Why are historically Catholic countries and regions generally more corrupt and less competitive than historically Protestant ones? How has institutionalization of religion influenced the prosperity of countries in Europe and the Americas?
This open access book addresses these critical questions by elucidating the hegemonic and emancipatory religious factors leading to these dissimilarities between countries. The book features up-to-date mixed methods from interdisciplinary research contributing to existing studies in the sociology of religion field by demonstrating-for the first time-the effect of the mutually reinforcing configuration of multiple prosperity triggers (religion-politics-environment). It demonstrates the differences in the institutionalization of Roman Catholicism and Protestantism by applying quantitative and qualitative methods and by performing a qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) of 65 countries. The author also provides a comprehensive survey and results of empirical research on different theories of development, focusing on the influence of religion.
In search of evolutionarily stable strategies
There's a kind of sterility that pervades the red pill crowd rivaling the feminists they mock. Ye shall know them by their fruits https://t.co/Cysbkogej9
Hi! I'm into new worlds, new perspectives and the mysteries of the mind. #amwriting #scifi #indieauthor #HugoAward finalist (for "Asymmetrical Warfare")
@tirsiannomads @mmpadellan I did, and I see Paul of Tarsus browbeating the Galatians over their personal decisions to be circumcised and keep kosher. sowing the seeds of sectarian discord that would lead to millions of Jewish and Christian deaths over the millennia. "Ye shall know them by their fruits."