{
  "creator": [
    "Morreall, John"
  ],
  "date": [
    "2005-08-31"
  ],
  "description": [
    "Researchers like Vassilis Saroglou have found a negative correlation  between religious belief and sense of humor.  I add two things to this  line of research.  First, I argue that the features that make religious  believers humorless also make them militaristic.  Secondly, I argue that  militarism and humorlessness are concentrated in religions which stress  orthodoxy and faith, such as Christianity and Islam; militarism and  humorlessness do not dominate nontheistic religions such as Buddhism  which do not stress orthodoxy and faith."
  ],
  "format": [
    "text/html"
  ],
  "identifier": [
    "https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/369",
    "10.5964/ejop.v1i3.369"
  ],
  "language": [
    "eng"
  ],
  "publisher": [
    "PsychOpen GOLD / Leibniz Institut for Psychology (ZPID)"
  ],
  "relation": [
    "https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/369/369.html"
  ],
  "rights": [
    "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0"
  ],
  "source": [
    "Europe’s Journal of Psychology; Vol. 1 No. 3 (2005)",
    "1841-0413"
  ],
  "title": [
    "Religious Faith, Militarism, and Humorlessness"
  ],
  "type": [
    "info:eu-repo/semantics/article",
    "info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion"
  ]
}