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Religion Evolved to Help With
Self-Control?
By Psych Central News Editor
Has religion evolved to help people
exercise better self-control? That’s the thesis of new research by
University of Miami professor Michael McCullough, who found that
religious people have more self-control than their less-religious
counterparts.
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The new
research suggests that people who are more religious may be
better at pursuing and achieving long-term goals, not only
individually, but collectively as a religious group.
These findings might also
help explain why religious people tend to have lower rates
of substance abuse, better school achievement, less
delinquency, better health behaviors, less depression, and
longer lives.
In this research project,
McCullough evaluated 8 decades worth of research on
religion, which has been conducted in diverse samples of
people from around the world.
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He found persuasive
evidence from a variety of domains within the social
sciences, including neuroscience, economics, psychology,
and sociology, that religious beliefs and religious
behaviors are capable of encouraging people to exercise
self-control and to more effectively regulate their
emotions and behaviors, so that they can pursue valued
goals.
“The importance of
self-control and self-regulation for understanding human
behavior are well known to social scientists, but the
possibility that the links of religiosity to
self-control might explain the links of religiosity to
health and behavior has not received much explicit
attention,” said McCullough. “We hope our paper will
correct this oversight in the scientific literature.”
Among the most interesting conclusions that the research
team drew were the following: |
- Religious rituals such as
prayer and meditation affect the parts of the human brain that
are most important for self-regulation and self-control;
- When people view their goals
as “sacred,” they put more energy and effort into pursuing those
goals, and therefore, are probably more effective at attaining
them;
- Religious lifestyles may
contribute to self-control by providing people with clear
standards for their behavior, by causing people to monitor their
own behavior more closely, and by giving people the sense that
God is watching their behavior;
- The fact that religious people
tend to be higher in self-control helps explain why religious
people are less likely to misuse drugs and alcohol and
experience problems with crime and delinquency.
McCullough’s review of the research
on religion and self-control contributes to a better understanding
of “how the same social force that motivates acts of charity and
generosity can also motivate people to strap bomb belts around their
waists and then blow themselves up in crowded city buses,” he
explained. “By thinking of religion as a social force that provides
people with resources for controlling their impulses (including the
impulse for self-preservation, in some cases) in the service of
higher goals, religion can motivate people to do just about
anything.”
Among the study’s more practical
implications is that religious people may have at their disposal a
set of unique psychological resources for adhering to their New
Year’s Resolutions in the year to come.
The research paper, which
summarizes the results of their review of the existing science, will
be published in the January issue of Psychological Bulletin. -- Courtesy
of Psychcentral.com
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