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protection of individuals correcting the misalignment
of their brains and their anatomical sex, while supporting their transition
into society as hormonally reconstituted and surgically corrected citizens.
Religious Practice as Behavior Enforcement |
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Living - The Dialogue | |||
TS-Si News Service | |||
Saturday, 27 November 2010 04:00 | |||
Royal Holloway, Egham Hill, UK. When subconsciously exposed to religious ideas and concepts, religious people are far more likely to actively punish those they believe are acting selfishly and unfairly, a new study reveals.
Biologists have found it anomalous that religions are so successful since evolutionary processes eliminate practices which squander energy or resources. However, religions prosper despite encouraging this behavior. One explanation is that costly religious practices persist because they promote and enforce cooperative behavior within religious groups. Research led by Dr Ryan McKay from Royal Holloway, University of London reveals that for those who financially support religious institutions, subliminal religious messages strongly increase the costly punishment of unfair behavior, even when such punishment is to their individual material disadvantage. The findings appear in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. In the experiment, a series of words were flashed on a computer screen so quickly that they could not consciously be perceived by participants. Previous studies have indicated that priming participants with religious concepts promotes moral and fair behavior, especially among the religious, and the researchers wanted to investigate if such priming also promotes the punishment of unfair behavior.Historically, religion carries formidable material, physical and emotional costs and risks, from sacrificing crops to risking infection by ritual piercing. The 304 participants were asked a series of questions about how religious they were, including if they donated to a religious organisation. "People who financially support organisations are actively investing in the norms of those organisations," explains Dr McKay. "For example, if I support the RSPCA and I see someone being cruel to an animal, I am more likely to want to punish this individual because I really support the cause — it's about putting your money where your mouth is. Financial support is a more reliable indication of an individual's religiosity than someone just saying they're religious." In the experiment, Player 'A' was asked to choose between two allocations of payoffs to themselves and Player 'B' — either a fair allocation (whereby both players received the same amount of money) or an unfair allocation (whereby Player A received much more than Player B). After Player A's decision, both were then exposed to a series of rapidly presented words relating to religious concepts. Player B was subsequently given the opportunity to spend money from their own share to reduce A's payoff. The results of this experiment show that religious priming substantially increased the punishment of unfair offers amongst those who donated to religions. "This particular subset of players may have punished those who acted unfairly because the religious concepts presented to them activated norms pertaining to fairness and its enforcement," says Dr McKay. " Another possibility, not mutually exclusive, is that the religious primes activated the notion that they are being watched by a supernatural agent. "Religious participants may have punished unfair behaviours in order to maintain their standing in the eyes of this agent." CitationWrath of God: religious primes and punishment. Ryan Mckay, Charles Efferson, Harvey Whitehouse, Ernst Fehr. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 2010; ePub ahead of print. doi:10.1098/rspb.2010.2125
Download PDF Abstract Recent evidence indicates that priming participants with religious concepts promotes prosocial sharing behaviour. In the present study, we investigated whether religious priming also promotes the costly punishment of unfair behaviour. A total of 304 participants played a punishment game. Before the punishment stage began, participants were subliminally primed with religion primes, secular punishment primes or control primes. We found that religious primes strongly increased the costly punishment of unfair behaviours for a subset of our participants—those who had previously donated to a religious organization. We discuss two proximate mechanisms potentially underpinning this effect. The first is a ‘supernatural watcher’ mechanism, whereby religious participants punish unfair behaviours when primed because they sense that not doing so will enrage or disappoint an observing supernatural agent. The second is a ‘behavioural priming’ mechanism, whereby religious primes activate cultural norms pertaining to fairness and its enforcement and occasion behaviour consistent with those norms. We conclude that our results are consistent with dual ![]() Keywords: religion, supernatural agency, subliminal priming, fairness, punishment, cooperation.
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Last Updated on Saturday, 27 November 2010 00:09 |