Grabow Hilmar, Rock Anne
Social and Political Psychology, Kiel University, Kiel, Germany.
Front Psychol. 2023 Feb 16;14:1026144. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1026144. eCollection 2023.
The belief in conspiracy narratives and the concept of conspiracy mentality have gained increasing attention in psychological science over the last years. A cornerstone is the assumption of secretly acting groups pulling the strings in world affairs. Based on the reasoning that religiosity and conspiracy mentality share a common core - both can be understood as strong convictions without final proof or even in the face of contradictory evidence - we hypothesised that the support of COVID-19 conspiracy narratives would be related to religiosity as well as conspiracy mentality. Given that religious socialisation usually starts very early in life, we furthermore assumed that religiosity could be an antecedent of conspiracy mentality. Therefore, we tested a mediation model comprising religiosity (predictor), support of conspiracy narratives (criterion), and conspiracy mentality (mediator) among = 616 participants of an online survey. Analyses revealed significant total and indirect effects, supporting our hypothesis.
在过去几年中,对阴谋论叙事的信念以及阴谋心态的概念在心理学领域受到了越来越多的关注。其核心假设是,有秘密行动的团体在操纵世界事务。基于宗教信仰和阴谋心态有共同核心的推理——两者都可被理解为在没有最终证据甚至面对矛盾证据时的坚定信念——我们假设,对新冠疫情阴谋论叙事的支持与宗教信仰以及阴谋心态有关。鉴于宗教社会化通常在生命早期就开始了,我们进一步假设宗教信仰可能是阴谋心态的一个先决条件。因此,我们在一项在线调查的616名参与者中测试了一个中介模型,该模型包括宗教信仰(预测变量)、对阴谋论叙事的支持(标准变量)和阴谋心态(中介变量)。分析揭示了显著的总效应和间接效应,支持了我们的假设。