Toosi Negin R, Ambady Nalini
Department of Psychology, Tufts University.
Int J Psychol Relig. 2011 Winter;21(1):17-29. doi: 10.1080/10508619.2011.532441.
As a social identity, religion is unique because it contains a spectrum of choice. In some religious communities, individuals are considered members by virtue of having parents of that background, and religion, culture, and ethnicity are closely intertwined. Other faith communities actively invite people of other backgrounds to join, expecting individuals to choose the religion that best fits their personal beliefs. These various methods of identification influence beliefs about the essentialist nature of religious identity. Essentialism is when social groups are considered to have deep, immutable, and inherent defining properties. In this study, college students (N=55) provided ratings of essentialism for eight religious identities: Atheist, Buddhist, Catholic, Hindu, Jewish, Muslim, Protestant, and Spiritual-but-not-religious. Significant differences in essentialism were found between the target groups. Results and implications for intergroup relations are discussed.
作为一种社会身份,宗教具有独特性,因为它包含一系列选择。在一些宗教团体中,个人因其父母具有该背景而被视为成员,宗教、文化和种族紧密相连。其他信仰团体则积极邀请其他背景的人加入,期望个人选择最符合其个人信仰的宗教。这些不同的身份认同方式影响着人们对宗教身份本质主义性质的看法。本质主义是指社会群体被认为具有深刻、不变且固有的定义属性。在本研究中,55名大学生对八种宗教身份的本质主义程度进行了评分:无神论者、佛教徒、天主教徒、印度教徒、犹太教徒、穆斯林、新教徒以及有精神信仰但无宗教信仰者。研究发现目标群体之间在本质主义方面存在显著差异。文中讨论了研究结果及其对群体间关系的影响。