Abstract
In “Milvian Bridges in Science, Religion, and Theology: Debunking
Arguments and Cultural Evolution,” Lari Launonen and Aku Visala
engage with an EDA against religious belief that appeals to cultural rather
than biological evolution. According to this EDA, religious beliefs are
unjustified, not because they are generated by biologically shaped cognitive
processes that are unreliable as far as those beliefs are concerned but
because they are generated by cultural processes that select for those
beliefs for their ability to produce prosocial behavior rather than for their
truth sensitivity. Scientific beliefs, by contrast, are truth-sensitive because
their cultural fitness depends on their power to produce accurate predictions.
Their truth sensitivity explains the great amount of convergence on
them that exists across cultures. In response to the EDA in question,
Launonen and Visala argue that the difference between science and religion
is actually more a matter of degree than a matter of kind, that there
is considerable cross-cultural convergence on theistic and Christian
beliefs, and that folk Christian beliefs, just as folk scientific ones, are
truth-sensitive to the extent that they are constrained by expert beliefs.