Risk Perception and New Age Beliefs

This is a study of risk perception in relation to New Age (NA) beliefs, including traditional folk superstition and belief in paranormal phenomena, as well as use of alternative healing practices. Data were also obtained on trust dimensions and on personality and psychopathology variables, as well as religious involvement. It was found that four factors accounted for the investigated NA beliefs, which were termed higher consciousness beliefs, denial of analytic knowledge, traditional superstition, and belief in the physical reality of the soul. NA beliefs were strongly and positively related to religious involvement, and negatively to educational level. These beliefs were also positively related to maladjustment and to concerns over tampering with nature. In regression analyses, it was found that NA beliefs explained about 15% of the variance of perceived risk, and that the most powerful explanatory factors were higher consciousness beliefs and beliefs in paranormal phenomena. Traditional superstition and use of healing practices did not contribute to explaining perceived risk.

[1]  S. Wallace The Denial of Death , 1979, Occupational health nursing.

[2]  J. Glicksohn Belief in the paranormal and subjective paranormal experience , 1990 .

[3]  T. Hines Pseudoscience and the Paranormal , 1988 .

[4]  A. Furnham Explaining health and illness: lay beliefs on the nature of health , 1994 .

[5]  D. R. Hoge A validated intrinsic religious motivation scale. , 1972 .

[6]  G. Āllport,et al.  Personal religious orientation and prejudice. , 1967, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[7]  W. Macdonald The Popularity of Paranormal Experiences in the United States , 1994 .

[8]  C. Batson,et al.  The Religious Experience: A Social-Psychological Perspective , 1982 .

[9]  M. Grimmer,et al.  The Structure of Paranormal Beliefs Among Australian Psychology Students , 1990 .

[10]  Robert A. Bjork,et al.  Enhancing Human Performance: An Evaluation of “New Age” Techniques Considered by the U.S. Army , 1990 .

[11]  M. Davies Paranormal Beliefs in British and Southern USA College Students , 1988 .

[12]  S. Pfeifer Belief in demons and exorcism in psychiatric patients in Switzerland. , 1994, The British journal of medical psychology.

[13]  D. Clarke Belief in the paranormal: A New Zealand survey. , 1991 .

[14]  E. E. Jones The aquarian conspiracy: Personal and social transformation in the 1980s. , 1980 .

[15]  Jeffrey S. Levin,et al.  'New age' healing in the U.S. , 1986, Social science & medicine.

[16]  John H. Langdon,et al.  Umbrella hypotheses and parsimony in human evolution: a critique of the Aquatic Ape Hypothesis. , 1997, Journal of human evolution.

[17]  H. Irwin Origins and functions of paranormal belief: The role of childhood trauma and interpersonal control. , 1992 .

[18]  L Sjöberg,et al.  Limits of Knowledge and the Limited Importance of Trust , 2001, Risk analysis : an official publication of the Society for Risk Analysis.

[19]  K. Makarec,et al.  Exotic Beliefs May Be Substitutes for Religious Beliefs , 1990 .

[20]  Fintan R. Steele,et al.  The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark , 1996, Nature Medicine.

[21]  M. Douglas,et al.  Risk and Culture , 1983 .

[22]  H. Irwin Paranormal Belief and Proneness to Dissociation , 1994, Psychological reports.

[23]  S. A. Myers,et al.  Personality characteristics as related to the out-of-body experience. , 1983 .

[24]  N. Barraclough,et al.  Modelling childhood causes of paranormal belief and experience: Childhood trauma and childhood fantasy , 1995 .

[25]  H. Irwin A study of the measurement and the correlates of paranormal belief , 1985 .

[26]  S. Epstein,et al.  Individual differences in intuitive-experiential and analytical-rational thinking styles. , 1996, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[27]  M. Lindeman Motivation, cognition and pseudoscience. , 1998, Scandinavian journal of psychology.

[28]  C. Ross,et al.  Paranormal Experiences in the General Population , 1992, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[29]  M. Lindeman,et al.  Belief in Astrology as a Strategy For Self-Verification and Coping With Negative Life-Events , 1998 .

[30]  Tom Pyszczynski,et al.  A Terror Management Theory of Social Behavior: The Psychological Functions of Self-Esteem and Cultural Worldviews , 1991 .

[31]  T. Toneatto,et al.  Cognitive psychopathology of problem gambling. , 1999, Substance use & misuse.

[32]  Beliefs in Paranormal Phenomena and Locus of Control: A Field Study , 1981 .

[33]  C. Campbell Half-Belief and the Paradox of Ritual Instrumental Activism: A Theory of Modern Superstition , 1996 .

[34]  C. Sagan The Demon-Haunted World , 1995 .

[35]  P. Slovic,et al.  The Role of Affect and Worldviews as Orienting Dispositions in the Perception and Acceptance of Nuclear Power1 , 1996 .

[36]  M. Zuckerman Behavioral Expressions and Biosocial Bases of Sensation Seeking , 1994 .

[37]  M. Shermer,et al.  Why People Believe Weird Things: Pseudoscience, Superstition, and Other Confusions of Our Time , 1997 .

[38]  J. Tobacyk Superstition and Beliefs about the Prediction of Future Events , 1991 .

[39]  L. Covi,et al.  SCL-90: an outpatient psychiatric rating scale--preliminary report. , 1973, Psychopharmacology bulletin.

[40]  J. Tobacyk,et al.  Paranormal Beliefs and their Implications in University Students from Finland and the United States , 1992 .

[41]  S. Schwartz,et al.  Toward a theory of the universal content and structure of values: Extensions and cross-cultural replications. , 1990 .

[42]  Lamar V. Wilkinson,et al.  Paranormal Beliefs and Preference for Games of Chance , 1991 .

[43]  C. Batson,et al.  The Religious Experience , 1983 .

[44]  Catherine S. Fichten,et al.  Popular horoscopes and the "Barnum effect." , 1983 .

[45]  S. Epstein Integration of the cognitive and the psychodynamic unconscious. , 1994, The American psychologist.

[46]  C. Frederick,et al.  Superstitious behavior in sport: Levels of effectiveness and determinants of use in three collegiate sports. , 1998 .

[47]  Miguel Roig,et al.  Belief in the paranormal and its association with irrational thinking controlled for context effects , 1998 .

[48]  W. Hanegraaff New Age Religion And Western Culture , 1996 .

[49]  Bruce F. Campbell Ancient wisdom revived : a history of the Theosophical movement , 1981 .

[50]  R. Kyle The New Age movement in American culture , 1995 .

[51]  E. Tiryakian Toward the Sociology of Esoteric Culture , 1972, American Journal of Sociology.

[52]  M. Oppenheim How Superstition Won and Science Lost: Popularizing Science and Health in the United States , 1988 .

[53]  R. Lange,et al.  Death anxiety and the paranormal: the primacy of belief over experience. , 1997, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[54]  B. Fischhoff,et al.  How safe is safe enough? A psychometric study of attitudes towards technological risks and benefits , 1978 .

[55]  Timothy C. Earle,et al.  Social Trust , 1995 .

[56]  H. Irwin Childhood Trauma and the Origins of Paranormal Belief: A Constructive Replication , 1994, Psychological reports.

[57]  H. Irwin Fantasy Proneness and Paranormal Beliefs , 1990 .

[58]  J. Lovelock The Ages of Gaia: A Biography of Our Living Earth , 1988 .

[59]  G. Keinan Effects of stress and tolerance of ambiguity on magical thinking. , 1994 .

[60]  R. Lange,et al.  Top-down purification of Tobacyk's Revised Paranormal Belief Scale , 2000 .

[61]  Lennart Sjöberg,et al.  Perceived risk and tampering with nature , 2000 .

[62]  Susan Blackmore,et al.  Probability misjudgment and belief in the paranormal: A newspaper survey , 1997 .

[63]  B. Beyerstein Brainscams: Neuromythologies of the New Age , 1990 .

[64]  Hakan Kallmen,et al.  Manifest anxiety, general self-efficacy and locus of control as determinants of personal and general risk perception , 2000 .

[65]  J. W. Fox The Structure, Stability, and Social Antecedents of Reported Paranormal Experiences* , 1992 .

[66]  J. Bernthal,et al.  Preliminary Considerations , 2008 .

[67]  B. Skinner Superstition in the pigeon. , 1948, Journal of experimental psychology.

[68]  David F Duncan,et al.  Belief in the Paranormal and Religious Belief among American College Students , 1992 .

[69]  J. Tobacyk,et al.  Comparisons of Belief-Based Personality Constructs in Polish and American University Students , 1992 .

[70]  M. Siegrist,et al.  Salient Value Similarity, Social Trust, and Risk/Benefit Perception , 2000, Risk analysis : an official publication of the Society for Risk Analysis.

[71]  S. Vyse Believing in Magic: The Psychology of Superstition , 1997 .

[72]  H. K. Nixon Popular Answers to Some Psychological Questions , 1925 .

[73]  M. Lindeman,et al.  Assessment of Magical Beliefs about Food and Health , 2000, Journal of health psychology.