Watchful gods, watchful governments, and the peculiar psychological properties of anti-atheist prejudice

Recent polls indicate that atheists are among the least liked people in areas with religious majorities (i.e., in most of the world). An evolutionary approach to prejudice, combined with a cultural evolutionary model of religion’s effects on cooperation, suggest that anti-atheist prejudice is partic...

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Main Author: Gervais, Will Martin
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/42873
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-428732018-01-05T17:25:59Z Watchful gods, watchful governments, and the peculiar psychological properties of anti-atheist prejudice Gervais, Will Martin Recent polls indicate that atheists are among the least liked people in areas with religious majorities (i.e., in most of the world). An evolutionary approach to prejudice, combined with a cultural evolutionary model of religion’s effects on cooperation, suggest that anti-atheist prejudice is particularly motivated by distrust. Consistent with this theoretical framework, a broad sample of American adults revealed that distrust characterized anti-atheist prejudice, but not antigay prejudice (Chapter 2). Furthermore, a description of a criminally untrustworthy individual was seen as comparably representative of atheists and rapists, but not representative of Christians, Muslims, Jewish people, feminists, or gays (Chapter 3). Results were consistent with the hypothesis that the relationship between belief in God and atheist distrust was mediated by the belief that people behave better if they feel that God is watching them (Chapter 3). In sum, atheists have long been distrusted, in part because they do not believe that a watchful, judging god monitors their behavior. However, in many parts of the world, secular institutions such as police, judges, and courts are also potent sources of social monitoring that encourage prosocial behavior. Reminders of such secular authority could therefore reduce believers’ distrust of atheists. Participants who watched a video about police effectiveness or were subtly primed with secular authority concepts expressed less distrust of atheists than did participants who watched a control video or were not primed, respectively (Chapter 4). Furthermore, political intolerance of atheists is reduced in countries with effective secular rule of law (Chapter 5). These studies are among the first to systematically explore the social psychological underpinnings of anti-atheist prejudice, and converge to indicate the centrality of distrust in this phenomenon. Arts, Faculty of Psychology, Department of Graduate 2012-08-07T17:29:58Z 2012-08-07T17:29:58Z 2012 2012-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/42873 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
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language English
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description Recent polls indicate that atheists are among the least liked people in areas with religious majorities (i.e., in most of the world). An evolutionary approach to prejudice, combined with a cultural evolutionary model of religion’s effects on cooperation, suggest that anti-atheist prejudice is particularly motivated by distrust. Consistent with this theoretical framework, a broad sample of American adults revealed that distrust characterized anti-atheist prejudice, but not antigay prejudice (Chapter 2). Furthermore, a description of a criminally untrustworthy individual was seen as comparably representative of atheists and rapists, but not representative of Christians, Muslims, Jewish people, feminists, or gays (Chapter 3). Results were consistent with the hypothesis that the relationship between belief in God and atheist distrust was mediated by the belief that people behave better if they feel that God is watching them (Chapter 3). In sum, atheists have long been distrusted, in part because they do not believe that a watchful, judging god monitors their behavior. However, in many parts of the world, secular institutions such as police, judges, and courts are also potent sources of social monitoring that encourage prosocial behavior. Reminders of such secular authority could therefore reduce believers’ distrust of atheists. Participants who watched a video about police effectiveness or were subtly primed with secular authority concepts expressed less distrust of atheists than did participants who watched a control video or were not primed, respectively (Chapter 4). Furthermore, political intolerance of atheists is reduced in countries with effective secular rule of law (Chapter 5). These studies are among the first to systematically explore the social psychological underpinnings of anti-atheist prejudice, and converge to indicate the centrality of distrust in this phenomenon. === Arts, Faculty of === Psychology, Department of === Graduate
author Gervais, Will Martin
spellingShingle Gervais, Will Martin
Watchful gods, watchful governments, and the peculiar psychological properties of anti-atheist prejudice
author_facet Gervais, Will Martin
author_sort Gervais, Will Martin
title Watchful gods, watchful governments, and the peculiar psychological properties of anti-atheist prejudice
title_short Watchful gods, watchful governments, and the peculiar psychological properties of anti-atheist prejudice
title_full Watchful gods, watchful governments, and the peculiar psychological properties of anti-atheist prejudice
title_fullStr Watchful gods, watchful governments, and the peculiar psychological properties of anti-atheist prejudice
title_full_unstemmed Watchful gods, watchful governments, and the peculiar psychological properties of anti-atheist prejudice
title_sort watchful gods, watchful governments, and the peculiar psychological properties of anti-atheist prejudice
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/42873
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