cover image Big Gods: How Religion Transformed Cooperation and Conflict

Big Gods: How Religion Transformed Cooperation and Conflict

Ara Norenzayan. Princeton Univ., $29.95 (272p) ISBN 978-0-691-15121-2

Why did Christianity and Islam flourish while other faiths faded into obscurity?%C2%A0What binds complex societies together and enables strangers to live cooperatively within them?%C2%A0Norenzayan, a professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia, claims that these two questions answer each other.%C2%A0Religions that have omniscient "Big Gods" who monitor and punish adherents for moral transgressions gave rise to large-scale societies of strangers out of small groups of related hunter-gatherers. Ranging across quantitative studies, historical cross-cultural examples, theological texts, and the practices of believers, Norenzayan convincingly argues that religions with Big Gods are successful because they generate a sense of being watched and regulated, require extravagant displays of commitment that weed out religious impostors, and encourage solidarity and trust. While the author only briefly sketches why Big Gods incite war and violence, he speculates that we may be on the verge of cooperative societies without God.%C2%A0Prosperous and peaceful Scandinavian countries with a majority of atheists rely on secular institutions to enforce cooperation. They "climbed the ladder of religion, and then kicked it away," he writes. (Sept.)