Morality and Self-Control: How They Are Intertwined and Where They Differ
Despite sharing conceptual overlap, morality and self-control research have led largely separate lives. In this article, we highlight neglected connections between these major areas of psychology. To this end, we first note their conceptual similarities and differences. We then show how morality res...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Current directions in psychological science : a journal of the American Psychological Society 2018-08, Vol.27 (4), p.286-291 |
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container_title | Current directions in psychological science : a journal of the American Psychological Society |
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creator | Hofmann, Wilhelm Meindl, Peter Mooijman, Marlon Graham, Jesse |
description | Despite sharing conceptual overlap, morality and self-control research have led largely separate lives. In this article, we highlight neglected connections between these major areas of psychology. To this end, we first note their conceptual similarities and differences. We then show how morality research, typically emphasizing aspects of moral cognition and emotion, may benefit from incorporating motivational concepts from self-control research. Similarly, self-control research may benefit from a better understanding of the moral nature of many self-control domains. We place special focus on various components of self-control and on the ways in which self-control goals may come to be seen as moral issues (i.e., moralized). |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/0963721418759317 |
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subjects | Morality Self control |
title | Morality and Self-Control: How They Are Intertwined and Where They Differ |
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