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RETRACTED ARTICLE: Complex societies precede moralizing gods throughout world history

Matters Arising to this article was published on 07 July 2021

A Retraction to this article was published on 07 July 2021

This article has been updated

Abstract

The origins of religion and of complex societies represent evolutionary puzzles1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8. The ‘moralizing gods’ hypothesis offers a solution to both puzzles by proposing that belief in morally concerned supernatural agents culturally evolved to facilitate cooperation among strangers in large-scale societies9,10,11,12,13. Although previous research has suggested an association between the presence of moralizing gods and social complexity3,6,7,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18, the relationship between the two is disputed9,10,11,12,13,19,20,21,22,23,24, and attempts to establish causality have been hampered by limitations in the availability of detailed global longitudinal data. To overcome these limitations, here we systematically coded records from 414 societies that span the past 10,000 years from 30 regions around the world, using 51 measures of social complexity and 4 measures of supernatural enforcement of morality. Our analyses not only confirm the association between moralizing gods and social complexity, but also reveal that moralizing gods follow—rather than precede—large increases in social complexity. Contrary to previous predictions9,12,16,18, powerful moralizing ‘big gods’ and prosocial supernatural punishment tend to appear only after the emergence of ‘megasocieties’ with populations of more than around one million people. Moralizing gods are not a prerequisite for the evolution of social complexity, but they may help to sustain and expand complex multi-ethnic empires after they have become established. By contrast, rituals that facilitate the standardization of religious traditions across large populations25,26 generally precede the appearance of moralizing gods. This suggests that ritual practices were more important than the particular content of religious belief to the initial rise of social complexity.

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Fig. 1: Locations of the 30 sampled regions on the world map, labelled according to precolonial evidence of moralizing gods.
Fig. 2: Social complexity before and after the appearance of moralizing gods.

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Data availability

The full machine-readable dataset is available as Supplementary Data 1, and at http://seshatdatabank.info/datasets. Full coding data with detailed explanations and references are available at http://seshatdatabank.info/data, and are summarized in Supplementary Table 2. The data include the coded levels of uncertainty and disagreement, the textual explanations and the references for each of the variables for all polities used in our analysis. These webpages also make it possible to comment on each of our data points and suggest additions or corrections and thus provide an up-to-date and dynamic dataset that undergoes continual improvement by members of the Seshat team and external scholars. To maximize transparency, we have tied each cluster of variables to the names of the research assistants who gathered the data, and to the names of the experts who reviewed the data.

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Acknowledgements

We thank Q. Atkinson and A. Willard for feedback on an earlier version of the manuscript and E. Postma for discussions on parts of the statistical analyses. We acknowledge the contributions of our team of research assistants, post-doctoral researchers, consultants and experts. See http://www.seshatdatabank.info for a comprehensive list of private donors, partners, experts and consultants. This work was supported by an ESRC Large Grant entitled ‘Ritual, Community, and Conflict’ (REF RES-060-25-0085), a John Templeton Foundation grant to the Evolution Institute entitled ‘Axial-Age Religions and the Z-Curve of Human Egalitarianism’, a Tricoastal Foundation grant to the Evolution Institute entitled ‘The Deep Roots of the Modern World: The Cultural Evolution of Economic Growth and Political Stability’, an Advanced Grant (‘Ritual Modes: Divergent modes of ritual, social cohesion, prosociality, and conflict’, grant agreement no. 694986) and a Starter Grant (‘The Cultural Evolution & Ecology of Institutions’, grant agreement no. 716212) from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme, an award from the Templeton World Charity Foundation entitled ‘Cognitive and Cultural Foundations of Religion and Morality’ (TWCF0164), a Keio Research Institute at SFC Startup Grant, a Keio Gijuku Academic Development Fund Individual Grant and a grant from the European Union Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme (grant agreement no. 644055 (ALIGNED, www.aligned-project.eu)).

Reviewer information

Nature thanks Carol Ember, Peter J. Richerson and the other anonymous reviewer(s) for their contribution to the peer review of this work.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Contributions

H.W., P.F. and P.E.S. designed the study, with input from P.T., T.E.C., K.C.F. and R.M.R.; E.C. and R.P. coded the religion and ritual data, with additional input from J.L., J.B., B.t.H and A.C.; P.E.S. analysed the data, with input from H.W., P.F., P.T., T.E.C. and R.M.R.; P.E.S., H.W. and P.F. drafted the manuscript.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Patrick E. Savage.

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The authors declare no competing interests.

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Extended data figures and tables

Extended Data Fig. 1 Social complexity time series for individual regions.

The 12 regions for which social complexity data are available both before and after the appearance of moralizing gods are shown. Vertical bands represent the period in which the first evidence of moralizing gods (red) and doctrinal rituals (blue) appeared. Grey shading represents 95% confidence intervals based on a PCA using multiple imputation8.

Source data

Extended Data Fig. 2 Full time series showing mean social complexity over time before and after the appearance of moralizing gods.

n = 12 regions with data before and after the appearance of moralizing gods. Social complexity has been scaled so that the society with the highest social complexity (Qing Dynasty, China, around ad 1900) has a value of 1 and the society with the lowest social complexity (Early Woodland, Illinois, USA, around 400 bc) has a value of 0. Vertical bands represent the period in which moralizing gods and doctrinal rituals first appeared. All errors represent 95% confidence intervals, with the exception of the vertical bar for moralizing gods, which represents the mean duration of the polity in which moralizing gods appeared (because times are normalized to the time of first evidence of moralizing gods, and there is thus no variance in this parameter). Lack of confidence intervals indicates data from only a single region. This figure is identical to Fig. 2a, except that it also includes all available data before and after moralizing gods, rather than being restricted to a window of 2,000 years before and after.

Source data

Extended Data Fig. 3 Social complexity before and after the appearance of MHG.

This is a version of Fig. 2 in which analyses are restricted to only MHG, rather than the broader definition of moralizing gods used in Fig. 2 and elsewhere (which includes BSP as well as MHG). a, Time series showing the mean social complexity over time for 2,000 years before and after the appearance of MHG. n = 10 regions with social complexity data for before and after moralizing high gods. Social complexity has been scaled so that the society with the highest social complexity (Qing Dynasty, China, around ad 1900) has a value of 1 and the society with the lowest social complexity (Early Woodland, Illinois, USA, around 400 bc) has a value of 0. Vertical bands represent the period in which MHG and doctrinal rituals first appeared. All errors represent 95% confidence intervals, with the exception of the vertical bar for MHG, which represents the mean duration of the polity in which MHG appeared (because times are normalized to the time of first evidence of MHG and there is therefore no variance in this parameter). b, Histogram of differences in rates of change in social complexity after minus before the appearance of MHG (n = 158 time windows from the 10 regions). The y axis represents the number of time windows out of 158.

Source data

Extended Data Table 1 Timing and rates of change in social complexity before and after the earliest precolonial evidence of moralizing gods
Extended Data Table 2 Logistic regression results predicting moralizing gods
Extended Data Table 3 Analyses with doctrinal rituals instead of moralizing gods as the dependent variable
Extended Data Table 4 Robustness analyses modifying modelling assumptions of the analyses
Extended Data Table 5 List of the 51 social complexity variables analysed

Supplementary information

Supplementary Information

This file contains Supplementary Material, including Supplementary Tables S1-S18.

Reporting Summary

Supplementary Data

This file contains the raw dataset containing all data analysed in the paper.

Source data

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Whitehouse, H., François, P., Savage, P.E. et al. RETRACTED ARTICLE: Complex societies precede moralizing gods throughout world history. Nature 568, 226–229 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1043-4

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