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David Interviews David about F.A. Hayek and Jane Jacobs June 7, 2010

Posted by David in Economics, Personal stuff, Politics, Reflections, The Social Sciences.
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David: Why did you choose Hayek and Jacobs as your favorite thinkers?

DAVID: I chose Hayek and Jacobs because they’re the only thinkers who have transformed the way I think about whatever social phenomena I’m interested in. Jacobs’s “The Death and Life of Great American Cities” suddenly made sense of things of which I had been vaguely aware but which I could not articulate. I had been struggling with urban economic theory, but found the abstract models difficult to reconcile with observed reality. To this day, it remains my favorite book.  This was while I was pursuing my PhD in regional planning around 1995.  The first book I read that was allegedly by Hayek was the Fatal Conceit, which I liked but which was not one of my favorite books. That must have been around 1991 or 1992. Then at about the same time that I was reading Death and Life I came across Hayek’s paper entitled “The Use of Knowledge in Society” which made sense of why I couldn’t make sense of standard equilibrium models in economics. The interesting thing is that the Jacobs book and the Hayek paper tell essentially the same story. One could almost say that Hayek’s 1945 paper is a generalized and more abstract summary of the central arguments in Jacobs’s book. To this day, I consider Hayek’s paper the best short article ever written in economics. So I would say that Hayek’s 1945 paper and Jacobs’s 1961 book changed my approach to economics, urban planning, and politics for good.

David: Could you summarize in one sentence the intellectual transformation that Hayek and Jacobs caused in your own thinking?

DAVID: I went from a world where information and knowledge were disregarded into a world where knowedge is subjective, imperfect, and local.

David: Were there any political implications of your theoretical shift?

DAVID: Yes, I would say that it would be very difficult indeed to keep conventional political views while being converted to a Hayekian-Jacobsian understanding of the human world. We have to remember that Hayek was the guy who showed that central planning is associated with massive knowledge losses as compared with markets while Jacobs showed how centralized city planning disregards the valuable local knowledge of residents in specific neighborhoods. So all kinds of top-down policies and plans become suspect and inherently unattractive. So while I have had liberal, democratic, and individualist values since when I was about 19 or 20 years old, my interpretation of the desirability of various specific policies have changed. To give you an example, the middle-of-the-road (Swedish) Liberal Party recently proposed that schools should be the responsibility of the national government rather than municipalities in order to ensure higher academic standards. Before 1995 I might have said that this seems like a worthwhile policy, but today I’m resolutely against it. The education system needs decentralized local experimentation in the same way that shoe stores, restaurants, and health care need decentralized local experimentation. So it’s not just a matter of being in favor of markets, democracy, and science. It’s a matter of being in favor of entrepreneurial markets, bottom-up democracy, and science with competing research programs.

David: Both Hayek and Jacobs have been criticized for lacking a consistent ideology, even though each has influenced a number of ideologues, politicians, and movements (and not necessarily the same people). What are your thoughts about this?

DAVID: Let’s look at Hayek first. He started out as a moderate left-winger until he came under the influence of Ludwig von Mises, who is of course known as a consistent defender of classical liberal institutions and a very small state. The followers of Mises (so-called “Misesian Austrians”) are as far as I know nowadays without exception minarchist or even anarchist libertarians. Hayek was much more moderate in the degree of government activity that he considered possible to combine with a well-functioning market economy, although his specific policy proposals tended to shift over time. In the Consititution of Liberty, for example, he states that he has no problems with government provision of education as long as private producers are allowed to compete with the public sector. He also accepts a safety net such as a minimum income as well as municipal zoning policies. On the other hand, in the 1970s he advocated the denationalization of money. Then in the Fatal Conceit he comes across as a pro-market conservative, but I don’t think we should put too much faith in that book. According to reliable sources, that book was mainly written by his “editor” (Bartley) when Hayek was almost 90 and not in very good health.  What I think is consistent in Hayek is not any specific policy proposal, but rather a sort of open-minded and open-ended liberal consequentialism that makes it possible to reassess policies when new information becomes available. It is also interesting that Hayek has had a much wider sphere of influence than Mises. Thatcher famously said that “this is what we believe in” while referring to the Constitution of Liberty. On the other hand, the moderate German Social Democrat Helmut Schmidt called himself a “Hayekian.” And two left-wing economists, Geoffrey Hodgson and Ted Burczak have recently either proposed (Burczak) or envisioned (Hodgson) post-capitalist economies with worker-controlled firms while acknowledging that Hayek won the Socialist Calculation Debate in the 1930s. What all these people have in common is that the Hayekian influence has made them more pro-market than others with similar values. Margaret Thatcher was more sensible than Richard Nixon; Helmut Schmidt was more economically literate than Michael Foot; and Ted Burczak ‘s socialism makes more sense than Oskar Lange’s.

David: And Jacobs?

DAVID: Jacobs had a great deal of influence on the “New Urbanism” movement, who understood the need for mixed uses but neglected the need for market feedback (unlike Jacobs herself). But then the New Urbanists are architects, and in my experience architects are especially hopeless when it comes to understanding the value of decentralized markets. Maybe that’s why so many of them like working for Arab sheiks and Chinese bureaucrats. She has also had some influence on the green movement, which tend to be strong on democracy and human rights (which I like) but weak on markets (which makes them impossible to vote for in my view).  Fortunately, there are a few Hayekian economists who have discovered Jacobs and are attempting a much needed synthesis. Sandy Ikeda is probably the most obvious example of a Hayek-Jacobs economist, but there are others. So I guess that one can say that Jacobs has influenced an uncommon variety of people with very different ideologies, including greens, libertarians, and confused technocrats. But if you look at her various specific proposals they are actually quite similar to Hayek’s: open-ended and open-minded liberal consequentialism that in her case focused on local entrepreneurship, decentralized democracy and trial-and-error experimentation.

David: Are there any specific policy proposals by Hayek or Jacobs with which you disagree?

DAVID: Sure. I think Hayek was superficial and plain wrong when he gave his stamp of approval to conventional zoning regulations. Jacobs is much better on zoning. On the other hand, Jacobs’s hostility to cars and suburbs is too categorical. Now I happen to share her dislike of cars (I like to walk) and monotonous  suburbs, but I think the fact remains that a large proportion of people actually like their cars and McMansions. I think we have to respect that, even if bustling and diverse downtowns are better for creativity and innovative start-ups. There are many other examples where I disagree with specific policies even though I agree with the big picture.

David: Speaking of creativity, do you think that Hayek and Jacobs were more creative than other 20th century social theorists?

DAVID: Indeed I do. I think Hayek to some extent and Jacobs to an even greater extent illustrate that while competence and creativity are great complements, these two by-and-large desirable characteristics are sometimes unfortunately substitutes. Consider the average guy defending his or her dissertation. For the most part, PhDs are competent in their chosen discipline but not terribly creative. They tend to specialize in a very narrow field and then spend a lifetime publishing a “theme with empirical variations,” say cost-benefit analyses of sugar mills. Now if you look at Hayek, in the first part of his career he undoubtedly emphasized competence over creativity. Hayek studied the Austrian variant of what was then the neoclassical mainstream, first under Wieser and then under Mises. What resulted was the most generally respectable part of his published output (let’s call it Hayek I). He extended a monetary theory of the business cycle and investigated the indirect effects of regulated rents in the housing market and so forth. It was all very competent and perhaps incrementally creative but not terribly exciting. It was only with his emphasis on subjective and dispersed knowledge (Hayek II) during the Socalist Calculation Debate that he created a totally new approach. I think it’s telling that this was also the start of his relative decline in his professional reputation among economists. And then he wrote a path-breaking book on theoretical psychology. And eventually he became Hayek III, with a focus on a mixture of economics, political philosophy, and cultural evolution. I think it’s noteworthy that Hayek himself said that he did not have the ability to construct the grand theoretical edifices for which Mises became famous; he said that he was instead experimenting and exploring at the margin. So Mises was probably more competent, but Hayek was more creative, I think that there can be no doubt about that. But more importantly, Hayek’s undogmatic open-endedness created a foundation for other social scientists to use as a strating point. “Misesian” economics, by contrast, has become a theoretical cul-de-sac where the members are repeating themselves. It is not a progressive research program, and I know of no eclectic Misesian fellow travelers. There are however plenty of Hayekian fellow travelers who are not usually considered Austrian economists — for example Douglass North, Vernon Smith, Oliver Williamson and so forth.

Jacobs is an even more clear-cut case. She never got a college degree, choosing instead to spend two years auditing a very diverse set of courses at Columbia University. So her competence was sketchy. But in her case that was a good thing, given the extremely unhelpful theoretical constructs used in urban planning. Maybe she could have used some more theoretical competence – her discussion of economic theories in some of her books sometimes betrays a lack of depth - but on the other hand it enabled her to offer a totally new approach to urban planning and urban economics which was based on observed reality rather than Platonic utopias.  It is difficult to imagine any of her books had she gotten a PhD in urban planning or economics. They would probably then have been totally forgotten dry academic treatises that applied the theories favored by her advisor.

I like to use an analogy from jazz, which also benefits from creativity among its practitioners. Friedrich Hayek is like Keith  Jarrett – a classically trained pianist who switched to free-form solo improvisations and eclectic modern jazz – first with two quartets and later with his own trio. Nevertheless, he managed to record pieces such as the Goldberg Variations and the Well-tempered Clavier (by Bach) as well as modern pieces by Shostakovich. Jane Jacobs is more like Miles Davis – the enormously creative jazz trumpeter who created three new genres (cool, modal jazz, and fusion) but who would never be able to play a classical concerto with the required competence. Most social science professors, however, are like Wynton Marsalis – a jazz and classical trumpeter with a very high level of competence (“virtuosity”) but with no style to call his own.

David: How come you have not listed any of the thinkers who had a decisive influence on Hayek among your favorite thinkers? I’m thinking of people like Adam Smith, David Hume, Carl Menger, and Ludwig von Mises.

DAVID: Now, Smith, Hume, and Menger are clearly at least as creative as Hayek. Smith created economics as a discipline, Hume a school of philosophy, and Menger created the distinctive Austrian schoold by generalizing his real-world observations while working as a financial journalist for the Wiener Zeitung (Menger was in this similar to Jacobs). Mises filled in the gaps in Menger’s system, although unfortunately he tried (and thought he succeeded) to bring closure to economics as a discipline. I think Mises’s Human Action is the best textbook there is in economics, but please skip the first 100 pages, where he more or less delimits economics as equal to Human Action (Mises was only interested in those economic laws that are universally true – in other words if it’s not true of all rational economic actors it’s not economics, which makes interesting empirical economic problems something else than economics). Now Menger is very open-ended; unfortunately his work is also very incomplete although with a number of insights that were revolutionary at the time. Smith is still interesting and mostly correct, but some parts are downright wrong such as his view of economic value. The good thing about Hayek is that he integrates all the really valuable parts in Smith, Menger, and Mises into his theoretical framework, while not keeping the questionable parts. So Hayek is indispensable in my view, whereas Smith, Menger, and Mises are good and interesting but not truly required reading any longer.

David: Are there any undeservedly neglected parts in Hayek’s and/or Jacobs’s work:

DAVID: In Hayek, I think that most of the really important stuff is being reused and expanded by at least a few economists. However, Hayek’s idea of spontaneous orders has rarely been applied to other fields than markets or perhaps the legal system. Fortunately, the Foundation for the Study of Spontaneous Orders has been sponsoring a new journal and a few conferences where contributors are encouraged to apply spontaneous order theory to new domains (I have been involved in this). Regarding Jacobs I think her excellent little book entitled “Systems of Survival” offers up a new approach to informal institutions with her description of two patterns of moral behavior — Moral Syndrome A and Moral Syndrome B. Moral Syndrome A gives priority to values such as honesty, workmanship, and openness whereas Moral Syndrome B favors honor, duty, loyalty and so on. Jacobs hypothesizes that Moral Syndrome A is more common among businesspeople, scientists, and traders whereas Moral Syndrome B dominates politics, the military, religious hierarchies and so on. I can think of interesting empirical applications for studying cross-cultural and international conflicts on the basis of this dichotomy, but so far I don’t think that anyone has attempted this.

David: To what extent have Hayek and/or Jacobs penetrated your own work.

DAVID: Everything I write on economics is built on a Hayekian foundation. And everything I write about problems with a spatial dimension has a Jacobsian foundation. This does not mean that I always refer to them, but it’s the default position for me. On the other hand, I don’t slavishly follow everything Hayek or Jacobs claim. I stick to their core assumptions, but not necessarily to their more detailed analyses. I do however not accept Hayek’s methodological individualism, even though I share his normative individualism. Hayek almost rejected methodological individualism himself in a footnote to Law, Legislation, and Liberty, but ultimately I think we have a rare instance – in Hayek’s case – of too much competence (read: too much Mises) and not enough creativity.

David: Is there anything outside of their theoretical contributions which you find particularly inspiring?

DAVID: Yes, I find Hayek’s insistence that the state should have no goals of its own very inspiring. What he was saying was that the state is ok if it is like the municipal provision of a power grid or street-cleaning but it has exceeded it’s authority if there are any national goals or ideas about a shared collective purpose. These are ultimately very liberal sentiments in the European sense of the word, but then again I’m a European liberal. The most inspiring part of Jacobs’s message is her belief in cities rather than nations as the basic unit of political organizations, and further that governance within cities should itself be decentralized to neighborhoods. I also find their anti-nationalism inspiring. Hayek became a British citizen and claimed that it’s possible and perhaps common to feel more at home in a culture other than the one into which one is born (he expressed a preference for British over Austrian culture). Jacobs emigrated from the US to Canada because she preferred it there and because of opposition to the Vietnam War. Particularly in the Jacobs case, there is therefore also a strong dose of anti-militarism that I share.

David: Any hopes for the future?

DAVID: Yes, I hope that the combination of ideas from Hayek and Jacobs will become the future mainstream in urban economics and urban planning.

David: Thank you for taking time to answer these questions!

DAVID: My pleasure.

Cosmos and Taxis in Religious Life September 9, 2009

Posted by David in Economics, Politics, The Social Sciences.
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I have just completed a draft of a new paper.  In the past, the only sensitive topic that I have addressed is politics, but in this paper I deal with the three topics that are likely to upset some people if you express your personal opinions: politics, religion, and sex. While I have tried to keep as low a profile as possible regarding my personal opinions, the implications of the paper are clear:

1 Deregulated religion implies more religion

2 Postmodern (postindustrial) society implies that religions that are tolerant of sexual minorities are more likely to achieve positive growth, other things being equal.

3 Other things have usually not been equal in the past: conservative religions have been more successful because they exclude free-riders to a greater extent than religious liberals.

4 A pattern prediction is that if religious entrepreneurs are able to combine liberal (tolerant) values with high-tension (costly) religion, they are more likely to be successful among people with postmodern values than both low-tension religious liberals and high-tension religious conservatives.

The paper is an attempt to combine  Stark’s sociology of religion and Inglehart’s postmodernization theory within a Hayekian spontaneous-order framework:

Introduction

Most studies of spontaneous orders[1] have focused on markets, with some recent extensions to science, democracy, and legal systems. The religious life of an open society – the religious cosmos – is however also an example of such an order. The systemic feedback of religious spontaneous orders is distinct; religious organizations do not use money revenue or vote totals in assessing their performance. The systemic resource of the religious cosmos coincides with what Rodney Stark and Roger Finke (2000: 103) call “objective religious commitment.” Commitment consists of factors such as religious service attendance, adherence to prescribed religious norms, as well as in-kind and money contributions.

        A number of empirical studies have corroborated Adam Smith’s ([1776] 1965) insight that government involvement in the religious life of a nation leads to a less religious society. This proposition is at the core of the new “religious economy theory” as developed by Stark and Fiske (2000), which is a forceful rejection of sociological theories of religion that rest on the secularization thesis. A further component of religious economy theory is that there are tensions within organizations; expansion beyond some upper limit induces difficulties in maintaining behavioral rules that reduce free-riding.

        Behavioral rules serve the purpose of restricting membership in religious organizations to individuals with “virtuous” behavior and organization-specific contributions. Such rules improve the religious experience since worshippers are both producers and consumers. Rules can however be made too costly, since benefits must exceed costs; organizations have therefore adapted their rules in response to aggregate changes in commitment.

        Religious economy theory has so far not analyzed the relationship between the religious cosmos and social values; the unstated implication is that the ongoing transformation from a modern into a postmodern society does not affect the competitiveness of the distinct religious organizations that constitute the religious cosmos (Inglehart, 1997). Surveys show that individuals with the new value structure (often termed “postmodern values”) are less likely to attend religious services but spend more time thinking about “the meaning of life.” There should thus be ample opportunities for religious entrepreneurship.

Religious entrepreneurs face lessons from the past as well as new challenges. Historical experience shows that the intermingling of politics and religion increases hostility or apathy vis-à-vis organized religion (Iannaccone, 1991; Stark and Finke, 2000). The second history lesson is that “liberal faiths” have been less successful than their “conservative” rivals in modern (rather than postmodern) liberal democracies. Religious liberals have offered a less intense religious experience since they have tended to be more tolerant of free-riders and – in many cases – professed vague religious beliefs.

        Religious entrepreneurs face the challenge of devising costly exclusion rules that reward behavior that desirable recruits are willing to accept while repelling undesirables. Success in systemic resource terms requires that desirable adherents perceive the rewards of commitment to be greater than the perceived costs. As we shall see, both rewards and costs depend to some extent on the prevailing value system of the social environment.

In what follows, I first discuss a few of Stark and Finke’s terms and propositions so as to make their relevance to spontaneous order theorizing more apparent. I then attempt to make the theory even more comprehensive by introducing three extensions to the theory: a distinction between long-term and short-term costs; value system effects; and the relation between value systems and the competitiveness of various sorts of tension. Tension refers to the cost that religious organizations impose on members for the purpose of reducing free-riding and raising commitment (Stark and Finke, 2000). Finally, I discuss some of the future challenges that a religious organization (i.e. a “taxis”) is likely to face in a postmodern religious cosmos.  

Recasting Stark and Finke (2000) as a spontaneous order theory

 

The once dominant secularization thesis was a reflection of the modernist faith in the perfectibility of both government and science, and was often an unexamined assumption in twentieth-century sociology and anthropology. It also reflected the hostility to religion of nineteenth century thinkers such as Auguste Comte, Emile Durkheim, and Karl Marx.

Over the past 40 years, Rodney Stark, William Sins Bainbridge, Lawrence Iannaccone, and Roger Finke have developed the new religious economy theory, which is opposed to the secularization thesis on both theoretical and empirical grounds. Their most conspicuous difference from earlier sociologists of religion is that they assert that religious choices can – and tend to be – rational. Early attempts at using rational choice theory to formulate a general theory of religion include Stark and Bainbridge (1980; 1986). Gary Becker’s neoclassical rational choice framework exerted a strong influence on these contributions. The most ambitious attempt to date, however, is the comprehensive religious economy theory that is expounded in Acts of Faith: Explaining the Human Side of Religion (Stark and Finke, 2000).

The later version (ibid.) of the theory is more comprehensive and much less wedded to conventional neoclassical concepts. It integrates anthropological insights as well as a more evolutionary approach to a process that involves boundedly rational individuals, as is apparent from Proposition 1: “Within the limits of their information and understanding, restricted by available options, guided by their preferences and tastes, humans attempt to make rational choices” (Stark and Finke, 2000: 85, italics added).

A short paper such as this could never do justice to a theory as rich and subtle as Stark and Finke (ibid.). The theory encompasses 36 definitions and 99 propositions, which the authors manage to integrate into a seamless and persuasive whole. Acts of Faith also contains a wealth of empirical evidence ranging from summaries of regression results and case studies of individual religious organizations, almost all of which are compatible with the theory but incompatible with the secularization thesis. I shall therefore only highlight a handful of features that are especially relevant to an understanding of the religious cosmos as a spontaneous order.

 

Religious commitment as a systemic resource

A problem with religious economy theory is that it does not provide an explicit recognition of the systemic differences between the spontaneous order that coordinates profit-seeking firms and that which coordinates commitment-seeking religious organizations. Frequently, Stark and Finke (ibid.) offer propositions that treat religious rewards and costs as perfectly analogous to market revenues and costs.

A separation is desirable since there are systematic differences between the information-disseminating capacity of the systemic resources (money and commitment). Unlike money, religious commitment is a vague construct that may encompass various combinations of measurable variables. A commitment measure could for example be an index that attempts to combine measures of money donations, unpaid labor by members, the number of members, total attendance at services, and adherence to organization-specific behavioral prohibitions. Any attempt to convert different qualities of commitment into a single index of aggregate commitment is not as straightforward as calculating money revenues on the basis of market prices, and the relative weight of a commitment variable could at best emerge as an arbitrary social convention. For a religious organization to accept such a social convention as valid would however depend on its sharing this convention with the wider society, which in itself implies a lower level of tension with the social environment than a deviant convention, other things being equal. 

The religious cosmos therefore relies on a fuzzier performance measure than does the market order. But this does not mean that religious organizations must succumb to calculational chaos on a par with a state-owned enterprise in a centrally planned economy. Few would argue against the contention that the Roman Catholic Church has more aggregate religious commitment than the Episcopal Church. But Jehovah’s Witnesses may with some justification claim to have more systemic resources in the United States than the Roman Catholic Church, although most disinterested observers would probably disagree.

We should also note that there is a good reason for why money as expressed in market prices should not substitute for seemingly less “efficient” measures of religious commitment. First, the dominant religious faiths consider the willingness to pay money among adherents as a substandard measure of overall commitment, since it penalizes those with little money. Second, most religious organizations and most believers – regardless of religion – consider the explicit purchase of religious virtue as illegitimate. Like love or trust, but unlike sex or socks, religious virtue is an attribute that is (partly or wholly) devalued by an attempt to buy it. It is also symptomatic that the alleged sale of indulgences – implying purchased virtue – by Pope Leo X was one of the causes of Martin Luther’s Ninety-Five Theses.

 

The religious cosmos

In spite of not differentiating enough between the market order and the religious order, Stark and Finke’s theoretical propositions (ibid.) make up a logically consistent and convincing depiction of causal processes, which are in turn reinforced by the empirical evidence[2]. On the one hand, this is because the market analogy is often close enough to warrant an identical abstract theory. On the other hand, they also note many – if not all – of the circumstances by which the religious cosmos differs from markets that rely on market prices as the coordinating mechanism. The religious cosmos is more similar to the market order than the “marriage market” as theorized by Gary Becker (1973; 1974); therefore some of Israel Kirzner’s (1999) criticisms of Becker do not apply. They also do not apply because of Stark and Finke’s (2000) much more nuanced and realistic treatment of human knowledge and rational behavior.  

The starting point of a spontaneous order theory of religion is that the religious cosmos is a process without any goals of its own. This process coordinates religious individuals (consumers and co-producers) and organizations (producers). The systemic resource is objective religious commitment, which also functions as a signal that guides domain-specific action.

From the individual’s point of view, there is both subjective and objective commitment. Subjective commitment refers to “belief in, and knowledge of, the explanations sustained by a religious organization and having the appropriate emotions” (Stark and Fiske, 2000: 103). Such commitment reflects an individual’s explicit or implicit relational contract with a religious organization. The individual agrees to the contract in the expectation of a bundle of supernatural and natural benefits. The expectation of at least some supernatural benefits is the criterion for demarcating religious from non-religious exchange (ibid: 90).

The subjective commitment of the individual gives rise to various observable attributes of individual behavior. It is these observable attributes that constitutes objective religious commitment, which is the systemic resource that guides the religious cosmos.

Religious organizations are commitment-seeking producers of religious services. They therefore monitor commitment such as “religious participation or practice (taking part in rites and services, for example), material offerings (sacrifices, contributions, and offerings), and conformity to rules governing action (not sinning)” (ibid: 103). A religious organization accumulates commitment in a number of ways, for example by achieving higher attendance rates among existing members or by adding new members.

 

Tension and free-riding

Religious organizations operating in a competitive environment can only achieve (aggregate individual) commitment growth if it undertakes measures to exclude free-riders. The reason for this is twofold. First, a religious service is a territorial public good, which means that some consumers may choose not to contribute toward the cost of providing the service if it is not rationed (cf. Olson, 1965). Second, free-riders tend to have lower levels of objective religious commitment. A lower level of commitment matters, since consumers of religious services are not merely passive consumers but also co-producers (Iannaccone, 1994). A religious service is similar to other experience goods that depend on enthusiastic participation: a congregation of listless skeptics is akin to a heavy-metal concert in front of deaf octogenarians. Stark and Finke provide an example:

Think of a congregation in which individual levels of religious commitment fluctuate on a scale of one to ten. Suppose that there are the same number of people at each level, which yields an average commitment level of 5. Now suppose that this congregation imposes a rule requiring a commitment level of 5 or above in order to remain a member. The immediate result is an average level of commitment of 7.5. Moreover, people who previously had scored 5 and thus had been average members in terms of commitment, now find themselves at the bottom. Many of these are likely to respond by increasing their level of commitment in order to once again become average members. As they do so, the average level of commitment also rises, and the returns on their investment increase correspondingly. (Stark and Finke, p. 148-49).   

 

The required commitment level is not only a measure of the minimal cost that members must pay for inclusion; it is also a measure of the tension of the organization vis-à-vis the surrounding society (ibid: 143). Tension refers to how much a religious group differs from a reference group, usually the general population of some geographical area. One key proposition is that higher-tension organizations tend to grow at the expense of lower-tension ones (ibid: 154), since higher tension both reduces opportunistic behavior and increases the perceived value of the supernatural and natural benefits. However, the transaction costs of excluding undesirables increase with the size of both congregations and organizations, which implies that there is a gradual decrease in tension for those that are most successful in recruiting new adherents (other things being equal). 

Not every prospective member of a religious organization desires high rewards in exchange for high costs – this is why there is a range of religious offerings from low-tension Episcopalians to ultra-strict Holiness sects. But low-tension organizations face difficult commitment problems. For example, they may have funding problems because of their tolerance for listless members who primarily use their membership for infrequent wedding and funeral services, in exchange for low or non-existent contributions. Funding problems and low attendance rates do not usually inspire confidence in the organizational ability to produce rewards, whether uncertain supernatural rewards or observable natural ones such as inspirational sermons or social networking opportunities.

 

State suppression of the religious cosmos

The American religious cosmos has generally been successful in providing a variety of “brands” that can meet the demands of a diverse set of consumers. American history tells of a remarkable variety of organizations and entrepreneurs in a free religious cosmos, which in the aggregate manifests itself as a higher level of commitment than in Europe.

What then is the reason for the lower levels of commitment in Europe? According to Stark and Finke (ibid: 228-39), this is not due to secularization. Contrary to much conventional wisdom, Stark and Finke (ibid.) claim that there never was an “Age of Faith” in Europe, since the historical record shows that most European religious activity prior to the twentieth century was both involuntary and reluctant. A political analogy would be the claim that there has never been an “Age of Communism” unless most people at that time voted for communist parties in free and fair elections.

European religious history is the history of how governments suppressed the religious cosmos and imposed religious taxis. Before the twentieth century, governments imposed religious monopolies on their subjects, while state-sponsored religious leaders colluded with secular rulers in extracting forced contributions. Later religious toleration did however not end European religious regulations. Instead, each European government subsidized one or two dominant religious organizations, while “unusual” religions were – and in most cases still are – the subject of regulations and taxes that exceed those for other types of non-profits.

Italy offers an interesting counterexample in that the government granted all religious organizations the same rights to state support in 1984. It has subsequently experienced rising levels of objective religious commitment among Catholics and non-Catholics alike (Introvigne and Stark, 2005). Introvigne and Stark (ibid.) ascribe increased Catholic attendance rates to increased Catholic product innovation and market segmentation. The innovation and segmentation policies have been in response to the emergence of small high-growth competitors such as various Pentecostal churches, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and New Age movements.

The ability to receive tax revenues and other state support has had the consequence of high nominal membership counts and low levels of average commitment among Europe’s established churches. European history has borne out Adam Smith’s assertion that religious teachers “in the same manner as other teachers, may depend altogether for their subsistence upon the voluntary contributions of their hearers; or they may derive it from some other fund to which the law of their country may entitle them … Their exertion, their zeal and industry, are likely to be much greater in the former situation than in the latter.” (Smith [1776] 1965: 740; quoted in Iannaccone, 1991, p. 156.)

Nowhere is Adam Smith’s assertion more evident than in Sweden, where the Church of Sweden relies on government taxation to generate revenue and is governed by representatives of secular political parties, who need not have any religious faith (Rydenfelt, 1985). The Church of Sweden is assured of a large number of nominal members, since newborn babies become members without a parental application – as long as one of the parents is a member of the Church of Sweden.

The commitment outcome is consistent with religious economy theory: while 67 percent of Swedes claim that they are affiliated with the Church of Sweden, attendance rates at services hover in the low single digits. Indeed, the overall attendance rate in Sweden is only eight percent (World Values Survey, 2006), at least half of which is accounted for by Roman Catholics, Muslims, and Pentecostals. This figure is even lower than the 10 percent attendance rate among unaffiliated Americans (Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, 2008).  

  

 

The religious cosmos, the market process, and democracy

A religious monopoly, a centrally planned economy, and an authoritarian state are three different types of taxis without cosmos. In an unregulated system there is both cosmos – the unplanned order that gives rise to denominational expansions and contractions – and taxis – the made order of each religious organization. The knowledge problems inherent in central planning (Hayek, 1945) explain why large religious organizations with centralized decision-making face internal feedback problems. Some large organizations, for example Southern Baptists and Unitarian Universalists, have however mitigated these problems through decentralized congregational competition and entrepreneurship.

Within this framework, most of contemporary Europe constitutes a “hampered cosmos,” where certain organizations are penalized and others are subsidized. The result should be unsurprising to those who are familiar with the effects of state intervention on markets: less overall religious commitment and entrepreneurship, even allowing for the long-term lock-in effects of previous monopolization.

There are certain pattern regularities that position the religious cosmos between the market order and democracy. David Emanuel Andersson (2008b: 66) writes that the “market process sorts endowment-weighted, fine-grained, individual priorities. Democracy sorts priorities that are egalitarian, coarse, and aggregated.” Using the same general formulation, we may view the religious cosmos as being roughly egalitarian, fine-grained, and individual. At first sight, these characteristics would seem to imply a knowledge-disseminating capacity that is superior to both markets and democracy (cf. Andersson, 2008b), but this impression would be mistaken. The systemic feedback – the signaling system of commitment gains and losses – is much fuzzier than either the accumulation of money or votes. Table 1 provides a comparison of the systemic performance properties of these three spontaneous orders: the religious cosmos; the market order; and democracy.

 

Table 1: Systemic properties of three spontaneous orders

 

Religious cosmos

Market order

Democracy

Ranking of knowledge dissemination effectiveness

Preferences

Continuous

(individual commitment)

Continuous (willingness to pay)

Discrete

(one person, one vote)

1 Religion/Market

3 Democracy

Distribution of endowments

Roughly equal

Roughly equal to highly skewed

Equal (for insiders)

1 Democracy

2 Religion

3 Market

Aggregation of priorities

No: Individual choice

No: Individual choice

Yes: Collective choice

1 Religion/Market

3 Democracy

Systemic resource

Commitment

Money

Votes

1 Market

2 Democracy

3 Religion

Typical taxis

Denomination

Business firm

Political party

-

Effect of abolishing cosmos

Monopolistic religious organization

Centrally planned economy

Autocracy

-

  

Extension I: Long-term and short-term subjective cost

 

Stark and Finke (2000, p. 85-6) use the conventional treatment of subjective rewards and opportunity costs when analyzing religious choices. But they do not discuss the diversity and ambiguity of subjective cost considerations, which is of more than passing interest. First, a high-cost (i.e. high-tension) religion does not uniformly increase costs by, say, introducing a general requirement that members become vegetarians. Some people may have no individual desire for meat or seafood, and do not face any additional subjective cost. This requirement would only impose costs on individuals with diets that are at odds with the doctrine of the organization.

        Second, it is common for individuals to engage in intra-personal bargaining between their long-term and short-term preferences. A compulsive gambler may have a short-term preference for playing the roulette wheel, but at the same time be convinced that it would be in her long-term interest to abstain. In this case, membership in a religious organization could be a way of enforcing the lexicographic priority of long-term values over short-term preferences. People may purposefully join a religious organization in order to tie their hands in the manner of Odysseus.

        In a static theory of individual choice, it is possible to disregard such inner conflicts and only be concerned with a momentary cost that (at least implicitly) is the present value of the expected future flow of combined long-term and short-term costs. For changes in aggregate demand, however, cost heterogeneity and the trade-off between long-term and short-term costs clarify the effects of changes in social values on subjective cost. Heterogeneous costs imply that value shifts may lead to corresponding shifts in the subjective costs associated with a behavioral rule, even if no single individual changes their perceived cost. This is possible because individuals have finite life spans. Continuous cohort replacement may shift the distribution of perceived costs in the population (Inglehart, 1997). Value shifts may engender new assessments of virtuous behavior, rewards, and costs.

Aggregate assessments affect the capacity of an organization to accumulate objective religious commitment. If the dominant value system in a society makes people believe that homosexuality is a sin, it may be possible for religious organizations that ban homosexual behavior to gain gay members. Conversely, if the dominant value system is that homosexuality is legitimate and that sexual tolerance is a virtue, the effect may be that the anti-gay denominations will repel not only gays, but also heterosexuals. As it happens, exactly this value change has gradually emerged in the most economically developed regions of the world over the past 40 years, according to survey results from the World Values Survey.

 

Extension II: Changing values imply changing subjective costs

 

Increasing sexual tolerance is only one aspect of a shift in social values that was first noticed in the 1970s (Inglehart, 1977). Ronald Inglehart calls this change “postmodernization,” which refers to the process whereby postmodern values gradually replace modern ones. According to Ronald Inglehart (1977; 1997), values reflect childhood experiences and are relatively stable after individuals reach adulthood. A consequence is that changes in social values primarily reflect cohort replacement: as new adults enter the population, they replace the values of the recently deceased.

        The cornerstone of Inglehart’s theory is that children who perceive their physical well-being as secure develop a different value system from those who experience subsistence conditions or war. The first cohorts that generally took their survival for granted were those North Americans and Western Europeans who were born in the late 1940s. They came of age in the late 1960s, so that the first measurable changes in social values should have occurred around 1970. The results of various cross-national surveys show that this was indeed the case (Inglehart, 1977).

        The key indicator of postmodern values is Inglehart’s postmaterialism index, which measures interviewees’ priority ordering of four or 12 societal goals. In the original four-item index, postmaterialism is defined as those whose first and second priority exhausts the set [freedom of speech; greater citizen participation in governmental decisions] while materialists give priority to the set [law and order; fighting rising prices]. The combination of one priority from each set corresponds to a mixed category. This index exhibits positive correlations with other postmodern values that reflect increasing tolerance of various ethnic, cultural or sexual minority groups.

        Two tolerance variables measure sexual tolerance: acceptance of homosexual neighbors and degree of justification of homosexuality. These two variables are even more robust than the postmaterialism index during economic downturns.

Analyses of partial correlations (controlling for the postmaterialism index) reveal that acceptance of gay neighbors exhibits consistently significant correlations with a host of indicators of national socio-economic development, unlike the postmaterialism index (controlling for tolerance) or other types of tolerance (controlling for postmaterialism). The simple correlation between tolerance of homosexuality and development is .727 if development is measured as freedom from corruption (Transparency International 2009), .704 if as political rights and civil liberties (Freedom House 2009), .667 if as human development (United Nations Development Programme 2009), and .564 if as economic freedom (Fraser Institute 2009)[3].

        On a less aggregated level, Richard Florida (2002) has shown that America’s most postindustrial metropolitan regions are also among the most tolerant, with greater than average representation of gays. In Sweden, questionnaire surveys from the 1990s showed that postmodern values were most prevalent among highly educated women in the largest conurbations, while they were least common among elderly men in rural settings (Andersson, Holmberg and Furth, 1997).

        While postmodern values are especially prevalent in North America and Northwestern Europe, the levels of religious commitment represent opposing poles in the developed world, with the United States and Sweden as extreme cases (Inglehart, 1997). As a believer in the secularization thesis, Inglehart dismisses the American results as an aberration, even though Canadian and Australian religious commitment align more closely with the United States than with Sweden. But nowhere does Inglehart mention the historical impact of state regulation in Europe.

        Stark and Finke (2000) not only contend that high-tension religious organizations tend to grow, while lower-tension ones are in relative decline. They also contend that higher-tension faiths are more conservative, and thus that conservative faiths are most successful. Pentecostal churches, Mormonism, and Jehovah’s Witnesses are indeed among the fastest-growing as well as among the most culturally conservative of America’s denominations. Table 2 shows attitudes toward homosexuality among American adherents of different religious traditions, along with their respective shares of all adults and all adults with a postgraduate degree. Most Hindus, Muslims, and Orthodox Christians are immigrants, while majorities of all other faiths were born in the United States. The unaffiliated category is made up of atheists (1.6 percent), agnostics (2.4 percent) and interviewees claiming to belong to “nothing in particular” (12.1 percent).   

 

Table 2: Percentage agreeing with the statement homosexuality is a way of life that should be accepted by society”; religious composition of adult population, United States, 2007

Religious affiliation

Percentage2 agreeing with statement

Percentage of US adult population1

Percentage with postgraduate degree2

Other faiths (Unitarian Universalist, Pagan etc.)

84

1.2

21

Buddhist

82

0.7

26

Jewish

79

1.7

35

Unaffiliated

71

16.1

13

Other Christian (Spiritualist, Unity Church etc.)

69

0.3

20

Catholic

58

23.9

10

Mainline Protestant

56

18.1

14

United States adult population

50

100.0

11

Orthodox Christian

48

0.6

18

Hindu

48

0.4

48

Historically black churches

39

6.9

5

Muslim

27

0.6

10

Evangelical Protestant

26

26.3

7

Mormon

24

1.7

10

Jehovah’s Witness

12

0.7

3

 Source: The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life: US Religious Landscape Survey, 2008.

1 The maximum 95% confidence interval is ±0.6%; 2 Maximum 95% confidence intervals range from ±1.5% (Catholics, Evangelical Protestant, and Mainline Protestant) to ±10.5% (Muslim).  

 

We should note that one of Stark and Finke’s success stories – the Jehovah’s Witnesses – is the least tolerant of the major American religious organizations. Minimum costs include attendance at two religious services, four hours of missionary work per week, and a ban on all forms of political participation. While these costs may have caused considerable religious rewards and high aggregate growth in the past, it is questionable whether the organization can maintain such growth if the social values of the surrounding society become increasingly contrarian.

The evolution of social values over the past 40 years shows an ever-growing[4] endorsement of postmodern priorities such as freedom of speech, democracy, and acceptance of alternative lifestyles. This evolution has occurred in tandem with a continuous increase in average educational attainment. Will future generations be attracted to a denomination where an unelected leadership imposes a doctrine that is unusually difficult to reconcile with natural science? The Jehovah’s Witnesses may be an extreme case, but many other conservative churches have behavioral rules that are quite similar, albeit to a lesser extent.

More liberal religious organizations tend to subscribe to doctrines that are better suited to the emerging postmodern value system. But most of them offer low-energy religion and rarely promise a transformative spiritual experience; they have for many years seen a net loss of members. Can strict behavioral rules (high tension) somehow be reconciled with a tolerant postmodern doctrine? It is to this question that we turn in the next section.  

       

Extension III: High tension need not imply cultural conservatism

 

Stark and Finke (2000, 195-217) discuss the matching of the supply of religious organizations to a demand that is divided into niches, reflecting population diversity both in religious preferences and in opportunity costs. The assumption is that the population is normally distributed around two large “moderate” and “conservative” niches. Organizations that straddle these two niches are most successful in the long term (e.g. the Roman Catholic Church). One proposition of the theory is that the strict niche (i.e. stricter than conservative) generates the most new organizations, but that these organizations then relax their tension if they become popular. Groups that exemplify this process include the Methodist and Presbyterian denominations.

        While this view of the relationship between niches, tension, and historical evolution is both theoretically and empirically persuasive, a longer time perspective shows that high tension need not necessarily be associated with cultural conservatism in the sense of behavioral rules that corresponds to earlier norms. It is of course true that Mormons and Jehovah’s Witnesses embody “old-fashioned” values and have experienced rapid commitment growth, while the declining Episcopal Church promotes mainstream values and rules that do not require any deviations from the cultural environment. But the history of the past two millennia shows that there are many instances of organizations that combined high tension, high growth, and what were then liberal breaks with past practice.

        Examples include the practice of early Roman Christians to care for the elderly and sick; the Jewish promotion of literacy and learning; and the Buddhist principles of non-violence and tolerance. If we look at the “ultra-liberal niche,” which supposedly signifies a complete absence of tension with the environment (p. 210), Unitarian Universalists[5] (UU) and New Age groups are mentioned as examples. It is worth noting, however, that 653 out of 1,096 UU Congregations in the United States and Canada are so called “Welcoming Congregations,” which represents a promise that the congregation “affirms and celebrates bisexual, gay, lesbian, and transgender issues and history during the church year (possibly including Gay Pride Week, which is in June)[6].”

        In a society where only about half of the population considers homosexuality a legitimate way of life, and about a quarter of the population would not like to have a gay neighbor (World Values Survey 2006), this signifies a certain degree of liberal tension with the surrounding society. Symptomatically, the Unitarian Universalists is the only historically Christian church that has combined positive growth (since 1983) in religious objective commitment and liberal behavioral rules.

        Unitarian Universalism is not the only liberal organization that has experienced growth. A recent survey (The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, 2008) reveals that 73 percent of all American Buddhists have converted from another religion or were previously unaffiliated, and are predominantly non-Asian. The most popular Buddhist sub-religions in the United States are Zen and Tibetan Buddhism, which are relatively high tension religious schools that are compatible with tolerant, postmodern values. Participation in Zen is quite costly since Zen teachers often expect adherents to participate regularly in group meditation retreats that last several days.

 

Future Challenges

 

In spite of these exceptions, Stark and Finke (2000) are correct when they link high tension, religious commitment, and cultural conservatism in modern twentieth-century societies. I would like to conjecture that this situation arose as influential modernist thinkers promoted faith in the potential perfection of both society and science. The ruling elites of industrializing Europe and North America were mostly technocrats with more faith in omniscient social engineering than in an omniscient God. High tension in modern society thus implies a rejection of a social value system that celebrates supposedly scientific social engineering, while tension in pre-modern societies often implied rejection of systems that celebrated war and conquest. But absolute faith in one’s own prescriptions unites the modern technocratic state and modern high-tension Christianity.

        Friedrich Hayek’s work in economics (1937, 1945) and psychology (1952) set the stage for a reassessment of the ability of planners and scientists to create a perfect society. The gist of his message is that the cognitive powers of humans are never sufficient for a detailed understanding of society. But long before that, Charles Darwin (1859) had shown that a literal reading of the Bible is untenable. With the spread of higher education and the implosion of the Soviet Bloc, Western populations are gradually, albeit slowly, catching up with Darwin and Hayek.

        The postmodern value system is associated with declining confidence in all types of authority figure, whether politician, scientist or priest. People with a postmodern value structure tend to spend more time thinking about spiritual concerns such as the meaning of life and morality (Inglehart, 1997). These trends offer opportunities for religious innovators, but constitute a challenge for authoritarian creeds.

Individuals do not generally choose religious organizations on doctrinal grounds (Stark and Finke, 2000, p. 116-118). Most potential new adherents are recruited by friends or relatives. Subsequently, recruits will convert if they expect the rewards to exceed the costs, where the rewards are contingent on “belief in, and knowledge of, the explanations sustained by a religious organization” (Stark and Finke, 2000: 103). It seems reasonable to assume that such belief is more likely to be forthcoming if the doctrine harmonizes well with the value system of the individual.

The importance of social networks in religious recruitment implies that Christian organizations have an inherent recruitment advantage in American society. Most Americans are Christians who are for the most part connected to other Christians. People who were raised as Christians also have a greater stake in Christianity, since they have accumulated religious capital that is costly to give up. Christianity thus benefits in proportion to its attained popularity[7]. A prediction is therefore that if a large Christian church manages to combine high tension with postmodern values, it should have extraordinarily good prospects for long-term commitment growth. Perhaps the high-tension religion of the future will resemble a doctoral program more than a military academy[8].    

         

References

Andersson, Ake E., Thomas Furth, and Ingvar Holmberg. (1997). 70-talister: om varderingar forr, nu och i framtiden. Stockholms: Natur och kultur.

Andersson, David Emanuel (2008a). Property Rights, Consumption and the Market Process. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.

Andersson, David Emanuel (2008b). “The double-edged nature of the Hayekian knowledge problem: systemic tendencies in markets and science.” Studies in Emergent Order. 1: 51-72.

Becker, Gary S. (1973). “A theory of marriage: part I.” Journal of Political Economy. 81(4): 813-46.

Becker, Gary S. (1974). “A theory of marriage: part II.” Journal of Political Economy. 82(2, Part II): S11-S26.

Darwin, Charles. (1859). On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. London: John Murray.

diZerega, Gus (2008). “New directions in emergent order research.” Studies in Emergent Order. 1: 1-23.

Florida, Richard. (2002). The Rise of the Creative Class: And How It’s Transforming Work, Leisure, Community, and Everyday Life. New York, NY: Basic Books.

Fraser Institute. (2008). Economic Freedom of the World: 2008 Annual Report: http://www.freetheworld.com/2008/EconomicFreedomoftheWorld2008.pdf

Freedom House. (2009). Freedom in the World: 2009 Edition: http://www.freedomhouse.org/template.cfm?page=25&year=2009

Hayek, Friedrich A. (1937). “Economics and knowledge.” Economica. 4(13): 33-54.

Hayek, Friedrich A. (1945). “The use of knowledge in society.” American Economic Review. 35(4): 519-30.

Hayek, Friedrich A. (1952). The Sensory Order. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.

Hayek, Friedrich A. (1982). Law, Legislation and Liberty: A New Statement of the Liberal Principles of Justice and Political Economy, Vol. 1-3. London: Routledge.

Iannaccone, Laurence R. (1991). “The consequences of religious market regulation: Adam Smith and the economics of religion.” Rationality and Society. 3: 156-77.

Iannaccone, Laurence R. (1994). “Why strict churches are strong.” American Journal of Sociology. 99: 1180-1211.

Inglehart, Ronald. (1977). The Silent Revolution: Changing Values and Political Styles among Western Publics. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Inglehart, Ronald. (1997). Modernization and Postmodernization: Cultural, Economic, and Political Change in 43 Societies. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Introvigne, Massimi, and Rodney Stark (2005). “Religious competition and revival in Italy: exploring European exceptionalism.” Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion. 1 (1), Article 5 (1-17).

Kirzner, Israel M. (1999). “Rationality, entrepreneurship and economic imperialism.” In Sheila C. Dow and Peter E. Earl (Eds.), Economic Organization and Economic Knowledge: Essays in Honour of Brian Loasby (Vol. 1). Cheltenham: Edward Elgar: 1-13.

Nozick, Robert (1993). The Nature of Rationality. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Olson, Mancur (1965). The Logic of Collective Action: Public Goods and the Theory of Groups. Cambridge, MA: Harvard.

Ormerod, Paul (2002). “Social networks and information.” In Edward Fullbrook (Ed.), Intersubjectivity in Economics: Agents and Structures. London: Routledge, pp. 216-30.

Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life (2008). US Religious Landscape Survey: http://religions.pewforum.org/pdf/report-religious-landscape-study-full.pdf

Rydenfelt, Sven. (1985). “Sweden and its bishops.” Wall Street Journal. August 21: A25.

Smith, Adam. ([1776]1965). An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. New York: The Modern Library.

Stark, Rodney and William Sims Bainbridge. (1980). “Towards a theory of religion: religious commitment.” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 19: 114-28.

Stark, Rodney and William Sims Bainbridge. (1987). A Theory of Religion. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.

Stark, Rodney and Roger Finke (2000). Acts of Faith: Explaining the Human Side of Religion. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

Transparency International. (2009). 2008 Corruption Perceptions Index: http://www.transparency.org/news_room/in_focus/2008/cpi2008/cpi_2008_table

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World Values Survey. (accessed 2009). WWS 2005-2008: www.worldvaluessurvey.com

 

Notes

 


[1] In this paper, spontaneous order and cosmos are interchangeable terms, as are the terms planned or made order and taxis. The underlying theory is based on Hayekian theory (Hayek, 1982, Chapter 2). Gus diZerega (2008) coined the term “systemic resource.” My use of the term is the same as his. The religious cosmos, the market order, and democracy are my preferred terms for the religious, economic, and political spontaneous orders.

[2] For a discussion of the relationship between the causal and evidential utility of a theory, see Andersson (2008a: Chapter 1), and Nozick (1993).

[3] This is based on my own calculations, using the most recent data from the 83 countries that carried out surveys between 1990 and 2008 and the most recent data from Transparency International (2009), Freedom House (2009), the United Nations Development Programme (2009), and the Fraser Institute (2009).  

[4] This is true of both North America and Western Europe, although the results of the World Values Survey (accessed 2009) indicate that the social values of the American population were slightly less postmodern in 2006 than in 1999.

[5] Strictly speaking, the UU does not meet the criterion that a religious organization should promise supernatural rewards. While originally a heterodox Christian church, UU is no longer a Christian organization. Instead, it may be described as a secular facilitator of dialogue between different faith traditions, including three UU groups that organize Buddhists, Christians, and Pagans, respectively. 

[6] Quotation from www.uua.org/leaders/leaderslibrary/welcomingcongregation

[7] Individuals are more likely to be connected to other individuals who belong to a large religion than to a small one, ceteris paribus. But the cost of joining a religion, given its level of tension, depends on the religious capital of the potential convert (Stark and Finke, 2000: 118-125). Thus, people who have been socialized into a Christian faith will find it less costly to join a Christian organization, since the marginal cost of denomination-specific doctrinal knowledge within Christian faiths is lower than the marginal cost of learning the doctrine of a religion of which they have no prior knowledge. In addition, “distant” religions imply opportunity costs associated with giving up one’s religious capital (which has both human and social capital attributes). Consequently, societies lacking in religious commitment (few religious connections) and religious socialization (low religious capital) should only experience substantial effects of religious deregulation after a long period of time (cf. Ormerod 2002). On the other hand, the lack of specifically Christian socialization in such societies implies greater opportunities for non-Christian religious organizations than in the United States. 

[8] In my experience, doctoral students tend to have greater faith than members of low-tension religions in their respective hard-core propositions.

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