years, by surveying ethnographies from societies around the world and throughout history.

We found societies are overwhelmingly more likely to have supernatural beliefs that concern “natural” phenomena, rather than “social” phenomena.

Supernatural explanations for natural events

In total, our research sample included historical records from 114 diverse societies.

These ranged from nomadic hunter-gatherer groups in Africa (such as the ǃKung people), to fishing and horticultural societies from the Pacific Islands (such as people from the Trobriand Islands), to large “complex” societies with modern technology and written records (such as the Javanese, Malay and Turkish societies).

Advertisement

For each society, we read through ethnographic texts and identified supernatural explanations that were commonly held across its people. We then identified the source of the explanation.

We were particularly interested in whether supernatural explanations focused on “natural” phenomena – events that had no clear human cause such as disease, natural disasters and drought – or whether they focused on human-caused “social” phenomena such as wars, murder and theft.

We found explanations for all these various phenomena in our survey. For example, the Cayapa people of the Ecuadorian rainforest attributed lightning, a natural phenomenon, to the Thunder spirit, who carried a large sword that glinted when he used it in combat.

And the Comanche people of the great American plains explained the timing of war, a social phenomenon, using dreams from medicine men.

Advertisement

However, our results also revealed a striking gap: supernatural explanations for natural phenomena were much more prevalent than for social phenomena.

In fact, nearly all the societies we surveyed had supernatural explanations for natural phenomena such as disease (96%), natural disasters (92%) and drought (90%). Fewer had supernatural explanations for warfare (67%), murder (82%) and theft (26%).

Supernatural beliefs evolve as societies expand

The global prevalence of naturally focused supernatural explanations is one of the most striking findings from our research. It’s partly surprising because current major religions such as Christianity and Islam are very social institutions.

Contemporary Christians rely on their religious beliefs as more of a social and moral compass, rather than a way to understand the weather. Similarly, the Bible seeks to explain a variety of social phenomena. The story of Cain and Abel explains the origin of murder, while the Book of Joshua explains the supernatural causes of the war that destroyed Jericho.

Rubens painting of Cain slaying Abel
The story of Cain slaying Abel purports to explain the origin of murder. Image credit: The Courtauld Institute of Art, London, public domain via Wikimedia Commons

So how might we explain the contrast between supernatural explanations in modern-day Christianity, and supernatural explanations among traditional societies, as told through historical records? One of our findings could provide a clue.

We found societies develop more supernatural explanations for social phenomena as they get bigger and more complex. More populous societies with currency and land transport were more likely to explain events such as theft and warfare using supernatural principles than small hunter-gatherer and horticultural groups.

We can’t say with certainty why this is. It may be because people know and trust each other less in bigger societies, and this translates to beliefs in witchcraft and sorcery. Or perhaps people in larger complex societies are more concerned about issues such as warfare and theft, and therefore more likely to develop supernatural explanations for them.

Intellectuals such as Edward Tylor and David Hume thought religious beliefs may have originated as a means of explaining natural phenomena.

Advertisement

Although our study can’t shed light on the origins of religion, it does corroborate this idea. But beyond that, it also shows that societies are more likely to turn to religion to make sense of the social world as they get larger and more complex.The Conversation

Joshua Conrad Jackson, Postdoctoral fellow, Kellogg School of Management, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Brock Bastian, Professor, Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, The University of Melbourne

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Tennis-Barty storms into third round as U.S. Open mops up
  2. UNICEF calls for schools to reopen in pandemic-hit nations
  3. Evergrande set to miss second offshore bond coupon payment this month, sources say
  4. Porcine Pacifists Help Break Up Fights Between Fellow Pigs

Source Link: Supernatural Beliefs Have Featured In Every Society Throughout History. New Research Helps Explain Why

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Why Are Car Tires Black If Rubber Is Naturally White?
  • China’s Terra-Cotta Warriors: What You Might Not Know
  • Do People Really Not Know What Paprika Is Made From?
  • There Is Something Odd Going On Inside The Moon, Watch These Snails Lay Eggs Through Their Necks, And Much More This Week
  • Inside Denisova Cave: The Meeting Point Of Neanderthals, Denisovans, And Us
  • What Is The 2-2-2 Rule And Can It Save Your Relationship?
  • Bat Cave Adventure Turns Hazardous: 12 Infected With Histoplasmosis
  • The Real Reasons We Don’t Eat Turkey Eggs
  • Physics Offers A Way To Avoid Tears When Cutting Onions. The Method Can Stop Pathogens Being Spread Too.
  • Push One End Of A Long Pole, When Does The Other End Move?
  • There’s A Vast Superplume Hidden Under East Africa That May Be Causing It To Split
  • Fast Leaf Hypothesis: Scientists Discover Sneaky Way Trees Use Geometry To Hog Nutrients
  • Watch: Rare Footage Captures Two Vulnerable New Zealand Species “Having A Scrap”
  • Beautiful Elk Spotted In Northern Colorado Has 1-In-100,000 Coloring
  • Mesmerizing Cosmic Dust Rainbow Caught By NASA’s PUNCH Mission
  • Endangered “Forgotten” Penguins Lay 1.5 Eggs At A Time In Bizarre Breeding Strategy
  • Watch Spellbinding Footage Of A “Fog Tsunami” Rolling Over Lake Michigan
  • What Happened When Scientists Exposed Human Cells To 5G? Absolutely Nothing
  • How Many Supernovae Are Happening In The Universe Every Second? More Than You Think
  • This View Of The Pacific Will Change The Way You See Planet Earth
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version