Journal article
The religiosity as social value hypothesis: A multi-method replication and extension across 65 countries and three levels of spatial aggregation
JE Gebauer, C Sedikides, FD Schönbrodt, W Bleidorn, PJ Rentfrow, J Potter, SD Gosling
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC | Published : 2017
DOI: 10.1037/pspp0000104
Abstract
Are religious people psychologically better or worse adjusted than their nonreligious counterparts? Hundreds of studies have reported a positive relation between religiosity and psychological adjustment. Recently, however, a comparatively small number of cross-cultural studies has questioned this staple of religiosity research. The latter studies find that religious adjustment benefits are restricted to religious cultures. Gebauer, Sedikides, and Neberich (2012) suggested the religiosity as social value hypothesis (RASV) as one explanation for those cross-cultural differences. RASV states that, in religious cultures, religiosity possesses much social value, and, as such, religious people wil..
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Awarded by German Research Foundation (DFG)
Funding Acknowledgements
We also acknowledge support from the German Research Foundation (DFG; GE 2515/2-1 & GE 2515/3-1).