If you don’t believe in God, do you at least believe in Aristotle? Evaluations of religious outgroup members hinge upon moral perceptions
If you don’t believe in God, do you at least believe in Aristotle? Evaluations of religious outgroup members hinge upon moral perceptions
Religious people tend to believe atheists are immoral. Although some work suggests that atheists themselves agree, such findings could also reflect symmetric ingroup bias in the moral domain, where atheists likewise view religious targets as untrustworthy and immoral. We examined how American religious and atheist participants rated the morality of atheist and religious targets and assessed a potential intervention: learning that targets adhere to a moral code. Across three studies, both religious and nonreligious participants demonstrated clear ingroup favoritism, rating ingroup targets more moral than outgroup targets. However, this ingroup bias was reduced when participants learned the target adheres to a warm and coherent moral system rooted in philosophy and concern for others. These findings extended beyond evaluations to downstream social consequences such as distancing. Such findings challenge arguments that atheists view themselves as immoral and point the way forward toward reducing religious ingroup bias.
127-149
Mallinas, Stephanie R.
bd562cad-ff22-4175-905f-bb596e1d5f84
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
17 May 2021
Mallinas, Stephanie R.
bd562cad-ff22-4175-905f-bb596e1d5f84
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
Mallinas, Stephanie R. and Conway, Paul
(2021)
If you don’t believe in God, do you at least believe in Aristotle? Evaluations of religious outgroup members hinge upon moral perceptions.
The International Journal for the Psychology of Religion, 32 (2), .
(doi:10.1080/10508619.2021.1916240).
Abstract
Religious people tend to believe atheists are immoral. Although some work suggests that atheists themselves agree, such findings could also reflect symmetric ingroup bias in the moral domain, where atheists likewise view religious targets as untrustworthy and immoral. We examined how American religious and atheist participants rated the morality of atheist and religious targets and assessed a potential intervention: learning that targets adhere to a moral code. Across three studies, both religious and nonreligious participants demonstrated clear ingroup favoritism, rating ingroup targets more moral than outgroup targets. However, this ingroup bias was reduced when participants learned the target adheres to a warm and coherent moral system rooted in philosophy and concern for others. These findings extended beyond evaluations to downstream social consequences such as distancing. Such findings challenge arguments that atheists view themselves as immoral and point the way forward toward reducing religious ingroup bias.
Text
Mallinas & Conway, 2021, Atheist Morality Perceptions, International Journal of Religion Preprint
- Accepted Manuscript
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e-pub ahead of print date: 17 May 2021
Published date: 17 May 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 472566
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472566
ISSN: 1050-8619
PURE UUID: 9950eb43-c55b-4dcb-a00b-8d45b6984dc6
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Date deposited: 08 Dec 2022 17:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:17
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Author:
Stephanie R. Mallinas
Author:
Paul Conway
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