An existentialist view on mortality salience effects: Personal hardiness, death-thought accessibility, and cultural worldview defence

Two studies examined the possible moderating role of hardiness on reactions to mortality salience inductions. A sample of 240 Israeli undergraduate students completed a hardiness scale, were exposed to a mortality salience or control induction, and then either rated the severity and punishment of 10...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of social psychology 2001-09, Vol.40 (3), p.437-453
Hauptverfasser: Florian, Victor, Mikulincer, Mario, Hirschberger, Gilad
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Two studies examined the possible moderating role of hardiness on reactions to mortality salience inductions. A sample of 240 Israeli undergraduate students completed a hardiness scale, were exposed to a mortality salience or control induction, and then either rated the severity and punishment of 10 social transgressions (Study 1, N = 120) or performed a word‐stem completion task, which tapped the accessibility of death‐related thoughts (Study 2, N = 120). Results indicated that a mortality salience induction led to more severe judgments of social transgressions as well as to more severe punishments than a control induction only among participants scoring low in the hardiness scale. However, a mortality salience induction led to a higher cognitive accessibility of death‐related thoughts than a control condition regardless of participants' hardiness scores. The discussion emphasizes the importance of considering inner resources when examining reactions to mortality reminders.
ISSN:0144-6665
2044-8309
DOI:10.1348/014466601164911