Title of article :
Gross gods and icky atheism: Disgust responses to rejected religious beliefs
Author/Authors :
Ritter، نويسنده , , Ryan S. and Preston، نويسنده , , Jesse Lee، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
6
From page :
1225
To page :
1230
Abstract :
Disgust is an emotional response that helps to maintain and protect physical and spiritual purity by signaling contamination and motivating the restoration of personal cleanliness. In the present research we predicted that disgust may be elicited by contact with outgroup religious beliefs, as these beliefs pose a threat to spiritual purity. Two experiments tested this prediction using a repeated taste-test paradigm in which participants tasted and rated a drink before and after copying a passage from an outgroup religion. In Experiment 1, Christian participants showed increased disgust after writing a passage from the Qurʹan or Richard Dawkinsʹ The God Delusion, but not a control text. Experiment 2 replicated this effect, and also showed that contact with an ingroup religious belief (Christians copying from the Bible) did not elicit disgust. Moreover, Experiment 2 showed that disgust to rejected beliefs was eliminated when participants were allowed to wash their hands after copying the passage, symbolically restoring spiritual cleanliness. Together, these results provide evidence that contact with rejected religious beliefs elicits disgust by symbolically violating spiritual purity. Implications for intergroup relations between religious groups is discussed, and the role of disgust in the protection of beliefs that hold moral value.
Keywords :
Moral disgust , Embodiment , religious belief , Outgroups , Taste
Journal title :
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number :
1960099
Link To Document :
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