Martel Francois Alexi, Buhrmester Michael, Gómez Angel, Vázquez Alexandra, Swann William B
Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States.
Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Front Psychol. 2021 Nov 15;12:779120. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.779120. eCollection 2021.
Recent research has identified three promising candidates for predicting extreme behavior: sacred values, moral convictions, and identity fusion. Each construct is thought to motivate extreme behavior in unique ways: Sacred values trigger extreme actions when people are asked to compromise cause-related values for personal gain; moral convictions trigger extreme actions when a cause is aligned with one's moral compass; and identity fusion triggers extreme actions when a cause is inextricably associated ("fused") with the personal self. In six studies, we asked which of the three constructs (either alone or in combination) was most predictive of sacrifice for a cause. We measured all three constructs with respect to either of two causes: gun rights (Studies 1-3) or abortion rights (4-6). The outcome measure was endorsement of fighting and dying for the cause. Although all three constructs were significant predictors of the outcome measure when considered separately, identity fusion consistently emerged as the strongest predictor of endorsement of self-sacrifice when all three were considered simultaneously. This pattern occurred regardless of the target cause (gun or abortion rights), the participant's position on the cause (i.e., pro-gun or anti-gun, pro-choice, or pro-life), or nationality (American vs. Spanish). Also, there was no evidence that the predictors interacted to predict the outcome measure. Finally, a manipulation that threatened the validity of the personal self strengthened the relationship between endorsement of self-sacrifice and both (a) identity fusion and (b) moral convictions. The latter finding suggests that threats to the validity of one's self-views may amplify the extreme behaviors of true believers.
神圣价值观、道德信念和身份融合。人们认为,每个因素都以独特的方式激发极端行为:当人们被要求为了个人利益而牺牲与事业相关的价值观时,神圣价值观会引发极端行动;当一项事业与某人的道德准则相符时,道德信念会引发极端行动;当一项事业与个人自我紧密相连(“融合”)时,身份融合会引发极端行动。在六项研究中,我们探讨了这三个因素中的哪一个(单独或组合)最能预测为一项事业做出的牺牲。我们针对两项事业之一衡量了所有这三个因素:持枪权(研究1 - 3)或堕胎权(研究4 - 6)。结果指标是对为该事业战斗和牺牲的认可程度。虽然单独考虑时,所有这三个因素都是结果指标的显著预测因素,但当同时考虑这三个因素时,身份融合始终是自我牺牲认可程度的最强预测因素。无论目标事业(持枪权或堕胎权)、参与者在该事业上的立场(即支持持枪或反对持枪、支持选择或支持生命)或国籍(美国人与西班牙人)如何,这种模式都会出现。此外,没有证据表明这些预测因素相互作用来预测结果指标。最后,一项威胁个人自我有效性的操纵加强了自我牺牲认可程度与(a)身份融合和(b)道德信念之间的关系。后一项发现表明,对一个人自我观点有效性的威胁可能会放大真正信徒的极端行为。