Opposition to short-term mating predicts anti-atheist prejudice
Opposition to short-term mating predicts anti-atheist prejudice
Which people are most likely to harbor prejudice toward atheists? Recent research suggests that perceptions of (non)religious individuals tend to track lifestyle (i.e., family and sexual) choices. We draw on this work, proposing that anti-atheist prejudice stems, in part, from the conflict that arises among competing mating strategies. Across four studies (N = 1855), we confirmed that anti-atheist prejudice is related to stereotypes about atheists' mating strategies (Pilot Study); we further found that people who favor committed mating strategies express greater levels of anti-atheist prejudice, even controlling for their beliefs about cooperation (Study 1a) and religiosity (Study 1b). Finally, this effect holds even when using a semi-implicit measure of prejudice, again controlling for religiosity (Study 2). These results suggest that mating strategies provide one source of individual differences in prejudice toward atheists, consistent with the notion that this prejudice may reflect perceived differences in lifestyle rather than just abstract theological disagreements or ingroup bias.
Moon, Jordan W.
552fac5b-2f9e-48c3-9546-a0844409098b
Krems, Jaimie Arona
e9f91012-c659-421a-84b5-6c602c9c9528
Cohen, Adam B.
7d7e1ded-a9f6-4bc5-8e72-11adc647b220
October 2020
Moon, Jordan W.
552fac5b-2f9e-48c3-9546-a0844409098b
Krems, Jaimie Arona
e9f91012-c659-421a-84b5-6c602c9c9528
Cohen, Adam B.
7d7e1ded-a9f6-4bc5-8e72-11adc647b220
Moon, Jordan W., Krems, Jaimie Arona and Cohen, Adam B.
(2020)
Opposition to short-term mating predicts anti-atheist prejudice.
Personality and Individual Differences, 165.
(doi:10.1016/j.paid.2020.110136).
Abstract
Which people are most likely to harbor prejudice toward atheists? Recent research suggests that perceptions of (non)religious individuals tend to track lifestyle (i.e., family and sexual) choices. We draw on this work, proposing that anti-atheist prejudice stems, in part, from the conflict that arises among competing mating strategies. Across four studies (N = 1855), we confirmed that anti-atheist prejudice is related to stereotypes about atheists' mating strategies (Pilot Study); we further found that people who favor committed mating strategies express greater levels of anti-atheist prejudice, even controlling for their beliefs about cooperation (Study 1a) and religiosity (Study 1b). Finally, this effect holds even when using a semi-implicit measure of prejudice, again controlling for religiosity (Study 2). These results suggest that mating strategies provide one source of individual differences in prejudice toward atheists, consistent with the notion that this prejudice may reflect perceived differences in lifestyle rather than just abstract theological disagreements or ingroup bias.
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Published date: October 2020
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Local EPrints ID: 505352
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505352
ISSN: 0191-8869
PURE UUID: 4f6634d4-4fcd-4a39-8a17-b01a3a6c735e
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Date deposited: 07 Oct 2025 16:43
Last modified: 08 Oct 2025 02:17
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Author:
Jordan W. Moon
Author:
Jaimie Arona Krems
Author:
Adam B. Cohen
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