Accordance and conflict between religious and scientific precautions against COVID-19 in 27 societies

Theodore Samore*, Daniel M.T. Fessler, Adam Maxwell Sparks, Colin Holbrook, Lene Aarøe, Carmen Gloria Baeza, María Teresa Barbato, Pat Barclay, Renatas Berniūnas, Jorge Contreras-Garduño, Bernardo Costa-Neves, Maria Del Pilar Grazioso, Pınar Elmas, Peter Fedor, Ana Maria Fernandez, Regina Fernández-Morales, Leonel Garcia-Marques, Paulina Giraldo-Perez, Pelin Gul, Fanny HabachtYoussef Hasan, Earl John Hernandez, Tomasz Jarmakowski, Shanmukh Kamble, Tatsuya Kameda, Bia Kim, Tom R. Kupfer, Maho Kurita, Norman P. Li, Junsong Lu, Francesca R. Luberti, María Andrée Maegli, Marinés Mejia, Coby Morvinski, Aoi Naito, Alice Ng’ang’a, Angélica Nascimento de Oliveira, Daniel N. Posner, Pavol Prokop, Yaniv Shani, Walter Omar Paniagua Solorzano, Stefan Stieger, Angela Oktavia Suryani, Lynn K.L. Tan, Joshua M. Tybur, Hugo Viciana, Amandine Visine, Jin Wang, Xiao-Tian Wang

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal article (peer-reviewed)Journal article

Abstract

Meaning-making systems underlie perceptions of the efficacy of threat-mitigating behaviors. Religion and science both offer threat mitigation, yet these meaning-making systems are often considered incompatible. Do such epistemological conflicts swamp the desire to employ diverse precautions against threats? Or do individuals—particularly individuals who are highly reactive to threats—hedge their bets by using multiple threat-mitigating practices despite their potential epistemological incompatibility? Complicating this question, perceptions of conflict between religion and science likely vary across cultures; likewise, pragmatic features of precautions prescribed by some religions make them incompatible with some scientifically-based precautions. The COVID-19 pandemic elicited diverse precautions thus providing an opportunity to investigate these questions. Across 27 societies from five continents (N = 7,844), in the majority of countries, individuals’ practice of religious precautions such as prayer correlates positively with their use of scientifically-based precautions. Prior work indicates that greater adherence to tradition likely reflects greater reactivity to threats. Unsurprisingly given associations between many traditions and religion, valuing tradition is predictive of employing religious precautions. However, consonant with its association with threat reactivity, we also find that traditionalism predicts adherence to public health precautions—a pattern that underscores threat-avoidant individuals’ apparent tolerance for epistemological conflict in pursuit of safety.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-20
JournalReligion, Brain and Behavior
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2024

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