Norenzayan Ara, Hansen Ian G
Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2006 Feb;32(2):174-87. doi: 10.1177/0146167205280251.
Four studies examined whether awareness of mortality intensifies belief in supernatural agents among North Americans. In Studies 1 and 2, mortality salience led to more religiosity, stronger belief in God, and in divine intervention. In Studies 3 and 4, mortality salience increased supernatural agent beliefs even when supernatural agency was presented in a culturally alien context (divine Buddha in Study 3, Shamanic spirits in Study 4). The latter effects occurred primarily among the religiously affiliated, who were predominantly Christian. Implications for the role of supernatural agent beliefs in assuaging mortality concerns are discussed.
四项研究探讨了死亡意识是否会增强北美人对超自然力量的信仰。在研究1和研究2中,死亡凸显导致了更强的宗教信仰、对上帝更坚定的信念以及对神意干预的更强烈信念。在研究3和研究4中,即使超自然力量是在文化陌生的背景下呈现(研究3中的神圣佛陀,研究4中的萨满教神灵),死亡凸显也增加了对超自然力量的信仰。后一种影响主要发生在宗教信徒中,他们主要是基督教徒。文中讨论了超自然力量信仰在缓解死亡焦虑方面的作用。