Fate sticks with you: a field experiment on the anthropomorphism of God and beliefs in tempting fate

To tempt fate is to behave in an overconfident manner, such as prematurely celebrating a job promotion, or taking unnecessary risks by skydiving without a helmet. What makes people reluctant to tempt fate? Past research has indicated that the anthropomorphism of God (AoG) elicits beliefs in tempting...

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主要作者: Leong, Jillian Wai Lam
其他作者: Albert Lee Kai Chung
格式: Final Year Project
語言:English
出版: Nanyang Technological University 2024
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在線閱讀:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177828
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1778282024-06-02T15:32:23Z Fate sticks with you: a field experiment on the anthropomorphism of God and beliefs in tempting fate Leong, Jillian Wai Lam Albert Lee Kai Chung School of Social Sciences Center for Religion, Culture and Cognition AlbertLee@ntu.edu.sg Social Sciences Anthropomorphism of God Beliefs in tempting fate Field experiment Jinx Culture To tempt fate is to behave in an overconfident manner, such as prematurely celebrating a job promotion, or taking unnecessary risks by skydiving without a helmet. What makes people reluctant to tempt fate? Past research has indicated that the anthropomorphism of God (AoG) elicits beliefs in tempting fate (BTF). While these studies were intellectually informative, they relied heavily on self-reports with limited external validity. The present study aimed to address this concern with a field experiment in the naturalistic settings. Participants recruited at health screening centres in Singapore were experimentally reminded of high AoG or low AoG, depending on conditions. Then, they were prompted to choose a sticker to put on themselves. Some stickers contained statements that bragged about good health (e.g., jinxing stickers), whereas other stickers contained statements that suggested the importance of good health (e.g., non-jinxing stickers). We predicted that participants will be inclined to choose a non-jinxing sticker, more so in the high AoG condition and less so in the low AoG condition. Contrary to predictions, results showed that participants in high AoG condition were no more likely to choose the non-jinxing stickers than participants in the low AoG condition. These results suggest that AoG did not elicit BTF in a naturalistic setting. We discuss possibilities for null results. Bachelor's degree 2024-05-31T08:25:52Z 2024-05-31T08:25:52Z 2024 Final Year Project (FYP) Leong, J. W. L. (2024). Fate sticks with you: a field experiment on the anthropomorphism of God and beliefs in tempting fate. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177828 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177828 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social Sciences
Anthropomorphism of God
Beliefs in tempting fate
Field experiment
Jinx
Culture
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Anthropomorphism of God
Beliefs in tempting fate
Field experiment
Jinx
Culture
Leong, Jillian Wai Lam
Fate sticks with you: a field experiment on the anthropomorphism of God and beliefs in tempting fate
description To tempt fate is to behave in an overconfident manner, such as prematurely celebrating a job promotion, or taking unnecessary risks by skydiving without a helmet. What makes people reluctant to tempt fate? Past research has indicated that the anthropomorphism of God (AoG) elicits beliefs in tempting fate (BTF). While these studies were intellectually informative, they relied heavily on self-reports with limited external validity. The present study aimed to address this concern with a field experiment in the naturalistic settings. Participants recruited at health screening centres in Singapore were experimentally reminded of high AoG or low AoG, depending on conditions. Then, they were prompted to choose a sticker to put on themselves. Some stickers contained statements that bragged about good health (e.g., jinxing stickers), whereas other stickers contained statements that suggested the importance of good health (e.g., non-jinxing stickers). We predicted that participants will be inclined to choose a non-jinxing sticker, more so in the high AoG condition and less so in the low AoG condition. Contrary to predictions, results showed that participants in high AoG condition were no more likely to choose the non-jinxing stickers than participants in the low AoG condition. These results suggest that AoG did not elicit BTF in a naturalistic setting. We discuss possibilities for null results.
author2 Albert Lee Kai Chung
author_facet Albert Lee Kai Chung
Leong, Jillian Wai Lam
format Final Year Project
author Leong, Jillian Wai Lam
author_sort Leong, Jillian Wai Lam
title Fate sticks with you: a field experiment on the anthropomorphism of God and beliefs in tempting fate
title_short Fate sticks with you: a field experiment on the anthropomorphism of God and beliefs in tempting fate
title_full Fate sticks with you: a field experiment on the anthropomorphism of God and beliefs in tempting fate
title_fullStr Fate sticks with you: a field experiment on the anthropomorphism of God and beliefs in tempting fate
title_full_unstemmed Fate sticks with you: a field experiment on the anthropomorphism of God and beliefs in tempting fate
title_sort fate sticks with you: a field experiment on the anthropomorphism of god and beliefs in tempting fate
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177828
_version_ 1800916354236153856