A study that Dr Sosis conducted in collaboration with Eric Bressler of McMaster University in Canada focused on 83 of these communes (30 religious, 53 secular) to see if the amount of time they survived correlated with the strictures and expectations they imposed on the behaviour of their members. The two researchers examined things like food consumption, attitudes to material possessions, rules about communication, rituals and taboos, and rules about marriage and sexual relationships.
As they expected, they found that the more constraints a religious commune placed on its members, the longer it lasted (one is still going, at the grand old age of 149). But the same did not hold true of secular communes, where the oldest was 40.
Estudo Científico do Dia
March 23rd, 2008 · 2 Comments
Tags: Portugal
2 responses so far ↓
1 JoãoMiranda // Mar 26, 2008 at 01:43
survival bias
2 joao // Mar 26, 2008 at 23:07
banalidades…
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