Publication | Closed Access
The Church, intensive kinship, and global psychological variation
481
Citations
65
References
2019
Year
EthnicityIntensive KinshipSociologyChristian PracticeReligiosityEducationWestern ChurchEuropean KinshipAnthropologySocial ChangeReligious GroupChurch Exposure
Recent research not only confirms the existence of substantial psychological variation around the globe but also highlights the peculiarity of many Western populations. We propose that part of this variation can be traced back to the action and diffusion of the Western Church, the branch of Christianity that evolved into the Roman Catholic Church. Specifically, we propose that the Western Church's transformation of European kinship, by promoting small, nuclear households, weak family ties, and residential mobility, fostered greater individualism, less conformity, and more impersonal prosociality. By combining data on 24 psychological outcomes with historical measures of both Church exposure and kinship, we find support for these ideas in a comprehensive array of analyses across countries, among European regions, and among individuals from different cultural backgrounds.
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