Bound to Share or Not to Care. The Force of Fate, Gods, Luck, Chance and Choice across Cultures

IF 0.6 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Renatas Berniūnas, Audrius Beinorius, V. Dranseika, Vytis Silius, Paulius Rimkevičius
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

People across cultures consider everyday choices in the context of perceived various external life-determining forces: such as fate and gods (two teleological forces) and such notions as luck and chance (two non-teleological forces). There is little cross-cultural evidence (except for a belief in gods) showing how people relate these salient notions of life-determining forces to prosociality and a sense of well-being. The current paper provides preliminary cross-cultural data to address this gap. Results indicate that choice is the most important life-determining factor. Regression analyses indicate that choice and belief in gods and fate emerged as significant predictors of prosociality towards strangers. Moreover, luck was a significant predictor of decreased prosociality. A relation between life-determining forces and life satisfaction followed the same pattern: choice, gods, and fate emerged as significant predictors of greater life satisfaction, whereas luck was associated with decreased life satisfaction. The overall pattern of results indicates that participants across different cultures might sense being bounded to share or not to care depending on the perceived intentional agency and meaning in the external forces.
必须分享或不在乎。命运、上帝、运气、机遇和文化选择的力量
不同文化的人们在感知到的各种外部生命决定力量的背景下考虑日常选择:如命运和神(两种目的论力量)以及运气和机会(两种非目的论力量)等概念。几乎没有跨文化的证据(除了对上帝的信仰)表明人们如何将这些决定生活的力量的显著概念与亲社会和幸福感联系起来。本文提供了初步的跨文化数据来解决这一差距。结果表明,选择是决定人生最重要的因素。回归分析表明,对神和命运的选择和信仰是对陌生人亲社会行为的重要预测因素。此外,运气是亲社会倾向下降的重要预测因素。决定生活的力量和生活满意度之间的关系也遵循同样的模式:选择、上帝和命运是生活满意度提高的重要预测因素,而运气则与生活满意度降低有关。结果的整体模式表明,不同文化的参与者可能会感觉到被限制分享或不关心,这取决于感知到的有意代理和外部力量的意义。
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来源期刊
Journal of Cognition and Culture
Journal of Cognition and Culture PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: The Journal of Cognition and Culture provides an interdisciplinary forum for exploring the mental foundations of culture and the cultural foundations of mental life. The primary focus of the journal is on explanations of cultural phenomena in terms of acquisition, representation and transmission involving cognitive capacities without excluding the study of cultural differences. The journal contains articles, commentaries, reports of experiments, and book reviews that emerge out of the inquiries by, and conversations between, scholars in experimental psychology, developmental psychology, social cognition, neuroscience, human evolution, cognitive science of religion, and cognitive anthropology.
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