Effect of religious rules on time of conception in Romania from 1905 to 2001
Claudiu Herteliu, Bogdan Vasile Ileanu, Marcel Ausloos, Giulia Rotundo

TL;DR
This study analyzes how religious fasting rules in Romania from 1905 to 2001 influenced conception timing, revealing that Lent fasting significantly reduced conceptions among Eastern Orthodox populations, with implications for sociophysics modeling.
Contribution
It provides a long-term, comparative analysis of religious fasting effects on conception timing using extensive data and develops econometric models for sociophysical applications.
Findings
Lent fasting has a more significant impact than Nativity fasting on conception rates.
Religious affiliation influences conception timing.
Econometric models can effectively analyze sociophysical phenomena.
Abstract
Population growth (or decay) in a country can be due to various f socio-economic constraints, as demonstrated in this paper. For example, sexual intercourse is banned in various religions, during Nativity and Lent fasting periods. Data consisting of registered daily birth records for very long (35,429 points) time series and many (24,947,061) babies in Romania between 1905 and 2001 (97 years) is analyzed. The data was obtained from the 1992 and 2002 censuses, thus on persons alive at that time. We grouped the population into two categories (Eastern Orthodox and Non-Orthodox) in order to distinguish religious constraints and performed extensive data analysis in a comparative manner for both groups. From such a long time series data analysis, it seems that the Lent fast has a more drastic effect than the Nativity fast over baby conception within the Eastern Orthodox population, thereby…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReligion and Society Interactions
