Religion Is Everywhere

Why religious beliefs will never disappear

Allan Milne Lees
11 min readJun 11, 2024
Image credit: Business Insider

As best as we can tell from archeological evidence, for as long as homo sapiens has existed we’ve always been conjuring up various invisible magical pixies and other fantastical notions we then cling to with quite extraordinary tenacity. The fact that our gods always reflect the social structures that give rise to them and that these pixies know nothing we humans didn’t already know never daunts us in any way. Since at least the Bronze Age we’ve even gleefully slaughtered each other over arguments about whose pixies are best — and we continue to do so today.

It would be a grave error, however, to assume that all religions are invariably connected to one form of invisible magical pixie or another. For the 300,000 years in which our species was essentially pre-technological it was natural that our febrile imaginations should conjure up such human-like pixies because there was nowhere else for our creativity to go. And so we had anthropomorphic gods of the hearth, the river, the sky, and so forth. Gradually, in certain parts of the world these animistic religions evolved to mirror the evolution of the societies that gave rise to them. It’s not surprising that the hierarchical city-states of the ancient world should invent hierarchical pantheons to mirror the contemporary experience.

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Allan Milne Lees

Anyone who enjoys my articles here on Medium may be interested in my books Why Democracy Failed and The Praying Ape, both available from Amazon.