1st Edition
The Evolution of Religion and Morality Volume I
1.
1. 1. The evolution of religion and morality: a synthesis of ethnographic and experimental evidence from eight societies
Benjamin Grant Purzycki, Joseph Henrich, Coren Apicella, Quentin D. Atkinson, Adam Baimel, Emma Cohen, Rita Anne McNamara, Aiyana K. Willard, Dimitris Xygalatas, and Ara Norenzaya
2. High levels of rule-bending in a minimally religious and largely egalitarian forager population
Coren Lee Apicella
3. Religion and expanding the cooperative sphere in Kastom and Christian villages on Tanna, Vanuatu
Quentin D. Atkinson
4, Religiosity and resource allocation in Marajó, Brazil
Emma Cohen, Adam Baimel, and Benjamin Grant Purzycki
5. Jesus vs. the ancestors: how specific religious beliefs shape prosociality on Yasawa Island, Fiji
Rita Anne McNamara and Joseph Henrich
6. Buddhism, identity, and class: fairness and favoritism in the Tyva Republic
Benjamin Grant Purzycki and Valeria Kulundary
7. Religion and prosocial behavior among the Indo-Fijians
Aiyana K. Willard
8. Big Gods in small places: the Random Allocation Game in Mauritius
Dimitris Xygalatas, Silvie Kotherová, Peter Maňo, Radek Kundt, Jakub Cigán, Eva Kundtová Klocová, and Martin Lang
Biography
Benjamin Grant Purzycki is Associate Professor at Aarhus University’s Department of the Study of Religion, Denmark. His books include Religion Evolving: Cultural, Cognitive, and Ecological Dynamics (with Richard Sosis, 2022) and The Minds of Gods: New Horizons in the Naturalistic Study of Religion (with Theiss Bendixen, 2023).
Joseph Henrich currently Ruth Moore Professor of Biological Anthropology in the Department of Human Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University, Cambridge, USA. His research deploys evolutionary theory to understand how human psychology gives rise to cultural evolution and how this has shaped our species’ genetic evolution. His most recent book is The WEIRDest People in the World: How the West became psychologically peculiar and particularly prosperous.
Ara Norenzayan is professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada, and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. He has published widely on the evolutionary origins of religion, and the psychology of religious diversity in today’s globalized world. He is the author of Big Gods: How Religion Transformed Cooperation and Conflict.






