Why people find religious persons less romantic

Why people find religious persons less romantic
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Across a number of faiths and cultures, people tend to date and marry others who share their religious beliefs. This is due to inferences about religious people\'s personalities, reveals a new study.

Melbourne: Across a number of faiths and cultures, people tend to date and marry others who share their religious beliefs. This is due to inferences about religious people's personalities, reveals a new study.

Now, new psychology research from New Zealand's University of Otago suggests this phenomenon -- known as 'religious homogamy' -- is partially a result of inferences about religious people's personalities.
The researchers measured how religious and non-religious individuals perceive the 'openness' -- a primary dimension of personality associated with intellectual curiosity -- of potential religious and non-religious mates.
They found that non-religious participants in particular associated religious behaviour with less openness, and that this inference led them to devalue religious individuals as romantic partners.
"The results illustrate that people's decision to partner with religious or non-religious individuals can be determined by personality traits that religiosity is believed -- rightly or wrongly -- to predict, rather than religion itself," said study co-author Jamin Halberstadt from the University of Otago, New Zealand.
In one experiment, religious and non-religious participants decided whether or not they would date 40 possible romantic partners who varied in how frequently they attended religious services.
The research team discovered that non-religious participants found potential partners less desirable, and also less open to new experience, as their religious behaviour increased.
In a second study, participants judged potential partners who attended religious services frequently or infrequently, some of whom also disclosed that they were open to new experiences.
Non-religious participants preferred non-religious partners, and also those who were open to new experiences, while religious participants showed the opposite preferences.
Further analysis suggested that religious and non-religious participants evaluate the same 'open' behaviours differently. That is, there was agreement that non-religious individuals are relatively open-minded, but not on whether being open-minded is a good thing.
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