Department of Psychology, Arizona State University.
Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara.
Cogn Sci. 2019 Sep;43(9):e12784. doi: 10.1111/cogs.12784.
Why are disembodied extraordinary beings like gods and spirits prevalent in past and present theologies? Under the intuitive Cartesian dualism hypothesis, this is because it is natural to conceptualize of minds as separate from bodies; under the counterintuitiveness hypothesis, this is because beliefs in minds without bodies are unnatural-such beliefs violate core knowledge intuitions about person physicality and consequently have a social transmission advantage. We report on a critical test of these contrasting hypotheses. Prior research found that among adult Christian religious adherents, intuitions about person psychology coexist and interfere with theological conceptualizations of God (e.g., infallibility). Here, we use a sentence verification paradigm where participants are asked to evaluate as true or false statements on which core knowledge intuitions about person physicality and psychology and Christian theology about God are inconsistent (true on one and false on the other) versus consistent (both true or both false). We find, as predicted by the counterintuitiveness hypothesis but not the Cartesian dualism hypothesis, that Christian religious adherents show worse performance (lower accuracy and slower response time) on statements where Christian theological doctrines about God's physicality (e.g., incorporeality, omnipresence) conflict with intuitions about person physicality. We find these effects for other extraordinary beings in Christianity-the Holy Spirit and Jesus-but not for an ordinary being (priest). We conclude that it is unintuitive to conceptualize extraordinary beings as disembodied, and that this, rather than inherent Cartesian dualism, may explain the prevalence of beliefs in such beings.
为什么无实体的超凡存在,如神和神灵,在过去和现在的神学中如此普遍?在直观的笛卡尔二元论假设下,这是因为将心灵概念化为与身体分离是自然的;在反直觉假设下,这是因为相信没有身体的心灵是不自然的——这种信仰违反了关于人身的核心知识直觉,因此具有社会传播优势。我们报告了对这些对比假设的关键测试。先前的研究发现,在成年基督教宗教信徒中,关于人的心理的直觉与关于上帝的神学概念并存并相互干扰(例如,不可错谬)。在这里,我们使用句子验证范式,要求参与者评估关于人身和心理的核心知识直觉以及关于上帝的基督教神学不一致(一个为真,另一个为假)与一致(两者均为真或均为假)的陈述。正如反直觉假设所预测的,但不是笛卡尔二元论假设所预测的,我们发现基督教宗教信徒在与关于上帝身体的基督教神学教义(例如,无形体、无所不在)相冲突的陈述上表现更差(准确性较低,反应时间较慢)。我们发现这些效果适用于基督教中的其他超凡存在——圣灵和耶稣——但不适用于普通存在(牧师)。我们的结论是,将超凡存在概念化为无实体的是反直觉的,而这可能解释了人们对这种存在的信仰的普遍性,而不是固有的笛卡尔二元论。