“文化可加性”与儒释道价值观与规范如何共存、互动、影响越南社会:基于R和Stan的长期民间故事贝叶斯分析

Q. Vuong, Manh-Tung Ho, Viet-Phuong La, D. Nhue, Bui Quang Khiem, Nghiem Phu Kien Cuong, Thu-Trang Vuong, Manh-Toan Ho, H. Nguyen, Viet-Ha T. Nguyen, Hiep-Hung Pham, N. Napier
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引用次数: 14

摘要

据报道,越南人每年焚烧约5万吨纸钱,这些纸钱的形式不仅包括纸币,还包括iphone、汽车、衣服,甚至家政人员,希望以此来取悦死者。这种做法被错误地归因于传统的佛教教义,但实际上起源于中国,大多数越南人并不知道这一点。在生活的其他方面,也有许多类似的例子,越南人乐于为自己的文化增添新的规范、价值观和信仰,甚至是相互矛盾的东西。这种现象被称为“文化可加性”,促使我们通过越南民间故事来研究儒、释、道三教的核心价值和规范之间的共存、互动和影响。通过应用贝叶斯逻辑回归,我们评估了故事的关键信息是否由宗教(因变量)主导的可能性,是否受到故事中与三教有关的价值观和反价值观的影响(自变量)。我们的主要发现包括儒家和道教价值观的文化可加性的存在。更具体地说,实证结果表明,道教和儒家价值观在民间故事中的相互作用或共同作用有助于预测故事的关键信息是否与儒家有关,β{VT⋅VC} = 0.86。而佛教则没有这样的统计趋势。研究结果引出了一些重要的启示。首先,这表明儒家的主导地位,因为儒家和道家的价值观同时出现在一个故事中,导致故事的关键信息由儒家主导。因此,它提出了儒家主导地位的证据,反对自由主义对三教共同根源(“tam giao đồng nguyen”)概念的解释,认为这是宗教统一或单一的。其次,“文化可加性”的概念可以帮助解释许多有趣的社会文化现象,即越南社会中没有宗教不容忍和极端主义,教育中的荒谬诡辩,科学和技术等创造性活动的低生产率,以及商业中误导性的品牌战略。我们意识到,我们的结果只是初步的,必须进行更多的理论和实证研究,以充分说明“文化可加性”的解释范围。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
'Cultural Additivity' and How the Values and Norms of Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism Co-Exist, Interact, and Influence Vietnamese Society: A Bayesian Analysis of Long-Standing Folktales, Using R and Stan
Every year, the Vietnamese people reportedly burned about 50,000 tons of joss papers, which took the form of not only bank notes, but iPhones, cars, clothes, even housekeepers, in hope of pleasing the dead. The practice was mistakenly attributed to traditional Buddhist teachings but originated in fact from China, which most Vietnamese were not aware of. In other aspects of life, there were many similar examples of Vietnamese so ready and comfortable with adding new norms, values, and beliefs, even contradictory ones, to their culture. This phenomenon, dubbed "cultural additivity", prompted us to study the co-existence, interaction, and influences among core values and norms of the Three Teachings –Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism–as shown through Vietnamese folktales. By applying Bayesian logistic regression, we evaluated the possibility of whether the key message of a story was dominated by a religion (dependent variables), as affected by the appearance of values and anti-values pertaining to the Three Teachings in the story (independent variables). Our main findings included the existence of the cultural additivity of Confucian and Taoist values. More specifically, empirical results showed that the interaction or addition of the values of Taoism and Confucianism in folktales together helped predict whether the key message of a story was about Confucianism, β{VT ⋅ VC} = 0.86. Meanwhile, there was no such statistical tendency for Buddhism. The results lead to a number of important implications. First, this showed the dominance of Confucianism because the fact that Confucian and Taoist values appeared together in a story led to the story’s key message dominated by Confucianism. Thus, it presented the evidence of Confucian dominance and against liberal interpretations of the concept of the Common Roots of Three Religions ("tam giao đồng nguyen") as religious unification or unicity. Second, the concept of "cultural additivity" could help explain many interesting socio-cultural phenomena, namely the absence of religious intolerance and extremism in the Vietnamese society, outrageous cases of sophistry in education, the low productivity in creative endeavors like science and technology, the misleading branding strategy in business. We are aware that our results are only preliminary and more studies, both theoretical and empirical, must be carried out to give a full account of the explanatory reach of "cultural additivity".
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