4.5 Article

Cascade modeling the effects of mysticism, spirituality, and religiosity on within- and between-group biases

Journal

PERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES
Volume 183, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.paid.2021.111156

Keywords

Mysticism; Religiosity; Spirituality; Prejudice; Racism; Sexism; Globalism; Multilevel selection

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This study explored the relationship between different forms of faith and bias against women and Arab immigrants. Findings suggest that mysticism and religiosity can contribute to antagonistic attitudes towards both groups, while spirituality may inhibit bias against women but facilitate bias against Arab immigrants. Through structural pathway analysis, the study also sheds light on how variations in belief systems affect group behavior and prejudiced attitudes.
Previous studies on the relationship between religiosity and prejudice have produced inconsistent results and lack a diverse understanding of faith identities. This prompts the need for further exploration of the contexts in which different forms of faith correlate with attitudinal biases both within and between biocultural groups. In this online study, we evaluated two cascade models hypothesizing paths between three forms of faith mysticism, religiosity, and spirituality - and bias against: (i) women and (ii) Arab immigrants. Additionally, we provide evidence supporting the nomological validity of a novel measure of globalism. 189 volunteer participants were recruited from the population of undergraduate students enrolled in psychology courses at the University of Arizona, and data were collected through a series of online survey measures. We found that both mysticism and religiosity appear to facilitate antagonistic attitudes towards both women and Arab immigrants. Meanwhile, spirituality seems to inhibit antagonistic attitudes towards women, while facilitating antagonistic attitudes towards Arab immigrants. By assessing the structural pathways between these constructs and various group-orientation variables, including collectivism, overt positive ethnocentrism, social dominance orientation, and globalism, this research provides a clearer understanding of how variations among these forms of belief affect group behavior and prejudiced attitudes.

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