Religious Fundamentalism: An Empirically Derived Construct and Measurement Scale

Archive for the Psychology of Religion 33 (3):299-323 (2011)
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Abstract

Items were generated to explore the factorial structure of a construct of fundamentalism worded appropriately for Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Results suggested three underlying dimensions: External versus Internal Authority, Fixed versus Malleable Religion, and Worldly Rejection versus Worldly Affirmation. The three dimensions indicate that religious fundamentalism is a personal orientation that asserts a supra-human locus of moral authority, context unbound truth, and the appreciation of the sacred over the worldly components of experience. The 15-item, 3-dimension solution was evaluated across Mexican and American samples. Fit indexes point out the viability of the new inventory across these two samples henceforward referred to as the Multi-Dimensional Fundamentalism Inventory. Additional validity tests supported that the new inventory was negatively correlated with participants’ integrative complexity in a religious domain–specific way.

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W. White
University of North Carolina at Wilmington

References found in this work

Fundamentalisms Comprehended.Martin E. Marty & R. Scott Appleby - 1996 - Religious Studies 32 (3):421-423.
Ideology, Authority, and the Development of Cultic Movements.Roy Wallis - 1974 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 41.

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