Content by Connor Wood, PhD (Page 2)
Connor Wood is a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Mind and Culture, focusing on the evolutionary study of religion, computer modeling of social processes, and religion-science issues. Connor writes a popular weekly blog, Science On Religion, at Patheos.com, and occasionally blogs for the Huffington Post. Connor’s interests include the evolutionary and cognitive roles of ritual, the influence of religion on health and self-regulation, and the conservative-liberal spectrum in psychology and religion. He also studies the relationship between cognitive style and spirituality at the survey website FaithInDepth.org.
Previously, Connor earned a B.A. in Creative Writing from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He then bummed around the world for a couple of years and had adventures, many of which turned out to be more fun to write about than they technically were to have. For example, he once was mugged in Mongolia. Today, Connor is working on a book that applies the cognitive and evolutionary sciences of religion to contemporary political quandaries. He likes climbing mountains in Colorado. Connor’s spirit animal is William James.
When To Be Intuitive, When To Be Analytical – Religion, Belief and Social Connections, Part 2
Religion is Intuitive – Religion, Belief and Social Connections, Part 1
Does Marching to the Same Rhythm Always Unite Us?
Does Science Need Its Own Rituals?
A Computer Model of Atheism?
Is a Secular America a Worse America?
Want to Study the Science of Religion? Start with this MOOC
Animals Evolve. People Evolve. Can Groups Evolve?
Anthropology, Not Demagoguery, Is the Way to Understand ISIS
Is Religion Evolutionarily Adaptive?
Want to Understand Religion? You’ve Gotta Have a Body
Can We Study Religion Scientifically?
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