道德推理与政治冲突:堕胎争议。

J. Kelley, M. Evans, B. Headey
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引用次数: 38

摘要

我们认为,堕胎争议有一个主要来源——宗教,还有两个不那么重要的来源——对性宽容和女性就业的态度。传统基督教通过三种不同的道德推理模式来反对堕胎:通过演绎道德推理,通过基督教世界观的暗示,堕胎违反了生命的神圣性,是对上帝设计的反叛;通过诉诸天主教教义的权威道德推理;通过结果主义的道德推理,作为一种控制性行为的手段,作为一种将女性活动限制在家中的手段。即使撇开基督教信仰不谈,对传统道德的坚持也会在这些结果主义的基础上促进对堕胎的反对。我们假设了一个模型,其中宗教信仰、反女权主义、性宽容和对堕胎的态度是不同的概念(一个四因素模型),而不是单一保守主义因素的所有简单方面。我们开发了可靠的多条目态度量表;结果表明,我们的四因素模型比单因素模型更能拟合数据;并对来自澳大利亚一个具有代表性的大型国家样本(N = 4540)的新数据进行假设检验。利用最大似然结构方程方法,我们发现基督教信仰的演绎推理是反对堕胎最重要的来源,具有强烈的直接和间接影响。暴露于天主教等级制度的权威之下是一个真实但较弱的反对来源。传统道德观念中关于性的结果主义推理——部分受到宗教的支持,部分独立于宗教——也很有影响力。但是,与公认的智慧相反,对女性就业的看法只影响很小。
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Moral reasoning and political conflict: the abortion controversy.
We argue that the abortion controversy has one major source--religion--and two less important ones--attitudes towards sexual permissiveness and women's employment. Traditional Christianity promotes opposition to abortion using three distinct modes of moral reasoning: through deductive moral reasoning, by the Christian world view's implication that abortion violates the sanctity of life and is a rebellion against God's design; through authoritative moral reasoning by appeal to Catholic dogma; and through consequentialist moral reasoning, as a means of control over sexuality and as a means of confining women's activities to the home. Even aside from Christian belief, adherence to traditional morality promotes opposition to abortion on these consequentialist grounds. We posit a model in which religious belief, anti-feminism, sexual permissiveness, and attitudes towards abortion are distinct concepts (a four-factor model) rather than all simply aspects of a single conservatism factor. We develop reliable, multiple item attitude scales; show that our four-factor model fits the data much better than the one-factor alternative; and test our hypotheses on new data from a large, representative national sample of Australia (N = 4540). Using maximum likelihood structural equation methods, we find that deductive reasoning from Christian belief is the most important source of opposition to abortion, with strong effects both direct and indirect. Exposure to the authority of the Catholic hierarchy is a real but weaker source of opposition. Consequentialist reasoning from traditional moral views on sex--partly buttressed by religion, partly independent of it--is also influential. But views on women's employment matter only a little, contrary to received wisdom.
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