4.4 Article

Taking a Leap of Faith: Reminders of God Lead to Greater Risk Taking

Journal

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL AND PERSONALITY SCIENCE
Volume 5, Issue 8, Pages 901-909

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1948550614537309

Keywords

God; religion; risk taking; morality; control

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Recent psychological models of religion suggest that religious beliefs provide a form of psychological control. Independently, other research has found that an increase in psychological control can lead people to adopt riskier strategies. Hence, we hypothesized that activation of God concepts increases risk taking. In three studies, we found that God primes led to take greater risk taking as though participants were literally taking a leap of faith. In Study 2, we presented evidence that this effect could be mediated by increased psychological control. Although consistent with psychological models of religion, the findings also contradict some survey findings that religious people are less risk seeking. This inconsistency was addressed in Study 3 by looking at how religion, morality, and risk taking are related. Implications to a relational schema approach to study the effects of God primes are discussed.

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