Why Religious Beliefs Are Irrational,
and Why Economists Should Care
by Bryan
Caplan
Larry
Iannaccone and his co-author Rodney Stark once wrote that the belief that
society is getting less religious says "less about empirical fact than it does about secularization faith – a faith that, despite a mountain
of evidence to the contrary, sustains the conviction of many social scientists
that religious institutions must soon
decay..." In short, belief in
secularization is just a religion.
Larry's
critics were, unsurprisingly, not pleased.
To tell people that their non-religious beliefs are just a religion is an
insult. Why is it an insult? There isn't any nice way to answer, so I'll
be blunt. It is an insult because the way
that people form religious beliefs is so intellectually irresponsible that
their conclusions are almost guaranteed to be false. People:
·
accept their
religious beliefs with little or no evidence
·
accept religious
beliefs that are contrary to the evidence
·
accept religious
beliefs without studying competing views
·
are certain
about religious beliefs that are dubious at best, and
·
accept their religious beliefs not because they are
intellectually compelling, but because they are emotionally comforting.
Forming
non-religious beliefs in a religious way is irrational
because forming any beliefs in a
religious way is irrational.
Now
I am not one of those people who says that modern
science has disproven religion. If I
said that, it would imply that two thousand years ago,
there was not solid evidence against
the claims that Jesus was born of a virgin and rose from the dead. But the counter-evidence has always been
overwhelming. Everyone else is born of a non-virgin and stays dead. It is absurd to recognize an exception
without overwhelming evidence, but all we have is the testimony of a few of his
disciples. And yet not only do
Christians believe these things; they often claim to know them with certainty, and get angry if you
disagree. Christianity has always been
irrational, and of course the same goes for Judaism, Islam, Greek mythology,
Satanism, and belief in Santa Claus.
Larry
has won a great deal of attention for his rational choice theory of
religion. But if you look closely, he
doesn't really have a rational choice theory of religion; he has a rational choice theory of group membership. As Larry
occasionally admits, virtually everything that he says about religion applies just
as well to fraternities, chess clubs, and football teams. Yes, belonging to a fraternity has costs and
benefits; yes, competition between fraternities leads to more efficient
outcomes. And both religions and
fraternities have been known to use what Larry calls "bizarre" rules
– such as "You can't drink any alcohol," or "You can only drink
alcohol," to exclude half-hearted members.
What
Larry's research strangely neglects – or, to use his word, "sidesteps" - is the differences
between religions and fraternities. The
most obvious of these, the 800-pound gorilla in the room, is doctrine. Fraternities don't have much of a doctrine; religions
do. To ignore doctrine is to ignore the
very thing that makes religion special – and the main reason why critics of
religion consider it irrational. Furthermore,
to ignore doctrine is to sidestep the deepest objection to Larry's rational
choice view of religion: How can you have a rational choice theory of
irrational belief?
Larry's
neglect of irrational beliefs is glaring because in the last decade economists
have started to take irrationality seriously.
Behavioral economists emphasize, for example, that people overestimate
the riskiness of air travel because plane crashes are vivid and memorable. But if that's irrational, how much more
irrational is it to believe that someone rose from the dead because one old book
says so? Economists who study religion know
enough about irrationality to send Kahneman, Tversky, and Thaler back to the
minors. But – presumably out of respect
for religion – they refuse to swing their bats.
What
would economists learn if they started paying attention to the doctrinal side
of religion? Now is my time for
shameless self-promotion. In a series of
papers on what I call "rational irrationality," I try to handle the deep
objection that Larry sidesteps. I defend
a rational choice theory of irrational belief. The gist of my theory is that people persistently hold wildly irrational
religious beliefs because the material cost is usually very low. In terms of daily life, what difference does
it make if the earth is 6000 years old or 6 billion? So it's not surprising how readily people
shut their eyes to the geological evidence.
In contrast, when the cost of irrationality is high, believers
conveniently forget the teachings of their religion. Lots of religions promise paradise to martyrs,
but adherents eager to die for their beliefs are one-in-a-million.
Is
religion rational? In
an important sense, NO. The
doctrines of every religion are at best extremely improbable, but adherents are
still very certain about them. Religious
beliefs and standard economic models don't fit together. However, rather than ignoring or denying this
incompatibility, economists should deal with it. If I'm right, it's not hard. Yes, religious beliefs are irrational, but
they are so divorced from reality that they are rarely costly. When they do become costly, a few fanatics
lay down their lives, but the overwhelming majority of the faithful open their
eyes and face the fact that it's crazy to bet your life on fairy tales.