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Judi Lynn

(162,534 posts)
Thu Sep 29, 2022, 09:22 PM Sep 2022

Study of Buddhist monks suggests celibacy can have surprising evolutionary advantages


by Ruth Mace and Alberto Micheletti September 17, 2022



Why would someone join an institution that removed the option of family life and required them to be celibate? Reproduction, after all, is at the very heart of the evolution that shaped us. Yet many religious institutions around the world require exactly this. The practice has led anthropologists to wonder how celibacy could have evolved in the first place.

Some have suggested that practices that are costly to individuals, such as never having children, can still emerge when people blindly conform to norms that benefit a group – since cooperation is another cornerstone of human evolution. Others have argued that people ultimately create religious (or other) institutions because it serves their own selfish or family interest, and reject those who do not get involved.

Now our new study, published in Royal Society Proceedings B and conducted in Western China, tackles this fundamental question by studying lifelong religious celibacy in Tibetan Buddhist monasteries.

Until recently, it was common for some Tibetan families to send one of their young sons to the local monastery to become a lifelong, celibate monk. Historically, up to one in seven boys became monks. Families typically cited religious motives for having a monk in the family. But were economic and reproductive considerations also involved?

More:
https://www.psypost.org/2022/09/study-of-buddhist-monks-suggests-celibacy-can-have-surprising-evolutionary-advantages-63921
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Study of Buddhist monks suggests celibacy can have surprising evolutionary advantages (Original Post) Judi Lynn Sep 2022 OP
Ok, but it could also be they just have one less kid, usually the oldest, which is important... Joinfortmill Sep 2022 #1
Celibacy itself does not have much evolution. keithbvadu2 Sep 2022 #2
It might as a function of family and social units. Warpy Sep 2022 #4
Legalize Sex Work. Anon-C Sep 2022 #3

Joinfortmill

(16,593 posts)
1. Ok, but it could also be they just have one less kid, usually the oldest, which is important...
Thu Sep 29, 2022, 09:40 PM
Sep 2022

as it relates to birth order.

Warpy

(113,131 posts)
4. It might as a function of family and social units.
Thu Sep 29, 2022, 11:32 PM
Sep 2022

I come from a family that sourly said it was the family fool who went into the church. Same thing, lifelong celibacy, removal from the gene pool, and providing the religious and cultural glue that held the larger society together. That kind of stability can have a positive Darwinian effect, even if the people creating it are non breeders.

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