University of Mannheim.
Leiden University.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2020 Jul;119(1):1-6. doi: 10.1037/pspa0000187. Epub 2020 Feb 10.
Religious people live longer than nonreligious people, according to a staple of social science research. Yet, are those longevity benefits an inherent feature of religiosity? To find out, we coded gravestone inscriptions and imagery to assess the religiosity and longevity of 6,400 deceased people from religious and nonreligious U.S. counties. We show that in religious cultural contexts, religious people lived 2.2 years longer than did nonreligious people. In nonreligious cultural contexts, however, religiosity conferred no such longevity benefits. Evidently, a longer life is not an inherent feature of religiosity. Instead, religious people only live longer in religious cultural contexts where religiosity is valued. Our study answers a fundamental question on the nature of religiosity and showcases the scientific potential of gravestone analyses. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
宗教人士比非宗教人士长寿,这是社会科学研究的一个基本观点。然而,这种长寿益处是否是宗教信仰的固有特征呢?为了找出答案,我们对墓碑铭文和图像进行了编码,以评估来自美国宗教和非宗教县的 6400 名已故人士的宗教信仰和寿命。我们发现,在宗教文化背景下,宗教人士比非宗教人士的寿命长 2.2 年。然而,在非宗教文化背景下,宗教信仰并没有带来这种长寿益处。显然,长寿并不是宗教信仰的固有特征。相反,只有在宗教信仰受到重视的宗教文化背景下,宗教人士的寿命才会更长。我们的研究回答了关于宗教性质的一个基本问题,并展示了墓碑分析的科学潜力。