联合起来避免剥削:强势(但不是基于声望)的领导者激发了追随者的集体道德反对

Richard Ronay, J. Oostrom, M. She, J. Maner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

虽然支配地位是获得较高社会地位的一种常见策略,但它往往包含剥削行为,使领导者与追随者发生冲突。人类学研究表明,这种冲突的漫长进化历史为旨在减少权贵剥削的道德体系奠定了基础。在这里,我们建立了主导地位(和声望)和道德领导之间的联系,报告了三项研究(总n = 1246),表明,作为对主导领导者的回应,追随者会联合起来,共同反对,目的是抵制甚至推翻现任领导者。这些研究还发现了主导型领导者引发道德反对的特定社会心理途径——低水平的信任和八卦都介导了领导主导对追随者集体反对的影响。虽然支配地位可以让人们在社会等级中上升,但作为一种领导策略,支配地位的长期持久性可能会被追随者的集体道德反对所破坏。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Banding together to avoid exploitation: Dominant (but not prestige-based) leaders motivate collective moral opposition from followers
Although dominance is a common strategy for attaining high social rank, it often entails exploitative behavior, bringing leaders into conflict with followers. Anthropological work suggests that a long evolutionary history of such conflict has set the stage for moral systems designed to reduce exploitation from powerful people. Here we establish links between dominance (and prestige) and moral leadership, reporting three studies (total n = 1246) demonstrating that, in response to dominant leaders, followers band together in collective opposition aimed at resisting, and even toppling, incumbent leaders. These studies also identify specific social psychological pathways through which dominant leaders elicit moral opposition—low levels of trust and gossip both mediated effects of leader dominance on collective opposition by followers. While dominance may allow people to rise through the ranks of a social hierarchy, the long-term durability of dominance as a leadership strategy may be undermined by collective moral opposition from followers.
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