Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2012 Jan;102(1):4-21. doi: 10.1037/a0025971. Epub 2011 Oct 24.
Despite the cultural ubiquity of ideas and images related to God, relatively little is known about the effects of exposure to God representations on behavior. Specific depictions of God differ across religions, but common to most is that God is (a) an omnipotent, controlling force and (b) an omniscient, all-knowing being. Given these 2 characteristic features, how might exposure to the concept of God influence behavior? Leveraging classic and recent theorizing on self-regulation and social cognition, we predict and test for 2 divergent effects of exposure to notions of God on self-regulatory processes. Specifically, we show that participants reminded of God (vs. neutral or positive concepts) demonstrate both decreased active goal pursuit (Studies 1, 2, and 5) and increased temptation resistance (Studies 3, 4, and 5). These findings provide the first experimental evidence that exposure to God influences goal pursuit and suggest that the ever-present cultural reminders of God can be both burden and benefit for self-regulation.
尽管与上帝有关的思想和形象在文化上无处不在,但人们对接触上帝形象对行为的影响知之甚少。上帝的具体形象因宗教而异,但共同点是上帝是(a)全能的、控制一切的力量,(b)全知全能的存在。鉴于这两个特征,接触上帝的概念可能会如何影响行为?利用自我调节和社会认知的经典和最新理论,我们预测并检验了接触上帝观念对自我调节过程的两种不同影响。具体来说,我们表明,与中性或积极概念相比,被提醒上帝的参与者(Studies 1、2 和 5)表现出主动目标追求的减少(Studies 1、2 和 5)和诱惑抵抗力的增加(Studies 3、4 和 5)。这些发现提供了接触上帝影响目标追求的第一个实验证据,并表明对上帝的普遍文化提醒既是自我调节的负担,也是好处。