Title :
Moral differences between Protestants and atheists, and the effects of religion on the morality of Protestants
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Sociology, Ulsan Univ., South Korea
fDate :
26 June-2 July 2005
Abstract :
Social control theory argues that religious people would stick to the ethical codes of religion. The theory further asserts that religion would have tremendous effects on individuals´ moral attitudes and behavior. This study tests social control theory. Data were collected from a sample of 911 people who were 18 or older at the time of study. The analysis reveals that Protestants have stronger moral values, are less corrupted, volunteer more for community service, and have better concerns for others than atheists. These differences, although significant statistically, are not so great. Religious activities such as church attendance, family worship, and participation in church activities have small effects on the Protestants´ attitudes toward violence, and reasonable effects on voluntary service. Various religiosity indices have reasonable and consistent effects on the Protestants´ attitudes toward marital fidelity and violence and on some of the moral behaviors in a positive way. The effects of religion on the Protestants´ morality are, however, not as great as social control theory predicts.
Keywords :
behavioural sciences; social sciences; Protestant morality; atheists; church activity participation; church attendance; community service; family worship; marital fidelity; moral attitudes; moral behavior; moral difference; religion ethical codes; religious activities; religious people; social control theory; violence; voluntary service; Assembly; Attitude control; Control theory; Economic forecasting; Electric breakdown; Ethics; Industrial economics; Sampling methods; Sociology; Testing;
Conference_Titel :
Science and Technology, 2005. KORUS 2005. Proceedings. The 9th Russian-Korean International Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8943-3
DOI :
10.1109/KORUS.2005.1507966