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Religiosity

The Oxford English Dictionary defines religiosity as: "Religiousness; religious feeling or belief. [...] Affected or excessive religiousness".[1] Different scholars have seen this concept as broadly about religious orientations and degrees of involvement or commitment.[2] Religiosity is measured at the levels of individuals or groups and there is a lack of agreement on what criteria would constitute religiosity among scholars.[2] Sociologists of religion have observed that an individual's experience, beliefs, sense of belonging, and behavior often are not congruent with their actual religious behavior, since there is much diversity in how one can be religious or not.[3] Multiple problems exist in measuring religiosity. For instance, measures of variables such as church attendance produce different results when different methods are used - such as traditional surveys vs time-use surveys.[4]

Measuring religion edit

Inaccuracy and limitations edit

The reliability of any poll results, in general and specifically on religion, can be questioned due numerous factors such as:[5]

  • there have been very low response rates for polls since the 1990s
  • polls consistently fail to predict government election outcomes, which signifies that polls in general do not capture the actual views of the population
  • biases in wording or topic affect how people respond to polls
  • polls categorize people based on limited choices
  • polls often generalize broadly
  • polls have shallow or superficial choices, which complicate expressing their complex religious beliefs and practices
  • interviewer and respondent fatigue is very common

The measurement of religiosity is hampered by the difficulties involved in defining what is meant by the term and the variables it entails. Numerous studies have explored the different components of religiosity, with most finding some distinction between religious beliefs/doctrine, religious practice, and spirituality. When religiosity is measured, it is important to specify which aspects of religiosity are referred to.[6]

Researchers also note that an estimated 20-40% of the population changes their self-reported religious affiliation/identity over time due to numerous factors and that usually it is their answers on surveys that change, not necessarily their religious practices or beliefs.[7]

In general, polling numbers should not be taken at face value since the way people answer questions differs in meaning in context by different cultures and is, thus, misleading to assume that answering a poll questions has a simple interpretation.[8]

According to Gallup there are variations on the responses based on how they ask questions. They routinely ask on complex things like belief in God since the early 2000s in 3 different wordings and they constantly receive 3 different percentages in responses.[9]

Questions of religion are "marginal" in censuses, usually optional, and are left out of most censuses in most countries.[10] Despite attempts to standardize wording, census phrasing of the religion question have not been consistent over time or from country to country, with responders understanding them in 3 different ways.[10] Censuses aim to enumerate religious communities, not religious faith, and "as long as the censuses in more than half of the world do not ask about religion it will not be possible to tell even within the closest million the size of the different religious communities globally."[10] Due to the complexity of religious identify, sometimes censuses also overestimate groups, as was the case of Christians in Britain, which are impacted by how the questions are asked and also by the fact that one person from each household fills out the census to represent the household vs surveys that ask individual adults.[11]

Surveys in the United States edit

Two major surveys in the United States (General Social Survey and Cooperative Congressional Election Study) consistently have discrepancies between their demographic estimates that amount to 8% and growing. This is due to a few factors such as each one asking questions differently and, thus, impacting how respondents answer their questions due "social desirability bias"; the lumping of very different groups (atheist, agnostics, nothing in particular) into singular categories (e.g. "no religion" vs "nothing in particular"); and imbalance of representative respondents (e.g. GSS sample of nones is more politically moderate than the nones in the CCES, while simultaneously the Protestant sample in the CCES is further to the right of the political spectrum).[12]

The 2008 American Religious Identification Survey (ARIS) found a difference between how people identify and what people believe. While only 0.7% of U.S. adults identified as atheist, 2.3% said there is no such thing as a god. Only 0.9% identified as agnostic, but 10.0% said there is either no way to know if a god exists or they weren't sure. Another 12.1% said there is a higher power but no personal god. In total, only 15.0% identified as Nones or No Religion, but 24.4% did not believe in the traditional concept of a personal god. The conductors of the study concluded, "The historic reluctance of Americans to self-identify in this manner or use these terms seems to have diminished. Nevertheless ... the level of under-reporting of these theological labels is still significant ... many millions do not subscribe fully to the theology of the groups with which they identify."[13]

According to a Pew study in 2009, only 5% of the total US population did not have a belief in a god. Out of all those without a belief in a god, only 24% self-identified as "atheist", while 15% self-identified as "agnostic", 35% self-identified as "nothing in particular", and 24% identified with a religious tradition.[14]

According to a Gallup's editor in chief, Frank Newport, numbers on surveys may not be the whole story. In his view, declines in religious affiliation or declines in belief in God on surveys may not actually reflect an actual decline in these beliefs among people since increased honesty on spiritual matters to interviewers may merely be increasing since people may feel more comfortable today expressing viewpoints that were previously deviant.[15]

Diversity in an individual's beliefs, affiliations, and behaviors edit

Decades of anthropological, sociological, and psychological research have established that "religious congruence" (the assumption that religious beliefs and values are tightly integrated in an individual's mind or that religious practices and behaviors follow directly from religious beliefs or that religious beliefs are chronologically linear and stable across different contexts) is actually rare. People's religious ideas are fragmented, loosely connected, and context-dependent; like in all other domains of culture and in life. The beliefs, affiliations, and behaviors of any individual are complex activities that have many sources including culture. As examples of religious incongruence he notes, "Observant Jews may not believe what they say in their Sabbath prayers. Christian ministers may not believe in God. And people who regularly dance for rain don't do it in the dry season."[3]

Demographic studies often show wide diversity of religious beliefs, belonging, and practices in both religious and non-religious populations. For instance, out of Americans who are not religious and not seeking religion: 68% believe in God, 12% are atheists, 17% are agnostics; also, in terms of self-identification of religiosity 18% consider themselves religious, 37% consider themselves as spiritual but not religious, and 42% considers themselves as neither spiritual nor religious; and 21% pray every day and 24% pray once a month.[16][17][18] Global studies on religion also show diversity.[19]

 
Results of a 2008/2009 Gallup poll on whether respondents said that religion was "important in [their] daily life."[20][21]
  90%-100%
  80%-89%
  70%-79%
  60%-69%
  50%-59%
  40%-49%
  30%-39%
  20%-29%
  10%-19%
  0%-9%
  No data

Components edit

Numerous studies have explored the different components of human religiosity (Brink, 1993; Hill & Hood 1999). What most have found is that there are multiple dimensions (they often employ factor analysis). For instance, Cornwall, Albrecht, Cunningham and Pitcher (1986) identify six dimensions of religiosity based on the understanding that there are at least three components to religious behavior: knowing (cognition in the mind), feeling (effect to the spirit), and doing (behavior of the body). For each of these components of religiosity, there were two cross classifications resulting in the six dimensions:[22]

  • Cognition
    • traditional orthodoxy
    • particularistic orthodoxy
  • Effect
    • Palpable
    • Tangible
  • Behavior
    • religious behavior
    • religious participation

Other researchers have found different dimensions, ranging generally from four to twelve components. What most measures of religiosity find is that there is at least some distinction between religious doctrine, religious practice, and spirituality.

For example[original research?], one can accept the truthfulness of the Bible (belief dimension), but never attend a church or even belong to an organized religion (practice dimension). Another example is an individual who does not hold orthodox Christian doctrines (belief dimension), but does attend a charismatic worship service (practice dimension) in order to develop his/her sense of oneness with the divine (spirituality dimension).

An individual could disavow all doctrines associated with organized religions (belief dimension), not affiliate with an organized religion or attend religious services (practice dimension), and at the same time be strongly committed to a higher power and feel that the connection with that higher power is ultimately relevant (spirituality dimension). These are explanatory examples of the broadest dimensions of religiosity and may not be reflected in specific religiosity measures.

Most dimensions of religiosity are correlated, meaning people who often attend church services (practice dimension) are also likely to score highly on the belief and spirituality dimensions. But individuals do not have to score high on all dimensions or low on all dimensions; their scores can vary by dimension.

Sociologists have differed over the exact number of components of religiosity. Charles Glock's five-dimensional approach (Glock, 1972: 39) was among the first of its kind in the field of sociology of religion.[23] Other sociologists adapted Glock's list to include additional components (see for example, a six component measure by Mervin F. Verbit).[24][25][26]

Other factors edit

Genes and environment edit

 
National welfare spending vs church attendance in Christian societies[27]

The contributions of genes and environment to religiosity have been quantified in studies of twins (Bouchard et al., 1999; Kirk et al., 1999) and sociological studies of welfare, availability, and legal regulations [28] (state religions, etc.).

Koenig et al. (2005) report that the contribution of genes to variation in religiosity (called heritability) increases from 12% to 44% and the contribution of shared (family) effects decreases from 56% to 18% between adolescence and adulthood.[29]

A market-based theory of religious choice and governmental regulation of religion have been the dominant theories used to explain variations of religiosity between societies[clarification needed]. However, Gill and Lundsgaarde (2004) [27] documented a much stronger correlation between welfare state spending and religiosity. (see diagram)

Just-world hypothesis edit

Studies have found belief in a just world to be correlated with aspects of religiousness.[30][31]

Risk-aversion edit

Several studies have discovered a positive correlation between the degree of religiousness and risk aversion.[32][33]

See also edit

Demographics edit

References edit

  1. ^ "religiosity". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.). The earliest recorded usage of the former meaning is from 1382 Wycliffe's Bible, and of the latter is from 1799 by William Taylor quoted in John Warden Robberds' 1843 Memoir.
  2. ^ a b Holdcroft, Barbara (September 2006). "What is Religiosity?". Catholic Education: A Journal of Inquiry and Practice. 10 (1): 89–103.
  3. ^ a b Chaves, Mark (March 2010). "SSSR Presidential Address Rain Dances in the Dry Season: Overcoming the Religious Congruence Fallacy". Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 49 (1): 1–14. doi:10.1111/j.1468-5906.2009.01489.x.
  4. ^ Rossi, Maurizio; Scappini, Ettore (June 2014). "Church Attendance, Problems of Measurement, and Interpreting Indicators: A Study of Religious Practice in the United States, 1975-2010". Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 53 (2): 249–267. doi:10.1111/jssr.12115. ISSN 0021-8294.
  5. ^ Wuthnow, Robert (2015). "8. Taking Stock". Inventing American Religion: Polls Surveys, and the Tenuous Quest for a Nation's Faith. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190258900.
  6. ^ Holdcroft, Barbara (September 2006). "What is Religiosity?". Catholic Education: A Journal of Inquiry and Practice. 10 (1): 89–103.
  7. ^ Johnson, Byron; Stark, Rodney; Bradshaw, Matt; Levin, Jeff (2022). "Are Religious "Nones" Really Not Religious?: Revisiting Glenn, Three Decades Later". Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion. 18 (7).
  8. ^ Holifield, E. Brooks (2015). Why Are Americans So Religious? The Limitations of Market Explanations. Religion and the Marketplace in the United States. pp. 33–60. ISBN 9780199361809. "Such numbers cannot be taken at face value. They do not simply represent the world as it is but are self-representations. The difference between how Americans and citizens of other Western nations answer pollsters’ questions is first of all about how they think of themselves and how they want to be thought of in the context in which the question is asked. It means something different to say that one is “very religious” in Picayune, Mississippi, than it does in Oslo. Someone might have many reasons to answer yes to such a question, and it might be misleading to interpret the “yes” as having one simple meaning."
  9. ^ Saad, Lydia; Hrynowski, Zach (24 June 2022). "How Many Americans Believe in God?". Gallup.com. Gallup. The answer to how many Americans believe in God depends on how the question is asked. Gallup has measured U.S. adults' belief in God three different ways in recent years, with varying results.
  10. ^ a b c Thorvaldsen, Gunnar (2014). "Religion in the Census". Social Science History. 38 (1–2): 203–220.
  11. ^ Voas, David; Bruce, Steve (January 2004). "Research note: The 2001 census and christian identification in Britain". Journal of Contemporary Religion. 19 (1): 23–28. doi:10.1080/1353790032000165087. ISSN 1353-7903.
  12. ^ Burge, Ryan P. (March 2020). "How Many "Nones" Are There? Explaining the Discrepancies in Survey Estimates". Review of Religious Research. 62 (1): 173–190. doi:10.1007/s13644-020-00400-7. S2CID 256240351.
  13. ^ Barry A. Kosmin and Ariela Keysar, (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 7, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-08.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link), March 2009, American Religious Identification Survey [ARIS 2008], Trinity College.
  14. ^ "Not All Nonbelievers Call Themselves Atheists | Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project". Pewforum.org. 2009-04-02. Retrieved 2014-02-27.
  15. ^ "See How Americans' Belief in God Has Changed Over 70 Years". Time. Retrieved 2018-03-24.
  16. ^ "American Nones: The Profile of the No Religion Population" (PDF). American Religious Identification Survey. 2008. Retrieved 2014-01-30.
  17. ^ "Religion and the Unaffiliated". "Nones" on the Rise. Pew Research Center: Religion & Public Life. October 9, 2012.
  18. ^ "Most of the Religiously Unaffiliated Still Keep Belief in God". Pew Research Center. November 15, 2012.
  19. ^ "The Global Religious Landscape". Pew Research Center. 2012-12-18.
  20. ^ Crabtree, Steve (31 August 2010). "Religiosity Highest in World's Poorest Nations". Gallup. Retrieved 27 May 2015. (in which numbers have been rounded)
  21. ^ GALLUP WorldView - data accessed on 17 January 2009
  22. ^ Cornwall; Albrecht; Cunningham; Pitcher (1986). "The Dimensions of Religiosity: A Conceptual Model with an Empirical Test". Review of Religious Research. 27 (3): 226–244. doi:10.2307/3511418. JSTOR 3511418.
  23. ^ Glock, C. Y. (1972) ‘On the Study of Religious Commitment’ in J. E. Faulkner (ed.) Religion's Influence in Contemporary Society, Readings in the Sociology of Religion, Ohio: Charles E. Merril: 38-56.
  24. ^ Verbit, M. F. (1970). "The components and dimensions of religious behavior: Toward a reconceptualization of religiosity". American Mosaic. 24: 39.
  25. ^ Küçükcan, T (2005). "Multidimensional Approach to Religion: a way of looking at religious phenomena". Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies. 4 (10): 60–70.
  26. ^ http://www.eskieserler.com/dosyalar/mpdf%20(1135).pdf[bare URL PDF]
  27. ^ a b Gill, Anthony; Erik Lundsgaarde (2004). "State Welfare Spending and Religiosity" (PDF). Comparative Political Studies. 16 (4): 399–436. doi:10.1177/1043463104046694. S2CID 145609214.
  28. ^ Nolan, P., & Lenski, G. E. (2010). Human societies: Introduction to macrosociology. Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publisher.
  29. ^ Koenig, L. B.; McGue, M.; Krueger, R. F.; Bouchard Jr, T. J. (2005). "Genetic and environmental influences on religiousness: findings for retrospective and current religiousness ratings". Journal of Personality. 73 (2): 471–488. doi:10.1111/j.1467-6494.2005.00316.x. PMID 15745438.
  30. ^ Begue, L (2002). "Beliefs in justice and faith in people: just world, religiosity and interpersonal trust". Personality and Individual Differences. 32 (3): 375–382. doi:10.1016/s0191-8869(00)00224-5.
  31. ^ Kurst, J.; Bjorck, J.; Tan, S. (2000). "Causal attributions for uncontrollable negative events". Journal of Psychology and Christianity. 19: 47–60.
  32. ^ Noussair, Charles; Stefan T. Trautmann; Gijs van de Kuilen; Nathanael Vellekoop (2013). "Risk aversion and religion" (PDF). Journal of Risk and Uncertainty. 47 (2): 165–183. doi:10.1007/s11166-013-9174-8. S2CID 54664945..
  33. ^ Adhikari, Binay; Anup Agrawal (2016). "Does local religiosity matter for bank risk-taking?". Journal of Corporate Finance. 38: 272–293. doi:10.1016/j.jcorpfin.2016.01.009..

External links edit

  • Bouchard, TJ Jr; McGue, M; Lykken, D; Tellegen, A (Jun 1999). "Intrinsic and extrinsic religiousness: genetic and environmental influences and personality correlates". Twin Res. 2 (2): 88–98. doi:10.1375/twin.2.2.88. PMID 10480743.
  • Brink, T.L. 1993. Religiosity: measurement. in Survey of Social Science: Psychology, Frank N. Magill, Ed., Pasadena, CA: Salem Press, 1993, pp. 2096–2102.
  • Cornwall, M.; Albrecht, S.L.; Cunningham, P.H.; Pitcher, B.L. (1986). "The dimensions of religiosity: A conceptual model with an empirical test". Review of Religious Research. 27 (3): 226–244. doi:10.2307/3511418. JSTOR 3511418.
  • Hill, Peter C. and Hood, Ralph W. Jr. 1999. Measures of Religiosity. Birmingham, Alabama: Religious Education Press. ISBN 0-89135-106-X
  • Kirk, KM; Eaves, LJ; Martin, NG (Jun 1999). "Self-transcendence as a measure of spirituality in a sample of older Australian twins". Twin Res. 2 (2): 81–7. doi:10.1375/twin.2.2.81. PMID 10480742.
  • Winter, T. Kaprio J; Viken, RJ; Karvonen, S; Rose, RJ. (Jun 1999). "Individual differences in adolescent religiosity in Finland: familial effects are modified by sex and region of residence". Twin Res. 2 (2): 108–14. doi:10.1375/136905299320565979. PMID 10480745.

religiosity, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, october, 2020, look, religiosity, wiktionary, free, dictionary, oxford, english, dic. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article October 2020 Look up religiosity in Wiktionary the free dictionary The Oxford English Dictionary defines religiosity as Religiousness religious feeling or belief Affected or excessive religiousness 1 Different scholars have seen this concept as broadly about religious orientations and degrees of involvement or commitment 2 Religiosity is measured at the levels of individuals or groups and there is a lack of agreement on what criteria would constitute religiosity among scholars 2 Sociologists of religion have observed that an individual s experience beliefs sense of belonging and behavior often are not congruent with their actual religious behavior since there is much diversity in how one can be religious or not 3 Multiple problems exist in measuring religiosity For instance measures of variables such as church attendance produce different results when different methods are used such as traditional surveys vs time use surveys 4 Contents 1 Measuring religion 1 1 Inaccuracy and limitations 1 2 Surveys in the United States 2 Diversity in an individual s beliefs affiliations and behaviors 3 Components 4 Other factors 4 1 Genes and environment 4 2 Just world hypothesis 4 3 Risk aversion 5 See also 5 1 Demographics 6 References 7 External linksMeasuring religion editInaccuracy and limitations edit The reliability of any poll results in general and specifically on religion can be questioned due numerous factors such as 5 there have been very low response rates for polls since the 1990s polls consistently fail to predict government election outcomes which signifies that polls in general do not capture the actual views of the population biases in wording or topic affect how people respond to polls polls categorize people based on limited choices polls often generalize broadly polls have shallow or superficial choices which complicate expressing their complex religious beliefs and practices interviewer and respondent fatigue is very commonThe measurement of religiosity is hampered by the difficulties involved in defining what is meant by the term and the variables it entails Numerous studies have explored the different components of religiosity with most finding some distinction between religious beliefs doctrine religious practice and spirituality When religiosity is measured it is important to specify which aspects of religiosity are referred to 6 Researchers also note that an estimated 20 40 of the population changes their self reported religious affiliation identity over time due to numerous factors and that usually it is their answers on surveys that change not necessarily their religious practices or beliefs 7 In general polling numbers should not be taken at face value since the way people answer questions differs in meaning in context by different cultures and is thus misleading to assume that answering a poll questions has a simple interpretation 8 According to Gallup there are variations on the responses based on how they ask questions They routinely ask on complex things like belief in God since the early 2000s in 3 different wordings and they constantly receive 3 different percentages in responses 9 Questions of religion are marginal in censuses usually optional and are left out of most censuses in most countries 10 Despite attempts to standardize wording census phrasing of the religion question have not been consistent over time or from country to country with responders understanding them in 3 different ways 10 Censuses aim to enumerate religious communities not religious faith and as long as the censuses in more than half of the world do not ask about religion it will not be possible to tell even within the closest million the size of the different religious communities globally 10 Due to the complexity of religious identify sometimes censuses also overestimate groups as was the case of Christians in Britain which are impacted by how the questions are asked and also by the fact that one person from each household fills out the census to represent the household vs surveys that ask individual adults 11 Surveys in the United States edit Two major surveys in the United States General Social Survey and Cooperative Congressional Election Study consistently have discrepancies between their demographic estimates that amount to 8 and growing This is due to a few factors such as each one asking questions differently and thus impacting how respondents answer their questions due social desirability bias the lumping of very different groups atheist agnostics nothing in particular into singular categories e g no religion vs nothing in particular and imbalance of representative respondents e g GSS sample of nones is more politically moderate than the nones in the CCES while simultaneously the Protestant sample in the CCES is further to the right of the political spectrum 12 The 2008 American Religious Identification Survey ARIS found a difference between how people identify and what people believe While only 0 7 of U S adults identified as atheist 2 3 said there is no such thing as a god Only 0 9 identified as agnostic but 10 0 said there is either no way to know if a god exists or they weren t sure Another 12 1 said there is a higher power but no personal god In total only 15 0 identified as Nones or No Religion but 24 4 did not believe in the traditional concept of a personal god The conductors of the study concluded The historic reluctance of Americans to self identify in this manner or use these terms seems to have diminished Nevertheless the level of under reporting of these theological labels is still significant many millions do not subscribe fully to the theology of the groups with which they identify 13 According to a Pew study in 2009 only 5 of the total US population did not have a belief in a god Out of all those without a belief in a god only 24 self identified as atheist while 15 self identified as agnostic 35 self identified as nothing in particular and 24 identified with a religious tradition 14 According to a Gallup s editor in chief Frank Newport numbers on surveys may not be the whole story In his view declines in religious affiliation or declines in belief in God on surveys may not actually reflect an actual decline in these beliefs among people since increased honesty on spiritual matters to interviewers may merely be increasing since people may feel more comfortable today expressing viewpoints that were previously deviant 15 Diversity in an individual s beliefs affiliations and behaviors editDecades of anthropological sociological and psychological research have established that religious congruence the assumption that religious beliefs and values are tightly integrated in an individual s mind or that religious practices and behaviors follow directly from religious beliefs or that religious beliefs are chronologically linear and stable across different contexts is actually rare People s religious ideas are fragmented loosely connected and context dependent like in all other domains of culture and in life The beliefs affiliations and behaviors of any individual are complex activities that have many sources including culture As examples of religious incongruence he notes Observant Jews may not believe what they say in their Sabbath prayers Christian ministers may not believe in God And people who regularly dance for rain don t do it in the dry season 3 Demographic studies often show wide diversity of religious beliefs belonging and practices in both religious and non religious populations For instance out of Americans who are not religious and not seeking religion 68 believe in God 12 are atheists 17 are agnostics also in terms of self identification of religiosity 18 consider themselves religious 37 consider themselves as spiritual but not religious and 42 considers themselves as neither spiritual nor religious and 21 pray every day and 24 pray once a month 16 17 18 Global studies on religion also show diversity 19 nbsp Results of a 2008 2009 Gallup poll on whether respondents said that religion was important in their daily life 20 21 90 100 80 89 70 79 60 69 50 59 40 49 30 39 20 29 10 19 0 9 No dataComponents editNumerous studies have explored the different components of human religiosity Brink 1993 Hill amp Hood 1999 What most have found is that there are multiple dimensions they often employ factor analysis For instance Cornwall Albrecht Cunningham and Pitcher 1986 identify six dimensions of religiosity based on the understanding that there are at least three components to religious behavior knowing cognition in the mind feeling effect to the spirit and doing behavior of the body For each of these components of religiosity there were two cross classifications resulting in the six dimensions 22 Cognition traditional orthodoxy particularistic orthodoxy Effect Palpable Tangible Behavior religious behavior religious participationOther researchers have found different dimensions ranging generally from four to twelve components What most measures of religiosity find is that there is at least some distinction between religious doctrine religious practice and spirituality For example original research one can accept the truthfulness of the Bible belief dimension but never attend a church or even belong to an organized religion practice dimension Another example is an individual who does not hold orthodox Christian doctrines belief dimension but does attend a charismatic worship service practice dimension in order to develop his her sense of oneness with the divine spirituality dimension An individual could disavow all doctrines associated with organized religions belief dimension not affiliate with an organized religion or attend religious services practice dimension and at the same time be strongly committed to a higher power and feel that the connection with that higher power is ultimately relevant spirituality dimension These are explanatory examples of the broadest dimensions of religiosity and may not be reflected in specific religiosity measures Most dimensions of religiosity are correlated meaning people who often attend church services practice dimension are also likely to score highly on the belief and spirituality dimensions But individuals do not have to score high on all dimensions or low on all dimensions their scores can vary by dimension Sociologists have differed over the exact number of components of religiosity Charles Glock s five dimensional approach Glock 1972 39 was among the first of its kind in the field of sociology of religion 23 Other sociologists adapted Glock s list to include additional components see for example a six component measure by Mervin F Verbit 24 25 26 Other factors editGenes and environment edit nbsp National welfare spending vs church attendance in Christian societies 27 The contributions of genes and environment to religiosity have been quantified in studies of twins Bouchard et al 1999 Kirk et al 1999 and sociological studies of welfare availability and legal regulations 28 state religions etc Koenig et al 2005 report that the contribution of genes to variation in religiosity called heritability increases from 12 to 44 and the contribution of shared family effects decreases from 56 to 18 between adolescence and adulthood 29 A market based theory of religious choice and governmental regulation of religion have been the dominant theories used to explain variations of religiosity between societies clarification needed However Gill and Lundsgaarde 2004 27 documented a much stronger correlation between welfare state spending and religiosity see diagram Just world hypothesis edit Studies have found belief in a just world to be correlated with aspects of religiousness 30 31 Risk aversion edit Several studies have discovered a positive correlation between the degree of religiousness and risk aversion 32 33 See also editDemographics of atheism Religion and personality Spiritual but not religiousDemographics edit Importance of religion by country Religion and happiness Religiosity and crime Religiosity and education Religiosity and intelligenceReferences edit religiosity Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required The earliest recorded usage of the former meaning is from 1382 Wycliffe s Bible and of the latter is from 1799 by William Taylor quoted in John Warden Robberds 1843 Memoir a b Holdcroft Barbara September 2006 What is Religiosity Catholic Education A Journal of Inquiry and Practice 10 1 89 103 a b Chaves Mark March 2010 SSSR Presidential Address Rain Dances in the Dry Season Overcoming the Religious Congruence Fallacy Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 49 1 1 14 doi 10 1111 j 1468 5906 2009 01489 x Rossi Maurizio Scappini Ettore June 2014 Church Attendance Problems of Measurement and Interpreting Indicators A Study of Religious Practice in the United States 1975 2010 Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 53 2 249 267 doi 10 1111 jssr 12115 ISSN 0021 8294 Wuthnow Robert 2015 8 Taking Stock Inventing American Religion Polls Surveys and the Tenuous Quest for a Nation s Faith Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190258900 Holdcroft Barbara September 2006 What is Religiosity Catholic Education A Journal of Inquiry and Practice 10 1 89 103 Johnson Byron Stark Rodney Bradshaw Matt Levin Jeff 2022 Are Religious Nones Really Not Religious Revisiting Glenn Three Decades Later Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion 18 7 Holifield E Brooks 2015 Why Are Americans So Religious The Limitations of Market Explanations Religion and the Marketplace in the United States pp 33 60 ISBN 9780199361809 Such numbers cannot be taken at face value They do not simply represent the world as it is but are self representations The difference between how Americans and citizens of other Western nations answer pollsters questions is first of all about how they think of themselves and how they want to be thought of in the context in which the question is asked It means something different to say that one is very religious in Picayune Mississippi than it does in Oslo Someone might have many reasons to answer yes to such a question and it might be misleading to interpret the yes as having one simple meaning Saad Lydia Hrynowski Zach 24 June 2022 How Many Americans Believe in God Gallup com Gallup The answer to how many Americans believe in God depends on how the question is asked Gallup has measured U S adults belief in God three different ways in recent years with varying results a b c Thorvaldsen Gunnar 2014 Religion in the Census Social Science History 38 1 2 203 220 Voas David Bruce Steve January 2004 Research note The 2001 census and christian identification in Britain Journal of Contemporary Religion 19 1 23 28 doi 10 1080 1353790032000165087 ISSN 1353 7903 Burge Ryan P March 2020 How Many Nones Are There Explaining the Discrepancies in Survey Estimates Review of Religious Research 62 1 173 190 doi 10 1007 s13644 020 00400 7 S2CID 256240351 Barry A Kosmin and Ariela Keysar Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 7 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 08 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link March 2009 American Religious Identification Survey ARIS 2008 Trinity College Not All Nonbelievers Call Themselves Atheists Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project Pewforum org 2009 04 02 Retrieved 2014 02 27 See How Americans Belief in God Has Changed Over 70 Years Time Retrieved 2018 03 24 American Nones The Profile of the No Religion Population PDF American Religious Identification Survey 2008 Retrieved 2014 01 30 Religion and the Unaffiliated Nones on the Rise Pew Research Center Religion amp Public Life October 9 2012 Most of the Religiously Unaffiliated Still Keep Belief in God Pew Research Center November 15 2012 The Global Religious Landscape Pew Research Center 2012 12 18 Crabtree Steve 31 August 2010 Religiosity Highest in World s Poorest Nations Gallup Retrieved 27 May 2015 in which numbers have been rounded GALLUP WorldView data accessed on 17 January 2009 Cornwall Albrecht Cunningham Pitcher 1986 The Dimensions of Religiosity A Conceptual Model with an Empirical Test Review of Religious Research 27 3 226 244 doi 10 2307 3511418 JSTOR 3511418 Glock C Y 1972 On the Study of Religious Commitment in J E Faulkner ed Religion s Influence in Contemporary Society Readings in the Sociology of Religion Ohio Charles E Merril 38 56 Verbit M F 1970 The components and dimensions of religious behavior Toward a reconceptualization of religiosity American Mosaic 24 39 Kucukcan T 2005 Multidimensional Approach to Religion a way of looking at religious phenomena Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 4 10 60 70 http www eskieserler com dosyalar mpdf 20 1135 pdf bare URL PDF a b Gill Anthony Erik Lundsgaarde 2004 State Welfare Spending and Religiosity PDF Comparative Political Studies 16 4 399 436 doi 10 1177 1043463104046694 S2CID 145609214 Nolan P amp Lenski G E 2010 Human societies Introduction to macrosociology Boulder CO Paradigm Publisher Koenig L B McGue M Krueger R F Bouchard Jr T J 2005 Genetic and environmental influences on religiousness findings for retrospective and current religiousness ratings Journal of Personality 73 2 471 488 doi 10 1111 j 1467 6494 2005 00316 x PMID 15745438 Begue L 2002 Beliefs in justice and faith in people just world religiosity and interpersonal trust Personality and Individual Differences 32 3 375 382 doi 10 1016 s0191 8869 00 00224 5 Kurst J Bjorck J Tan S 2000 Causal attributions for uncontrollable negative events Journal of Psychology and Christianity 19 47 60 Noussair Charles Stefan T Trautmann Gijs van de Kuilen Nathanael Vellekoop 2013 Risk aversion and religion PDF Journal of Risk and Uncertainty 47 2 165 183 doi 10 1007 s11166 013 9174 8 S2CID 54664945 Adhikari Binay Anup Agrawal 2016 Does local religiosity matter for bank risk taking Journal of Corporate Finance 38 272 293 doi 10 1016 j jcorpfin 2016 01 009 External links edit nbsp Wikiversity has learning resources about Religiosity Bouchard TJ Jr McGue M Lykken D Tellegen A Jun 1999 Intrinsic and extrinsic religiousness genetic and environmental influences and personality correlates Twin Res 2 2 88 98 doi 10 1375 twin 2 2 88 PMID 10480743 Brink T L 1993 Religiosity measurement in Survey of Social Science Psychology Frank N Magill Ed Pasadena CA Salem Press 1993 pp 2096 2102 Cornwall M Albrecht S L Cunningham P H Pitcher B L 1986 The dimensions of religiosity A conceptual model with an empirical test Review of Religious Research 27 3 226 244 doi 10 2307 3511418 JSTOR 3511418 Hill Peter C and Hood Ralph W Jr 1999 Measures of Religiosity Birmingham Alabama Religious Education Press ISBN 0 89135 106 X Kirk KM Eaves LJ Martin NG Jun 1999 Self transcendence as a measure of spirituality in a sample of older Australian twins Twin Res 2 2 81 7 doi 10 1375 twin 2 2 81 PMID 10480742 Winter T Kaprio J Viken RJ Karvonen S Rose RJ Jun 1999 Individual differences in adolescent religiosity in Finland familial effects are modified by sex and region of residence Twin Res 2 2 108 14 doi 10 1375 136905299320565979 PMID 10480745 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Religiosity amp oldid 1195546562, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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