Department of Psychology, Arizona State University.
Psychol Sci. 2018 Jun;29(6):947-960. doi: 10.1177/0956797617753606. Epub 2018 Mar 28.
Religious people are more trusted than nonreligious people. Although most theorists attribute these perceptions to the beliefs of religious targets, religious individuals also differ in behavioral ways that might cue trust. We examined whether perceivers might trust religious targets more because they heuristically associate religion with slow life-history strategies. In three experiments, we found that religious targets are viewed as slow life-history strategists and that these findings are not the result of a universally positive halo effect; that the effect of target religion on trust is significantly mediated by the target's life-history traits (i.e., perceived reproductive strategy); and that when perceivers have direct information about a target's reproductive strategy, their ratings of trust are driven primarily by his or her reproductive strategy, rather than religion. These effects operate over and above targets' belief in moralizing gods and offer a novel theoretical perspective on religion and trust.
宗教人士比非宗教人士更值得信赖。尽管大多数理论家将这些看法归因于宗教目标的信仰,但宗教人士在行为方式上也存在差异,这可能会暗示信任。我们研究了知觉者是否可能因为凭直觉将宗教与缓慢的生活史策略联系起来而更信任宗教目标。在三个实验中,我们发现宗教目标被视为缓慢的生活史策略者,并且这些发现不是普遍的积极光环效应的结果;目标宗教对信任的影响是通过目标的生活史特征(即感知的生殖策略)显著中介的;当知觉者有关于目标生殖策略的直接信息时,他们对信任的评价主要受其生殖策略的驱动,而不是宗教。这些效应凌驾于目标对道德化上帝的信仰之上,为宗教和信任提供了一个新的理论视角。