“…They also rely heavily on regression analysis, and seek to answer questions of the following type: "When the percentage of citizens who believe in God increases by one point, what is the quantitative impact on the country's economic growth rate (or homicide rate or patents per capita)?," "When citizens' average time in school increases by a year, what is the quantitative impact on the country's fertility rate (or on citizens' level of happiness; or on the percentage of the population that believes in God; or on the percentage of the population that believes care for kin is an important value)?" (See e.g., Akbari et al, 2020;Alesina & Giuliano, 2014;Barro & McCleary, 2003;Becker, 2019;Berkessel et al, 2021;Bénabou et al, 2018;Carvalho et al, 2019;Darnell & Sherkat, 1997;Easterlin et al, 2010;Iannaccone, 1994;Inglehart, 2018;Iyer, 2015;Lee & Lee, 2016;Lehrer, 2008;McCleary, 2011;McCleary & Barro, 2006;Rindermann, 2018;Shariff & Rhemtulla, 2012;Thomson et al, 2018). Such interdisciplinary research has (arguably) been spearheaded by economists (e.g., behavioral economics, economics of religion), but has also attracted political scientists, psychologists, sociologists, as well as quantitative-minded anthropologists and historians.…”