Guilt-Innocence Cultures are WEIRD

Guilt-innocence cultures are W.E.I.R.D.—Western, Education, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic.

In 2010, three cultural psychologists published an article titled “The Weirdest People in the World?” The authors explain that most psychological research in conducted on a small, unrepresentative subset of human population—W.E.I.R.D people.

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The article shows how behavioral scientists have published claims about human psychology and behavior, but their samples are drawn mostly from WEIRD people, whom researchers assume represent of all human populations. This subpopulation hardly represents humanity; they are unusual—frequent global outliers. So, we should not project social truth about WEIRD people upon all people in all cultures.

This fascinating article is long and technical, but has definite implications for global theology and cross-cultural ministry. Here is the main take away—WEIRD people are…weird, because they are both numerically rare and culturally different. Follow along to trace the implications.

1. WEIRD people are numerically rare (like guilt-innocence cultures).

People from WEIRD societies are “among the least representative populations one could find for generalizing about humans.” In the maps below, you notice that WEIRDness (education, industrialization, wealth, and democracy) is limited to North America, Western Europe, and the Aussies/Kiwis down under.

Educated—Dark Green (UN education index, 2007. Black=no data)

Industrialized—Blue (CIA list of “developed countries”)

map_of_developed_countries_cia_world_factbook_2008

Rich—Dark Blue (per capita GDP, IMF)

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Democratic—Dark Green (Democracy Index, 2015.)

democracy_index-2015

These maps show that high levels of education, wealth, and democracy is concentrated in a few places on the globe—mostly “Western” countries. You also notice the four maps above correspond to guilt-innocence cultures, displayed in blue in the map below.

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This shows that guilt-innocence cultures are WEIRD (i.e., Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic) and weird (by virtue of being globally rare).

2. WEIRD people are culturally different (like guilt-innocence cultures).

WEIRD people think and behave differently. Their cognitive and moral processes are rather peculiar. They hardly represent standard human thinking or behavior. WEIRD subcultures “may often be the worst populations from which to make generalizations” (p. 79). Empirical data from diverse disciplines indicates the WEIRD “sub-population is highly unusual along many important psychological and behavioral dimensions” (79). Basically, they don’t represent the typical human being.

Here is why WEIRD people are weird—they are independent, autonomous, and analytical. Jonathon Haidt, in The Righteous Mind, offers this generalization: The WEIRDer you are, the more you see a world full of separate objects, rather than relationships (p 96).

Consequently WEIRD philosophers have “mostly generated moral systems that are individualistic, rule-based, and universalist. That’s the morality you need to govern a society of autonomous individuals” (p 97). Since WEIRD and non-WEIRD people perceive and interpret the world differently, it makes sense they have different moral orientations. WEIRD morality is based on individual rights and fairness; non-WEIRD morality is more socio-centric and community-based, focusing on people’s obligation to play assigned roles in a group. In short, the moral reasoning of WEIRD people is rather peculiar in a global context.

Conclusions & Applications

This critique of the behavioral sciences—generalizing aspects of a one subculture to all of humanity—is also true of Christian theology. Both fields over-confidently universalize their own experience.

The authors of “The Weirdest People in the World?” conclude with several suggestions that apply to global theology and missiology.

  1. Include voices from across diverse populations. Don’t assume “they” think like “us”; go find out. Don’t generalize or assume representativeness. The conversation must broaden. This means creating new structures to facilitate this new conversation.
  2. Label particularity, lest you imply universality. People must identify the specific group about which they are making statements. For example, The NIV Study Bible or ESV Study Bible could take their cue from the African Study Bible, and rename A Western Study Bible or A Study Bible For First-World Problems. Another example: there has been a proliferation of books about global theology, but they treat Western theology as “historical theology,” not an “ethnic theology.” Why do Western theologians write Systematic Theology, but Asian theologians write Water Buffalo Theology? Suppose the seminary course “Systematic Theology” was relabeled “Western Theology.”

To summarize, if you are Western, then recognize that your culture, your theology, and your gospel are…WEIRD. 

 

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10 Comments on “Guilt-Innocence Cultures are WEIRD

  1. Wow. I still have so much to learn. I rolled my eyes at the thought of an “African” Bible… but you’re right, the Bibles I know should have a ‘westernized’ label. I just assume so much – and I’m trying not to! Thank you for pointing out my (our) weirdness.

  2. I’m broken-hearted to think of all the words I have spoken boldly as though I knew — because I thought I did.

  3. Japan seems to be the anomaly here. What does that mean? And what are the implications for the spread of the gospel there?

    • Amy, good point. Japan is Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic, but not guilt-innocence. As far as I can think, Japan is the strongest honor-shame country that is part of the First World bloc of countries. And to be honest, that has always been a confusing anomaly for me. Seems like Korea and the other Asian Tigers are becoming WEIRD, or at least EIRD (minus the Western). Personally, I’m not sure what to make of it.

      Anyone have thoughts on this?

      • It seems that there are several countries that don’t quite fit. Much of southern and Eastern Europe (Austria, Spain, Portugal, Italy), be they IERD or non-guilt WEIRD countries, are also “Outliers”. Ultimately we need to find ways to “do theology” that resonate in an honor shame framework. There are many OT texts we don’t teach or understand in a western setting because they speak to an Honor dynamic.

  4. Great to see info like this. Most missionaries I know here in Guatemala focus on guilt-innocence.
    It is interesting to note that the indigenous & tribal populations of Latin America (and I suspect much of the world) are NOT represented on the map. The indigenous populations (such as Maya, Quechua, Aymara) are predominately fear-power oriented.

    In Latin America there is an interesting (and messy) mix of honor-shame and fear-power dynamic going on that anyone in ministry needs to be aware of if they want to have an impact.

    • Thanks Rick, for that word. Those maps combine all the populations of each particular country. As your comments testify, the maps do not define reality, they just describe it in a simple way. Cultural dynamics can only be known through direct interaction with the local community, not a map. But, a map make us aware of dynamics to keep an eye out for.

    • This helps so much, in some maps I have found it to be color coded as shame-based and others guilt-based. From my experience with people there, it is actually honor-shame and fear-power dynamics.

  5. Amem! Thank you, now I know I am not unusual, that I can put what I felt about scripture into how I think about God, allowing my cultural understanding to enrich my theological worldview. That a more global theology is legitimate and needed.

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