Nice to see someone calling out the academia on their blind spot...

http://www.civilpolitics.org/content/civil-exploration-religion

A Civil Exploration of Religion

Religion affects everything – and I mean everything – we do. From debates about 
global warming or evolution to disagreements about how to educate children, 
there’s no area of social living that isn’t deeply influenced by our religious 
commitments. Unfortunately, it’s often difficult to untangle all the different 
ways that religious beliefs influence social, moral, and practical viewpoints, 
in part because these issues can be so polarizing. But just because something 
is difficult doesn’t mean it’s not worth trying! Our Boston University research 
team has developed a new set of religion surveys that will shed much-needed 
light on people’s religious, spiritual, and moral convictions – particularly 
along the all-important liberal-conservative dimension. We'd you to check them 
out at ExploringMyReligion.org.

These surveys represent a new direction in research because for a long time, 
many social scientists who studied religion wrote from a skeptical – no, a 
downright disapproving – perspective. The majority of psychologists, influenced 
in part by the staunchly this-worldly writings of Freud and his followers, 
assumed that religious belief was a kind of mental disturbance, a symptom of 
repressive neurosis. Critical theorists, rooted in the Marxist tradition, saw 
religion as little more than a tool for social oppression. And many social 
scientific surveys were subtly biased against religion, so that people with 
strong religious beliefs showed up as being authoritarian, reactionary, or 
unintelligent.

In a way, these academic prejudices regarding religion reflected the broader 
social trend, identified most famously by sociologist James Hunter in 1991, of 
increasingly divergent worldviews in American public culture. Progressives, who 
according to Hunter saw society as constantly improving and who operated with a 
more scientific, less religiously informed viewpoint, formed one camp. The 
“orthodox,” or traditionalists, made up the opposite camp. Traditionalists were 
more conservative, saw human society as depending on God for well-being, and 
understood the world in terms of sacred relationships rather than value-neutral 
scientific descriptions.

Interestingly, both progressives and traditionalists increasingly looked the 
same across denominations – that is, by the mid-20th century, a socially 
conservative Methodist had more in common with a conservative Catholic or 
Mormon than with a liberal Methodist peer. And certain areas of society found 
themselves much more aligned with one or the other viewpoint – academia, for 
example, was strongly progressivist in its outlook, while farmers and other 
agricultural workers were often traditionalists. In this increasingly polarized 
social environment, religion and tradition became a flashpoint for what Hunter 
famously called “the culture wars."

Like a real military conflict, the culture wars encouraged people to demonize 
and ridicule people on the other side. Thus, for example, religion was widely 
derided within the largely progressive world of social science, while religious 
conservatives irresponsibly caricatured media personalities as out-of-touch 
“Hollywood liberals” who lacked morals or personal responsibility. Within 
religious denominations, the more progressive members rolled their eyes at what 
they saw as the conservatives’ blind adherence to tradition, while the 
conservatives mistrusted the progressivists’ willingness to accept secular 
lifestyles and assumptions.

But in the face of all this mistrust and scorn, there have also been reasons 
for optimism. Starting in recent decades, a small group of researchers in the 
evolutionary and cognitive sciences began focusing their lenses on religion. 
What they’ve found has been a potential game-changer when it comes to the 
culture wars, in no small part because it helps make sense of religion from a 
secular viewpoint. Many of these researchers – for example, evolutionary 
biologist David Sloan Wilson – found themselves convinced that religion was 
actually adaptive, helping humans to form strong, stable groups throughout 
history using ritual and other tools.

Among these researchers has been New York University social psychologist 
Jonathan Haidt, who has gained recognition in the past few years for helping 
develop the innovative “moral foundations theory.” Haidt’s theory posits that 
conservatives and liberals emphasize different basic moral instincts. The 
instincts themselves are innate to human social cognition, but traditionalists 
and progressives emphasize them differently and for different – valid – 
reasons. Importantly, Haidt’s research transformed him from a dyed-in-the-wool 
liberal (and atheist) into someone who claims to be much more open to 
conservative perspectives (but who’s still an atheist).

Between shifting views in the social sciences and increasing sophistication in 
the scientific study of religion, the debates about religion and its role in 
human societies, history, and ideology are becoming rapidly more complex, 
sophisticated, and interesting. Writers are bringing concrete evidence to bear 
on their various positions. And it’s becoming less professionally risky for 
serious researchers to portray religion as more than simply a psychological 
aberration or set of delusions (although certainly some people still see it 
that way).

In this climate, the groundwork has been laid for a new model of religious, 
moral, and social attitudes that could go beyond the traditional “liberal is 
good, conservative is bad” view that has dominated in academic circles. If 
religion – often associated with more conservative social orientations – could 
potentially be adaptive, help communities function, or work to improve people’s 
health, then perhaps there is more to the religion-society relationship than a 
simple right-wrong dichotomy. Religion’s negative facets, including tribalism, 
religious violence, and oppression of women, might be balanced against its 
other, more agreeable, features to produce a nuanced model that does not 
demonize or valorize religiosity – or secularism.

The kind of research seen in the work of Haidt, D.S. Wilson, and others 
represents a new attitude toward religion in the academy, one that tries to be 
both rigorous and open, ideologically neutral yet aware of the flaws and 
benefits of different orientations. The dynamic religion quizzes we’ve put 
online for anyone to take at ExploringMyReligion.org are examples of this new 
attitude. We believe that we can actually learn something about religion, 
rather than just endlessly argue about it. And we can do so in a way that 
doesn’t pit liberal against conservative, progressive against orthodox, or 
secular against religious – instead, we want to learn the benefits, drawbacks, 
and basic assumptions of these different worldviews, so that our cultural 
conversation can start moving forward.



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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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