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I had no idea Obez was talking about Emerson Lake and Palmer until amp's post, and I'm the one who posted their From the Beginning last night. Another case of gratuitous acronym abuse.
I had no idea Obez was talking about Emerson Lake and Palmer until amp's post, and I'm the one who posted their From the Beginning last night. Another case of gratuitous acronym abuse.
I had no idea Obez was talking about Emerson Lake and Palmer until amp's post, and I'm the one who posted their From the Beginning last night. Another case of gratuitous acronym abuse.
This conclusion, which was reached by Azim Shariff and Mijke Rhemtulla, was made after a thorough investigation involving over 25 years of data that consisted of 143,197 people in 67 countries. What they discovered was that significantly lower crime rates could be found in societies where many people believed in Hell compared to those where more people believed in Heaven.
What they also discovered what that these effects still stood once they accounted for other factors like economic and social well-being. The Heaven/Hell dichotomy within societies proved to be a more accurate way of assessing a country's potential for crime than the usual suspects. And fascinatingly, the difference had to do with the very nature of God's personality.
As an example, the researchers discovered that university students with stronger beliefs in God's punitive and angry nature tended to be the least likely to cheat on an academic task. But stronger belief in God's comforting and forgiving nature significantly predicted higher levels of cheating.