Perceiving Self, Others, and Events through a Religious Lens: Mahayana Buddhists vs. Christians
碩士 === 國立臺灣大學 === 心理學研究所 === 105 === Are all religions essentially the same? Are believers of different religions heading in the same mental direction? To answer these questions from a sociopsychological perspective on the effects of religious beliefs, we compared social sensitivity and its closely...
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ndltd-TW-105NTU050710272019-05-15T23:39:45Z http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/yq5qxx Perceiving Self, Others, and Events through a Religious Lens: Mahayana Buddhists vs. Christians 透過宗教看人生:大乘佛教徒與基督徒的比較 Yi-Hao Wang 王翊豪 碩士 國立臺灣大學 心理學研究所 105 Are all religions essentially the same? Are believers of different religions heading in the same mental direction? To answer these questions from a sociopsychological perspective on the effects of religious beliefs, we compared social sensitivity and its closely related causal attribution style between 200 Mahayana Buddhists, who practiced unbiased love and compassion toward every being, and 200 Christians, who followed the path of and pursued union with God. With a similar cultural background, sex ratio, age distribution, socioeconomic status, and fluid intelligence level, Taiwanese Mahayana Buddhists and Christians in our study showed opposite tendencies when inferring mental states of others—As religiosity increased, overall theory of mind increased in Mahayana Buddhists and yet decreased in Christians. Meanwhile, these two religious groups showed opposite tendencies of attributional style—As religiosity increased, self-serving bias decreased in Buddhists and yet increased in Christians. These marked religiosity-dependent, sociopsychological differences between Mahayana Buddhists and Christians suggest that different religions shape mind and behavior differently and can lead their followers towards quite distinct mental directions. Tsung-Ren Huang 黃從仁 2017 學位論文 ; thesis 35 en_US |
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碩士 === 國立臺灣大學 === 心理學研究所 === 105 === Are all religions essentially the same? Are believers of different religions heading in the same mental direction? To answer these questions from a sociopsychological perspective on the effects of religious beliefs, we compared social sensitivity and its closely related causal attribution style between 200 Mahayana Buddhists, who practiced unbiased love and compassion toward every being, and 200 Christians, who followed the path of and pursued union with God. With a similar cultural background, sex ratio, age distribution, socioeconomic status, and fluid intelligence level, Taiwanese Mahayana Buddhists and Christians in our study showed opposite tendencies when inferring mental states of others—As religiosity increased, overall theory of mind increased in Mahayana Buddhists and yet decreased in Christians. Meanwhile, these two religious groups showed opposite tendencies of attributional style—As religiosity increased, self-serving bias decreased in Buddhists and yet increased in Christians. These marked religiosity-dependent, sociopsychological differences between Mahayana Buddhists and Christians suggest that different religions shape mind and behavior differently and can lead their followers towards quite distinct mental directions.
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author2 |
Tsung-Ren Huang |
author_facet |
Tsung-Ren Huang Yi-Hao Wang 王翊豪 |
author |
Yi-Hao Wang 王翊豪 |
spellingShingle |
Yi-Hao Wang 王翊豪 Perceiving Self, Others, and Events through a Religious Lens: Mahayana Buddhists vs. Christians |
author_sort |
Yi-Hao Wang |
title |
Perceiving Self, Others, and Events through a Religious Lens: Mahayana Buddhists vs. Christians |
title_short |
Perceiving Self, Others, and Events through a Religious Lens: Mahayana Buddhists vs. Christians |
title_full |
Perceiving Self, Others, and Events through a Religious Lens: Mahayana Buddhists vs. Christians |
title_fullStr |
Perceiving Self, Others, and Events through a Religious Lens: Mahayana Buddhists vs. Christians |
title_full_unstemmed |
Perceiving Self, Others, and Events through a Religious Lens: Mahayana Buddhists vs. Christians |
title_sort |
perceiving self, others, and events through a religious lens: mahayana buddhists vs. christians |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/yq5qxx |
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