Contains fulltext : 235706.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)This paper argues that the capitalist spirit associated with Max Weber’s Protestant Ethics is not associated with Protestantism but with the modernization phase of economic development. A preference for hard work is also found amongst other religions and non-religious people at times of high economic growth and decreases after the modernization phase. We find a robust relationship between the level and growth of economic development during an individual’s childhood and this individual’s work ethic. An epidemiological approach is applied to indicate that the direction of the relationship runs from growth and the level of economic development at the time valu...
The relationship between religion, the work ethic and socioeconomic success was examined using longi...
This inquiry seeks to establish that early sociologist Max Weber advances a view that religious fait...
Few theories in the social sciences have gained more widespread acceptance than Max Weber's The Prot...
This paper argues that the capitalist spirit associated with Max Weber’s Protestant Ethics is not as...
This paper argues that the capitalist spirit associated with Max Weber’s Protestant Ethics is not as...
Weber's contribution on Protestant work ethic has stimulated numerous social scientists. However, th...
Following Max Weber’s seminal work, much recent work has turned to religious values to explain socio...
This article develops two hypotheses about economically-relevant values of Christian believers, acco...
This article will focus on a Weber 's theory of modernization, which is based on the thesis of the c...
Across cultures and eras, economic activity has always been closely tied to ideas relating to belief...
This comment makes a contribution to Becker and Woessmann’s paper on a human capital theory of Prote...
In his essay “The Protestant Ethic” Max Weber explains the specific economic development and the fou...
Few theories in the social sciences have gained more widespread acceptance than Max Weber’s The Prot...
Max Weber's The Protestant Ethics and the Spirit of Capitalism explains the fact that in the context...
This comment makes a contribution to Becker and Woessmann’s paper on a human capital theory of Prote...
The relationship between religion, the work ethic and socioeconomic success was examined using longi...
This inquiry seeks to establish that early sociologist Max Weber advances a view that religious fait...
Few theories in the social sciences have gained more widespread acceptance than Max Weber's The Prot...
This paper argues that the capitalist spirit associated with Max Weber’s Protestant Ethics is not as...
This paper argues that the capitalist spirit associated with Max Weber’s Protestant Ethics is not as...
Weber's contribution on Protestant work ethic has stimulated numerous social scientists. However, th...
Following Max Weber’s seminal work, much recent work has turned to religious values to explain socio...
This article develops two hypotheses about economically-relevant values of Christian believers, acco...
This article will focus on a Weber 's theory of modernization, which is based on the thesis of the c...
Across cultures and eras, economic activity has always been closely tied to ideas relating to belief...
This comment makes a contribution to Becker and Woessmann’s paper on a human capital theory of Prote...
In his essay “The Protestant Ethic” Max Weber explains the specific economic development and the fou...
Few theories in the social sciences have gained more widespread acceptance than Max Weber’s The Prot...
Max Weber's The Protestant Ethics and the Spirit of Capitalism explains the fact that in the context...
This comment makes a contribution to Becker and Woessmann’s paper on a human capital theory of Prote...
The relationship between religion, the work ethic and socioeconomic success was examined using longi...
This inquiry seeks to establish that early sociologist Max Weber advances a view that religious fait...
Few theories in the social sciences have gained more widespread acceptance than Max Weber's The Prot...