Project Lead: Dr. Justin L. Barrett
Funded by: Templeton World Charity Foundation at $1.6 million
dollars
Project dates: July 1, 2011 – June 30, 2014
Research in the cognitive
science of religion (CSR) has converged on the thesis that tendencies toward
religious and spiritual thought, feelings, and actions may be part of largely
invariable human nature. The fact that
the world’s largest nation—China—is officially secular, allegedly has a long
history of dominant non-religious philosophies, and reportedly has a large
proportion of atheists challenges the naturalness of religion thesis, doesn’t
it? The proposed project and its
collection of selected sub-projects will address this big question empirically
using state-of-the-art techniques.
The proposed project has
been designed with two aims in mind: (1) scientifically address one of
humanity’s big questions, and (2) create a blue print for a new and growing
body of scholars to continue asking and answering such questions in the world’s
largest nation. The project is comprised
of ten coordinated work-packages (WPs) involving 11 relevant experts, including
collaborations between scholars from Fuller, University of Oxford, Boston
University, Calvin College, Cal State Fullerton, Wuhan University and the
Chinese Academy of Science.
WP1: Teleological and
Intentional Reasoning about the Natural World
WP2: What Constitutes a Person?
WP3: Afterlife and
Pre-life Beliefs
WP4: Revisiting the
Preparedness Hypothesis
WP5: Religious Practices
in Contemporary China
WP6: Religion and moral
development: Contemporary and Historical Perspectives
WP7: Ancient Chinese
Conceptions of Divinity
WP8: Counterintuitiveness
in Communication and Oral Tradition
WP10: On-line research
hub for Chinese CSR
Major outputs of the
project will include an on-line hub, resources, and virtual laboratory for
cross-cultural studies in the cognitive and evolutionary scientific study of
religion; numerous academic journal articles in religious studies, psychology,
anthropology, philosophy, and Chinese studies; at least three books; and a
major multi-site conference.