that mirror those painted in the caves of Africa, Europe and, for that matter, North America. So, we have related our inquiries into
the grouping mechanisms of the human species to the symbolism that forms the
foundation for our very thought processes.
What we believe
we’ve learned from studying the works, each quoted in the bibliography, of a
variety of fields, including among others anthropology, archeology,
evolutionary biology, neurology, physiology, and developmental psychology, is a
sequence of enabling events that have occurred roughly according to the
following progression. Biological organisms were founded on self-contained
instructions embedded in a language that provides for maintenance of a history
of past construction and a blueprint for future construction of the organisms
themselves. These instructions are susceptible to changes that allow for
profound shifts in functional capabilities as well as fine grained adaptation
to environmental conditions. An objective evaluation mechanism enables the
preferential progression of successive collections of entities, each with
incrementally different and adapted facilities for dealing with their physical
ecosystem. These change and evaluation mechanisms ultimately gave rise to the
vertebrates, and hence to mammals, and ultimately to hominids. A characteristic
of mammals is a system of emotion that provides more nuanced response stimuli
to sensory input and consequently facilitates more effective grouping
mechanisms than were found in previous species. When physiological capabilities
in the hominid brain allowed expanded exploitation of, among other facilities,
mirror neuron complexes, the mind was provided at least one, but perhaps more
mechanisms to form, store and easily recall specific contexts for the
sensori-motor experiences that it encountered and subsequently represented
through symbolic expression. This gave rise to the ability to evaluate and
manipulate these symbols through large-scale metaphoric reasoning which in turn
formed the basis of the higher level cognitive processes that support the
ascendance of the species, ultimately giving rise to the sub-species of modern
humans termed Homo sapiens sapiens.
Humans are guided in their interactions with each other and with their physical
ecosystem by a hierarchy of needs. Across generations of individuals, these
needs manifest within the mind based on sensory input processing driven by
brain structure and memory mechanisms. The needs hierarchy guides the
provisioning of the individual mind from infancy through adulthood. Enabled by
physiological and cognitive processes that encompass a combined emotion and
cognition based response, these needs evoke appetites that subsequently give
rise to motor action stimuli. Within this sub-species, religious systems appear
to be consistently recurring examples of the exploitation of these cognitive
mechanisms. Religion in general functions through the exploitation of a trust
infrastructure grounded in a physiological facility of the human mind that allows
for the establishment of an ecstatic altered state of consciousness. This trust
facility in turn enables the development and application of effective
governance mechanisms expressed through language, which we term theologies (a
term that one may consider abusive in the case of non-theistic religions), upon
which are established communities of common interest and shared action. This
allows the assertion of codes of moral and ethical conduct giving rise to
groups whose members interact with some level of efficiency with each other and
with other groups. Members of a group are expected to base their participation
in interactions on these codes to the extent that adequate infrastructures can
establish a personal level of trust sufficient to elicit the appropriate
stimulus for the required actions. When the codes are abrogated, trust is
affected, yielding consequences with potentially deep rooted impacts on the
various levels of the hierarchy of a person’s individual needs.
As with
biological systems operating purely in the physical ecosystem, social
ecosystems encompass a variety of threats to the resident species as well as to
the contained social orders. With respect to religion, certainly there are
charlatans, predators even, that have learned all too well the nuances of
religions; of religious practice and religious mechanisms. Some would argue
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