Wilson Marc Stewart
School of Psychology, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.
J Soc Psychol. 2005 Apr;145(2):209-24. doi: 10.3200/SOCP.145.2.209-224.
The author investigated the relationship between social values and R. Inglehart's (1971, 1981, 1990) Postmaterialism concept. In his theory, Materialism and Postmaterialism are basic value dimensions motivated by a person's need for security and short-term survival (on the one hand) and the desire to address needs that transcend material concerns (on the other). The aim of the present study was to attempt to locate Postmaterialism relative to politically nonspecific social values. Participants were 161 New Zealand university undergraduate men and women who completed P. R. Abramson and R. Inglehart's (1995) Postmaterialism scale and a 56-item Social Values Inventory (S. H. Schwartz, 1992). Analyses of Postmaterialism scale scores and aggregated scores reflecting the motivations underlying different groups of social values supported the hypothesis that Postmaterialism, as measured by this scale, is positively related to values associated with Self-Direction and Universalism motivations and negatively related to Security motivations. The results indicate that previous research had been limited to the application of values representing only a small part of the overall values space.
作者研究了社会价值观与R. 英格尔哈特(1971年、1981年、1990年)的后物质主义概念之间的关系。在他的理论中,物质主义和后物质主义是由个人对安全和短期生存的需求(一方面)以及满足超越物质关注的需求的愿望(另一方面)所驱动的基本价值维度。本研究的目的是试图确定后物质主义相对于政治上非特定的社会价值观的位置。参与者是161名新西兰大学本科男女学生,他们完成了P. R. 艾布拉姆森和R. 英格尔哈特(1995年)的后物质主义量表以及一份包含56个条目的社会价值观量表(S. H. 施瓦茨,1992年)。对后物质主义量表得分以及反映不同社会价值观群体背后动机的综合得分的分析支持了这样一个假设,即通过该量表测量的后物质主义与与自我导向和普遍主义动机相关的价值观呈正相关,与安全动机呈负相关。结果表明,先前的研究仅限于应用仅代表整体价值空间一小部分的价值观。