| Literature DB >> 26275836 |
Larisa Heiphetz1, Elizabeth S Spelke2, Liane L Young3.
Abstract
Many people are guided by religious beliefs, but judgments of religiously and secularly motivated individuals remain unclear. We investigated reasoning about religiously versus secularly motivated characters among 5- to 10-year-olds and adults. In Study 1, theist and non-theist children reported similar attitudes toward theists; however, large differences emerged between theist and non-theist adults. Study 2 obtained similar results using a continuous, rather than forced choice, measure of preference. Additionally, Studies 2-3 tested two explanations for the stronger influence of religious background on adults' versus children's responses. Study 2 did not find strong evidence for the theistic majority account, which posits that the greater perceived prevalence of theists as compared with non-theists influenced children's responses more than adults' responses. The results of Study 3 were consistent with the intuition account, which argues that non-theist adults had effortfully overridden the teleological intuitions that may have influenced children's responses in Studies 1-2 and potentially led children to prefer characters whose beliefs were in line with children's own intuitions. The degree to which teleological intuitions persisted implicitly among adults predicted those adults' pro-theist preferences. These findings offer connections between religious judgments and other areas of social cognition, such as social preferences and teleology.Entities:
Keywords: Implicit attitudes; Religious cognition; Social cognitive development; Social preferences; Teleology
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26275836 PMCID: PMC4727248 DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2015.07.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cognition ISSN: 0010-0277