Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by Crossref.
Farias, Miguel
van Mulukom, Valerie
Kahane, Guy
Kreplin, Ute
Joyce, Anna
Soares, Pedro
Oviedo, Lluis
Hernu, Mathilde
Rokita, Karolina
Savulescu, Julian
and
Möttönen, Riikka
2017.
Supernatural Belief Is Not Modulated by Intuitive Thinking Style or Cognitive Inhibition.
Scientific Reports,
Vol. 7,
Issue. 1,
Van Eyghen, Hans
2021.
Biases for Evil and Moral Perfection.
Religions,
Vol. 12,
Issue. 7,
p.
521.
Nichols, Ryan
Slingerland, Edward
Nielbo, Kristoffer Laigaard
Kirby, Peter
and
Logan, Carson
2021.
Supernatural agents and prosociality in historical China: micro-modeling the cultural evolution of gods and morality in textual corpora.
Religion, Brain & Behavior,
Vol. 11,
Issue. 1,
p.
46.
Target article
The cultural evolution of prosocial religions
Related commentaries (27)
A developmental perspective on the cultural evolution of prosocial religious beliefs
Are gods and good governments culturally and psychologically interchangeable?
Authoritarian and benevolent god representations and the two sides of prosociality
Awe: A direct pathway from extravagant displays to prosociality
Big Gods: Extended prosociality or group binding?
Clarity and causality needed in claims about Big Gods
Coerced coordination, not cooperation
Credibility, credulity, and redistribution
Cultural evolution and prosociality: Widening the hypothesis space
Divorcing the puzzles: When group identities foster in-group cooperation
Even “Bigger Gods” developed amongst the pastoralist followers of Moses and Mohammed: Consistent with uncertainty and disadvantage, but not prosocality
Explaining the success of karmic religions
Hell of a theory
Let us be careful with the evidence on mentalizing, cognitive biases, and religious beliefs
Memes and the evolution of religion: We need memetics, too
Mind God's mind: History, development, and teaching1
Monotheism versus an innate bias towards mentalizing
Moralizing gods revisited
Moralizing religions: Prosocial or a privilege of wealth?
Projecting WEIRD features on ancient religions
Prosociality and religion: History and experimentation
Recognizing religion's dark side: Religious ritual increases antisociality and hinders self-control
Religion promotes a love for thy neighbour: But how big is the neighbourhood?
Self-control, cultural animals, and Big Gods
The functions of ritual in social groups
The prosocial benefits of seeing purpose in life events: A case of cultural selection in action?
Why would anyone want to believe in Big Gods?
Author response
Parochial prosocial religions: Historical and contemporary evidence for a cultural evolutionary process