• Title of article

    Religious traditions as contexts of historical creativity: patterns of scientific and artistic achievement and their stability

  • Author/Authors

    Colin Berry، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    1125
  • To page
    1135
  • Abstract
    Because fragmentary evidence linking outstanding intellectual achievement to Protestant and Jewish family background has left unclear how far any general relationship between religious background and historical creativity holds across arts and sciences, the relative fruitfulness of western religious traditions was explored by regression analysis on a data-base of nearly 1,400 notable 19th and 20th century achievers in six science-related and three arts domains. It was hypothesized that (1) religious traditions are each equipotential across countries, national totals of exceptional achievers in any domain depending simply on the numerical strength of each tradition; (2) Protestant fruitfulness is greater in the sciences, Catholic in the arts and (3) differences will have declined over time. The first two hypotheses were confirmed. More variance was explained by Protestant and Catholic totals separately than by overall population size and Protestant fractions were more productive in all sciences than Catholic, which fared better in the arts. However, no reduction was found in these differences over time. Jewish fractions showed the highest incidence of creativity, but less equipotentiality and no general arts–science difference. It is concluded that creativity in arts and sciences depends strongly on increasingly hidden cultural roots in western society.
  • Keywords
    Creativity^ Eminence^ Achievement^ Religion^ Science^ Arts^ Family background
  • Journal title
    Personality and Individual Differences
  • Serial Year
    1999
  • Journal title
    Personality and Individual Differences
  • Record number

    456392