Emergent properties of global political culture were examined using data from the World History Survey (WHS) involving 6,902 university students in 37 countries evaluating 40 figures from world history. Multidimensional scaling and factor analysis techniques found only limited forms of universality in evaluations across Western, Catholic/Orthodox, Muslim, and Asian country clusters. The highest consensus across cultures involved scientific innovators, with Einstein having the most positive evaluation overall. Peaceful humanitarians like Mother Theresa and Gandhi followed. There was much less cross-cultural consistency in the evaluation of negative figures, led by Hitler, Osama bin Laden, and Saddam Hussein. After more traditional empirical ...
This article argues that the discipline of world history, with its interdisciplinary ties to the soc...
The universality versus culture specificity of quantitative evaluations (negative-positive) of 40 ev...
The universality versus culture specificity of quantitative evaluations (negative-positive) of 40 ev...
Emergent properties of global political culture were examined using data from the World History Surv...
Emergent properties of global political culture were examined using data from the World History Surv...
Emergent properties of global political culture were examined using data from the World History Surv...
Emergent properties of global political culture were examined using data from the World History Surv...
Emergent properties of global political culture were examined using data from the World History Surv...
The universality versus culture specificity of quantitative evaluations (negative-positive) of 40 ev...
Do human societies from around the world exhibit similarities in the way that they are structured, a...
[[abstract]]Social representations of world history were assessed using the open-ended questions, “W...
[[abstract]]Social representations of world history were assessed using the open-ended questions, “W...
[[abstract]]The universality versus culture specificity of quantitative evaluations (negative-positi...
Do human societies from around the world exhibit similarities in the way that they are structured, a...
Following open-ended methodology used in an earlier research by Liu et al., social representations o...
This article argues that the discipline of world history, with its interdisciplinary ties to the soc...
The universality versus culture specificity of quantitative evaluations (negative-positive) of 40 ev...
The universality versus culture specificity of quantitative evaluations (negative-positive) of 40 ev...
Emergent properties of global political culture were examined using data from the World History Surv...
Emergent properties of global political culture were examined using data from the World History Surv...
Emergent properties of global political culture were examined using data from the World History Surv...
Emergent properties of global political culture were examined using data from the World History Surv...
Emergent properties of global political culture were examined using data from the World History Surv...
The universality versus culture specificity of quantitative evaluations (negative-positive) of 40 ev...
Do human societies from around the world exhibit similarities in the way that they are structured, a...
[[abstract]]Social representations of world history were assessed using the open-ended questions, “W...
[[abstract]]Social representations of world history were assessed using the open-ended questions, “W...
[[abstract]]The universality versus culture specificity of quantitative evaluations (negative-positi...
Do human societies from around the world exhibit similarities in the way that they are structured, a...
Following open-ended methodology used in an earlier research by Liu et al., social representations o...
This article argues that the discipline of world history, with its interdisciplinary ties to the soc...
The universality versus culture specificity of quantitative evaluations (negative-positive) of 40 ev...
The universality versus culture specificity of quantitative evaluations (negative-positive) of 40 ev...