Recent articles
Van Slyke, J. (2014). Religion is easy, but science is hard … Understanding McCauley’s thesis. Zygon 49 (3) 696-707.
Reimer, K. S., Young, C., Birath, B., Spezio, M. L., Peterson, G. Van Slyke, J., Brown, W. S. (2011). Maturity is explicit: Self-importance of traits in humanitarian moral identity. The Journal of Positive Psychology 7 (1), 36-44. Spezio, M. S., Peterson, G., Brown, W. S., Reimer, K. S., Van Slyke J. (2011). Personality’s role in moral action. Science 332, 1380-1381. Van Slyke, J. (2010). Evolutionary and cognitive factors in the emergence of human altruism. Zygon, 45(4), 841-860. Van Slyke, J. (2010). Challenging the by-product theory of religion in the cognitive science of religion. Theology & Science, 8(2), 163-180. Peterson, G., Van Slyke, J., Spezio, M. L., Brown, W. S. & Reimer, K. S. (2010). The rationality of ultimate concern: Moral exemplars, theological ethics, and the science of moral cognition. Theology & Science, 8(2), 139-161. |
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Book Reviews
Van Slyke, J. (In press, 2014). “Why Religion is Natural and Science is Not” Book Review. The Journal of Religion 95 (1): 160-162.
Van Slyke, J. (2015). "Big Gods: How Religion Transformed Cooperation and Conflict" Book Review. Philosophy, Theology, and the Sciences 2 (1): 124-128.
Van Slyke, J. (2015). "Big Gods: How Religion Transformed Cooperation and Conflict" Book Review. Philosophy, Theology, and the Sciences 2 (1): 124-128.