Johnson establishes that sociological and anthropological studies have shown that humans respond much more readily to punishment than reward.Reward is like icing—you can eat a cake without it and still enjoy it—while punishment is like the threat of all food being removed.You see the difference?One has a far greater motivating factor than the other.This idea spins out into many aspects of religion, and even perhaps hints at the origins of religion itself.I have often written on this blog that animals exhibit religious behavior.We don’t speak their language so we can’t know for sure, but some of what various animals do seems very much like what we do in church, synagogue, mosque, or gurdwara.Accusations of anthropomorphism fall flat, to me.We evolved, did we not?Then why do we resist pointing out in animals where that behavior sticks out like a sore opposable thumb?
Human societies worldwide share the fear of divine punishment.Interestingly, even a significant portion of atheists admit fearing it too.Often those who know me ask about my preoccupation with fear.It sometimes shows in my writing about horror, but I think Johnson may well have the key in his pocket.Religion is about fear.It’s not just about fear, but it clearly is about avoiding divine (however defined) wrath.Lose a job or two broadly defined as religious and disagree with me.Am I sure that I should be reading this book?Now that I’ve finished it I can definitively say “yes.”While I don’t agree with everything in it Johnson has clearly hit on something that all people who study religion should know.