Divine intervention in decisions : an adaptive function of religious belief
Evolutionary explanations of religion explore the adaptive function of religious beliefs and tend to focus on socially adaptive mechanisms such as group commitment and cooperation. This study tests whether an adaptive function of religious belief is to increase the efficiency of decision making by r...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1413792020-06-08T03:51:10Z Divine intervention in decisions : an adaptive function of religious belief Lim, Alexander Yao Michael David Gumert School of Social Sciences Gumert@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology Evolutionary explanations of religion explore the adaptive function of religious beliefs and tend to focus on socially adaptive mechanisms such as group commitment and cooperation. This study tests whether an adaptive function of religious belief is to increase the efficiency of decision making by reducing one’s sense of uncertainty, and whether such a function exists in the moral, non-moral and navigational domains. Participants (N = 84) were given a set of hypothetical moral and non-moral scenarios, and a questionnaire on their navigational confidence. The time taken to make a decision and their confidence in making each decision were recorded. Participants also completed a series of questionnaires assessing religiosity and religious fundamentalism. Religiosity did not predict moral (p = .16, R2 = .02) or non-moral decision time (p = .94, R2 = .00); however, individuals grouped higher in religiosity (MEAN, N = 48) were found to make moral decisions more quickly than individuals grouped lower in religiosity (MEAN, N = 36) (t(49.95) = -2.11, p = .04). There was no significant relationship between religious fundamentalism and decision confidence or time. Neither religiosity nor religious fundamentalism predicted navigational confidence. Mediation analysis revealed that religiosity indirectly moral decision-making time through improving decision confidence [b = -.028, 95% C.I. (-.062, -.003)]. These findings provide evidence that religiosity increases the speed of moral decisions by reducing uncertainty, pointing to a previously unexplored adaptive function of religion – increased decision speed in the moral domain. Bachelor of Arts in Psychology 2020-06-08T03:51:10Z 2020-06-08T03:51:10Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141379 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University |
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Social sciences::Psychology Lim, Alexander Yao Divine intervention in decisions : an adaptive function of religious belief |
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Evolutionary explanations of religion explore the adaptive function of religious beliefs and tend to focus on socially adaptive mechanisms such as group commitment and cooperation. This study tests whether an adaptive function of religious belief is to increase the efficiency of decision making by reducing one’s sense of uncertainty, and whether such a function exists in the moral, non-moral and navigational domains. Participants (N = 84) were given a set of hypothetical moral and non-moral scenarios, and a questionnaire on their navigational confidence. The time taken to make a decision and their confidence in making each decision were recorded. Participants also completed a series of questionnaires assessing religiosity and religious fundamentalism. Religiosity did not predict moral (p = .16, R2 = .02) or non-moral decision time (p = .94, R2 = .00); however, individuals grouped higher in religiosity (MEAN, N = 48) were found to make moral decisions more quickly than individuals grouped lower in religiosity (MEAN, N = 36) (t(49.95) = -2.11, p = .04). There was no significant relationship between religious fundamentalism and decision confidence or time. Neither religiosity nor religious fundamentalism predicted navigational confidence. Mediation analysis revealed that religiosity indirectly moral decision-making time through improving decision confidence [b = -.028, 95% C.I. (-.062, -.003)]. These findings provide evidence that religiosity increases the speed of moral decisions by reducing uncertainty, pointing to a previously unexplored adaptive function of religion – increased decision speed in the moral domain. |
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Michael David Gumert |
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Michael David Gumert Lim, Alexander Yao |
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Final Year Project |
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Lim, Alexander Yao |
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Lim, Alexander Yao |
title |
Divine intervention in decisions : an adaptive function of religious belief |
title_short |
Divine intervention in decisions : an adaptive function of religious belief |
title_full |
Divine intervention in decisions : an adaptive function of religious belief |
title_fullStr |
Divine intervention in decisions : an adaptive function of religious belief |
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Divine intervention in decisions : an adaptive function of religious belief |
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divine intervention in decisions : an adaptive function of religious belief |
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Nanyang Technological University |
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2020 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141379 |
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1681059535439003648 |