Religious fundamentalism is observed across the world. We investigate its roots using agent-based simulations of religiosity dynamics in a spatially dispersed population. Agents’ religiosity responds to neighbors via direct interactions as well as via club goods effects. A simulation run is deemed fundamentalist if the final distribution contains a cohesive subset of agents with very high religiosity. We investigate whether such distributions are more prevalent when model parameters are shifted to reflect the transition from traditional societies to the modern world. The simulations suggest that the rise of fundamentalism in the modern world is aided by weaker attachment to the peer group, greater real income, and less compatibility between...
Critics of religion, such as Sigmund Freud, Karl Marx, and Friedrich Nietzsche, have long made famo...
"This paper develops behavioral and deterministic overlapping generations models to explain and simu...
Why do some individuals engage in more religious activity than others? And how does this religious ...
We report agent-based simulations of religiosity dynamics in a spatially dispersed population. Agent...
Religious fundamentalism is observed across the world. We survey evidence on religious fundamentalis...
This article uses a computer-based Schelling-model to examine the aggregate outcomes of individual c...
We provide an evolutionary model of conflict based on dyadic interactions within and between individ...
Religion is, at the very least, a highly complex social phenomenon. The theories we use to understan...
Religiosity is one of the most important sociological aspects of populations. All religions may evol...
This paper extends the club model of religion to better account for observed patterns of extremism. ...
A religion affiliation can be considered as a "degree of freedom" of an agent on the human genre net...
A rich literature examining the effects of intergovernmental grants has documented evidence of the “...
Statistical models attempting to predict who will disaffiliate from religions have typically account...
We propose a model of religious organizations which relies on the ability of such organizations to a...
Economic growth has not led to a decline in religion despite past predictions that it would. Using a...
Critics of religion, such as Sigmund Freud, Karl Marx, and Friedrich Nietzsche, have long made famo...
"This paper develops behavioral and deterministic overlapping generations models to explain and simu...
Why do some individuals engage in more religious activity than others? And how does this religious ...
We report agent-based simulations of religiosity dynamics in a spatially dispersed population. Agent...
Religious fundamentalism is observed across the world. We survey evidence on religious fundamentalis...
This article uses a computer-based Schelling-model to examine the aggregate outcomes of individual c...
We provide an evolutionary model of conflict based on dyadic interactions within and between individ...
Religion is, at the very least, a highly complex social phenomenon. The theories we use to understan...
Religiosity is one of the most important sociological aspects of populations. All religions may evol...
This paper extends the club model of religion to better account for observed patterns of extremism. ...
A religion affiliation can be considered as a "degree of freedom" of an agent on the human genre net...
A rich literature examining the effects of intergovernmental grants has documented evidence of the “...
Statistical models attempting to predict who will disaffiliate from religions have typically account...
We propose a model of religious organizations which relies on the ability of such organizations to a...
Economic growth has not led to a decline in religion despite past predictions that it would. Using a...
Critics of religion, such as Sigmund Freud, Karl Marx, and Friedrich Nietzsche, have long made famo...
"This paper develops behavioral and deterministic overlapping generations models to explain and simu...
Why do some individuals engage in more religious activity than others? And how does this religious ...