Friday, October 1, 2021

Divine Attribution Bias Positive, Negative




 Divine Attribution Biases may be positive or negative. 

A Positive Divine Attribution Bias exists when acts considered good are routinely attributed to God or divine intervention while minimising or ignoring more plausible causes.  PDAB

A Negative Divine Attribution Bias exists when a person attributes unpleasant or harmful events to divine intervention as if God or a divine being were punishing people for their sinful or unacceptable behaviour while minimising or ignoring more plausible explanations. NDAB

Examples 

Positive bias: A parking space opens up as one is searching. A positive Divine Attribution Bias is evident when the driver asserts that God, in a role of personal assistant, provided this parking convenience.

Negative bias: A tornado destroys a large part of a city. A negative Divine Attribution Bias exists when someone insists that the event was God’s punishment on the people for sins in the community.

Geoffrey W. Sutton, PhD is Emeritus Professor of Psychology. He retired from a clinical practice and was credentialed in clinical neuropsychology and psychopharmacology. His website is  www.suttong.com

 

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Dr. Sutton’s posts are for educational purposes only. See a licensed mental health provider for diagnoses, treatment, and consultation.

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