4.2 Article

Physiology and faith: Addressing the universal gender difference in religious commitment

Journal

JOURNAL FOR THE SCIENTIFIC STUDY OF RELIGION
Volume 41, Issue 3, Pages 495-507

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1468-5906.00133

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That men are less religious than women is a generalization that holds around the world and across the centuries. However, there has been virtually no study of this phenomenon because it has seemed so obvious that it is the result of differential sex role socialization. Unfortunately, actual attempts to isolate socialization effects on gender differences in religiousness have,failed, is have fur more frequent and care it efforts to explain gender differences in crime. There is a growing body ofplausible evidence in support ofphysiological basesfor gender differences in crime. Making the assumption that, like crime, irreligiousness is an aspect of a general syndrome of short-sighted, risky behaviors leads to the conclusion that male irreligiousness may also have a physiological basis. If nothing else, this article may prompt creative efforts to salvage the socialization explanation.

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