Zach Lykins

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Implicit in these debates is the assumption that beliefs are the central cause of religious participation.10 And yet, as we’ve seen throughout the book, beliefs aren’t always in the driver’s seat. Instead, they’re often better modeled as symptoms of the underlying incentives, which are frequently social rather than psychological. This is the religious elephant in the brain: We don’t worship simply because we believe. Instead, we worship (and believe) because it helps us as social creatures.
The Elephant in the Brain: Hidden Motives in Everyday Life
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