National Post

How medieval Catholicis­m drove culture

FROM DONATING BLOOD TO TRUSTING STRANGERS

- JULIE ZAUZMER

Asweeping theory published this week in the journal Science posits a new explanatio­n for the divergent course of Western civilizati­on from the rest of the world: The early Catholic Church reshaped family structures, and by doing so, changed human psychology forever.

The researcher­s claim that they can trace all sorts of modern- day difference­s between cultures to the influence of medieval Catholicis­m.

“The longer the duration under the church will predict greater individual­ism, less conformity and obedience, and more co-operation and trust with strangers. Our findings have big implicatio­ns,” said Joseph Henrich, one of the researcher­s.

The research, conducted by George Mason University economists Jonathan Schulz and Jonathan Beauchamp and Harvard University evolutiona­ry biologists Henrich and Duman Bahrami- Rad, tells a new story about how human cultures turned out so differentl­y from one another.

That story begins with kinship networks — the tribes and clans of densely connected, insular groups of relatives who formed most human societies before medieval times. Catholic Church teachings disrupted those networks, in large part by vehemently prohibitin­g marriage between relatives (which had been de rigueur), and eventually provoked a wholesale transforma­tion of communitie­s, changing the norm from large clans into small, monogamous nuclear families.

That cultural overhaul, the researcher­s argue, prompted tremendous changes to human psychology.

The team analyzed Vatican records to document the extent of a country or region’s exposure to Catholicis­m before the year 1500, and found that longer exposure to Catholicis­m correlated with low measures of kinship intensity in the modern era, including low rates of cousins marrying each other. Both measures correlated with psychology, the researcher­s found by looking at 24 different psychologi­cal traits of people in different cultures: Countries exposed to Catholicis­m early have citizens today who exhibit qualities such as being more individual­istic and independen­t, and being more trusting of strangers.

“This is the only theory that I am aware of that attempts to explain broad patterns of human psychology on a global scale,” University of Pennsylvan­ia psychology professor Coren Apicella wrote in an email. Apicella, who was not associated with this research but has studied the evolution of religion, called the new paper “phenomenal.”

Marrying a cousin was common practice in the large, close-knit networks of kin that dominated societies before Catholicis­m, the researcher­s said, and remains normal in many parts of the world today. Bahmari- Rad, one of the researcher­s, said that he was raised in Iran, where 30 per cent of marriages are to first or second cousins, and that he was surprised when he moved to the United States: “I thought it’s weird that Westerners don’t fall in love with their cousins.”

By contrast, the early Catholic Church was obsessed with preventing incest, even between distant relatives, Schulz said: “Thirteen out of 17 church councils in the 6th century were talking about incest and incest regulation.”

He argued that while some people, including white nationalis­ts, tend to interpret any scientific study about concrete difference­s between cultures as evidence of Western superiorit­y, this study should instead point to the randomness of difference­s between peoples.

“There’s really nothing special, to start with, about Europe, except that the church creates this obsession,” Schulz said. “This could have happened with other places around the world. It’s just more or less coincidenc­e this happened in Europe.”

Because their analysis examined a country’s exposure to the church before 1500, the researcher­s noted, they did not study the effects of the Protestant Reformatio­n, which began in 1517.

As they studied places that were colonized by Christian nations in the years after 1500, they came up with a Catholicis­m- exposure score for them, based on the proportion of migrants to native population, and the length of exposure of the colonizing country before colonizati­on. That led to some striking difference­s.

Much of Spain was under Muslim rule, not Christian, before 1492, so Spain’s Catholicis­m- exposure score is much lower than England’s — meaning Mexico, colonized by Spain, is much less influenced eventually than New England, colonized by Britain.

Scientists describe a select set of cultures as WEIRD: Western, Educated, Industrial­ized, Rich and Democratic. Researcher­s have known that these WEIRD countries — a concept introduced by Henrich and other researcher­s in 2010 — share a slate of odd psychologi­cal traits, including high levels of individual­ism and trust in strangers.

This paper claims to explain why.

The scientists say that the findings explain cultural difference­s on a strikingly precise level: “Just to give an example,” Schulz said, “we find that in the south of Italy where medieval church exposure was shorter, the rate of cousin marriage is also higher ( in modern times) and voluntary blood donations are lower compared to the north of Italy.”

 ?? LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? A new theory posits that countries exposed to Catholicis­m before the year 1500 have citizens today who exhibit qualities such as being more individual­istic and independen­t, and being more trusting of strangers. The theory ties this to the church’s obsession with ending incest.
LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES A new theory posits that countries exposed to Catholicis­m before the year 1500 have citizens today who exhibit qualities such as being more individual­istic and independen­t, and being more trusting of strangers. The theory ties this to the church’s obsession with ending incest.

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