The Spears Research Institute, HealthCare Chaplaincy, 307 E. 60th Street, New York, NY 10022, USA.
J Relig Health. 2010 Jun;49(2):246-61. doi: 10.1007/s10943-009-9244-z.
The present study analyzed the association between specific beliefs about God and psychiatric symptoms among a representative sample of 1,306 U.S. adults. Three pairs of beliefs about God served as the independent variables: Close and Loving, Approving and Forgiving, and Creating and Judging. The dependent variables were measures of General Anxiety, Depression, Obsessive-Compulsion, Paranoid Ideation, Social Anxiety, and Somatization. As hypothesized, the strength of participants' belief in a Close and Loving God had a significant salutary association with overall psychiatric symptomology, and the strength of this association was significantly stronger than that of the other beliefs, which had little association with the psychiatric symptomology. The authors discuss the findings in the context of evolutionary psychiatry, and the relevance of Evolutionary Threat Assessment Systems Theory in research on religious beliefs.
本研究分析了美国 1306 名成年人代表样本中特定的上帝信仰与精神症状之间的关联。上帝信仰有三个对子作为自变量:亲近和慈爱、赞许和宽恕、创造和审判。因变量是对一般焦虑、抑郁、强迫症、偏执观念、社交焦虑和躯体化的衡量。正如假设的那样,参与者对亲近和慈爱的上帝的信仰强度与整体精神症状学有显著的有益关联,而且这种关联的强度明显强于其他信仰的关联,后者与精神症状学几乎没有关联。作者在进化精神病学的背景下讨论了这些发现,并讨论了进化威胁评估系统理论在宗教信仰研究中的相关性。