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@proceedings{1315429, author = {Kundt, Radek}, booktitle = {Dynamics of the Religions: Past and Present; XXI IAHR World Congress, Erfurt, Germany, 23-29 August 2015}, keywords = {controlled experiment; laboratory experiment; hypothesis testing; religious prosociality}, language = {eng}, title = {Laboratory experiment as a part of the religious studies scholar's toolkit}, year = {2015} }
TY - CONF ID - 1315429 AU - Kundt, Radek PY - 2015 TI - Laboratory experiment as a part of the religious studies scholar's toolkit KW - controlled experiment KW - laboratory experiment KW - hypothesis testing KW - religious prosociality N2 - After introducing the strengths and weaknesses of the social-scientific laboratory experiment, I will focus on its ability to decide between competing hypotheses. I will argue that Religious Studies can use it for the same purpose. As a showcase, I will use the hotly debated issue of religious prosociality, an issue in evolutionary research on religion. Here, rival hypotheses compete for supporting empirical evidence (increased cooperation, generosity, reciprocity, trust and altruism; reduced cheating, etc.). One hypothesis considers religious prosociality to be an expression of parochial in-group favouritism, suggesting that it is a mere by-product of our coalitional psychology. The other sees religious prosociality as extending even to out-groups, arguing that it might be an adaptation. I will use this case as an example of how highly influential wide-ranging theories boil down to empirical testing and how experimental research can in the end play the essential role of an arbiter. ER -
KUNDT, Radek. Laboratory experiment as a part of the religious studies scholar's toolkit. In \textit{Dynamics of the Religions: Past and Present; XXI IAHR World Congress, Erfurt, Germany, 23-29 August 2015}. 2015.
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