Article: When God
sanctions violence, believers act more aggressivel
Posted by:
"Robert Karl Stonjek" stonjek@...
r_k_stonjek
Mon Mar 5, 2007
10:01 pm (PST)
When
God sanctions violence, believers act more aggressively
"To justify their actions, violent people often claim that God has
sanctioned their behavior," said Bushman, faculty associate at the U-M
Institute for Social Research and lead author of the article published in the
March 2007 issue of Psychological Science. "Christian extremists, Jewish
reactionaries and Islamic fundamentalists all can cite scriptures that seem to
encourage or at least support aggression against unbelievers.
Bushman, who is also a U-M professor of psychology and communications studies,
and colleagues at
The first study involved
After reporting their religious affiliations and beliefs, participants read a
passage adapted from the King James Bible that described a woman's brutal
murder and her husband's revenge on her attackers. Half the participants were
told that the passage came from the Old Testament, half that it came from an
ancient scroll found by archeologists. Half the participants from each of these
groups read a version of the passage that included a sentence in which God
commanded his followers to take arms against others.
After reading the passages, participants were paired with confederates of the
experimenters for a simple reaction task. They were told that the winner would
be able to "blast" the losing partner with noise as loud as 105
decibels, about the level of a fire alarm-a common experimental measure of
aggression.
The researchers found that both the religious and secular students were more
aggressive, delivering louder blasts of noise to their ostensible partners,
when told that the passage they read came from the Bible. Aggressive responses
also increased when participants read that God directly sanctioned violence.
The increased level of aggression was greater among believers than among
secularists, however.
"Our results further confirm previous research showing that exposure to
violent media causes people to behave more aggressively if they identify with
the violent characters than if they do not," Bushman said.
The work also supports the view that exposure to violent scriptures may induce
extremists to engage in aggressive actions. "It's important to note that
we obtained evidence supporting this hypothesis in samples of university
students who were, in our estimation, not typical of the terrorists who blow up
civilians," Bushman wrote. "Even among our participants who were not
religiously devout, exposure to God-sanctioned violence increased subsequent
aggression. That the effect was found in such a sample may attest to the
insidious power of exposure to literary scriptural violence."
According to Bushman and colleagues, this does not mean that reading the
scriptures leads to aggression. "Violent stories that teach moral lessons
or that are balanced with descriptions of victims' suffering or the aggressor's
remorse can teach important lessons and have legitimate artistic merit. But
taking a single violent episode out of its overall context, as we did in these
studies, can produce a significant increase in aggression."
Established in 1948, the
Source:
http://www.ns.