Scientists trying to locate the
origin of the belief in evil or the devil have linked it to people’s attempt to
understand diseases and they have identified Nigeria among the three countries
in the world where such belief is strongest.
Bangladesh and the Philippines
are the other countries where the belief is strongest. It is weakest in the
Czech Republic, Germany and Sweden.
The scientists led by Brock
Bastian, an associate professor with the School of Psychological Sciences at
the University of Melbourne in Australia, sought out to test the hypothesis
that areas of the world where diseases are very common are more often to
believe that the diseases and illnesses arising therefrom are caused by some
devil or malevolent evil spirits.
While such belief systems were
prevalent in Medieval Europe during the Great Plague or the Black death,
science had since shown that diseases are caused by microscopic pathogens
rather than spirits.
However, the connection between
religious convictions about good and evil and the presence of infectious disease
lingers today, the researchers discovered. They found that, in geographic
regions with high incidences of disease, people also demonstrated stronger
convictions about agents of evil, such as demons and witches.
“It opens up new insights into
the emergence of religion as a belief system that developed to explain natural
threats or events,” Bastian said.
To test that hypothesis, the
researchers conducted surveys and consulted archival data to assess levels of
belief in evil. They surveyed more than 3,000 university students in 28
countries, investigating whether the participants believed strongly in the evil
eye (a person’s ability to cast a curse “through a malevolent glare”),
witchcraft, the devil and unspecified evil forces. Archival data from around
58,000 people across 50 countries, collected between 1995 and 1998, addressed
the question of the subjects’ belief in the devil. In their evaluations, the
scientists noted individuals’ social class, level of education, political
orientation and strength of religious practice.
The researchers also examined
global historical data of infectious diseases, comparing those patterns with
geographic trends in spiritual beliefs about evil.
They learned that, in places
where infectious diseases were historically widespread, “people were more
likely to believe in the devil, the malevolent power of the evil eye and in
witches who channel evil,” according to the study, which was published online
Oct. 30 in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
“We uncovered consistent evidence
that historical pathogen prevalence is related to an increased tendency to
believe that there are forces of evil at work in the world,” the researchers
reported.
Once such convictions become
embedded in a culture, their influence can linger for generations.
Even today, when scientific
explanations for disease are readily available, “such thinking remains evident
in many modern societies, wherein health complaints are sometimes attributed to
the will of God or the work of the devil and spiritual remedies persist,” the
authors wrote.–Livescience.com
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