Tytuł pozycji:
Many faces of dogmatism : prejudice as a way of protecting certainty against value-violators among dogmatic believers and atheists
In this article, we suggest that dogmatic beliefs, manifested as strong beliefs that there is no
God (i.e., dogmatic atheism) as well as strong beliefs in God (i.e., religious orthodoxy), can
serve as a cognitive response to uncertainty. Moreover, we claim that people who
dogmatically do not believe in religion and those who dogmatically believe in religion are
equally prone to intolerance and prejudice towards groups that violate their important
values. That is because prejudice towards these groups may be an efficient strategy to
protect the certainty that strong beliefs provide. We tested these assumptions in two
studies. In Study 1 and Study 2, we demonstrated that dogmatic beliefs mediate the
relationship between intolerance to uncertainty and both, religious orthodoxy and
dogmatic atheism. In addition, in Study 2 we showed that both the religiously orthodox
and dogmatic atheists become prejudiced towards groups that violate their values and
that these effects are especially strong under experimentally induced uncertainty. In this
study, we focused on atheists and homosexuals as groups that pose a threat to Christian’s
religious worldviews, and Catholics and pro-life supporters as groups that pose a threat to
the values of atheists. The results are discussed in relation to past research on dogmatism
and religion, as well as with reference to what this means for the study of prejudice