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Terror Management Theory (TMT)

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Terror Management Theory (TMT) How the fear of death fundamentally influences the development of personality Russ Webster Theories of Personality – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Terror Management Theory (TMT)


1
Terror Management
Theory (TMT)
How the fear of death fundamentally influences
the development of personality Russ
Webster Theories of Personality rjwebster_at_bsu.edu
2
TMTs Existential Roots
  • What is existentialism?
  • Philosophy looking at big, abstract ideas
  • What does it mean to be human?
  • Why are we here?
  • How did we come to be?
  • Basically, the search for meaning
  • Old philosophy
  • Dates back to western classical era
  • Continued through Renaissance and today
  • Find it in paintings, music, literature

3
TMTs Existential Roots
  • Existential psychology began in reaction to
    Freuds theories
  • Both Freudian and existential psych explore the
    motivational consequences of human (unconscious)
    conflicts
  • However, they differ in which conflicts
    fundamentally influence human behavior
  • For Freud we manage sexual conflict
  • For existential psychs our search for meaning,
    freedom, coherence ultimately stemmed from the
    fear of death

4
TMT Theorists
  • Jeff Greenberg, Tom Pyszczynski, and Sheldon
    Solomon were all grad students at University of
    Kansas in the 1970s
  • They felt
  • dismayed by the massive popularity of purely
    cognitive explanations for human behavior and
  • that something big was being left out of
    psychological research
  • Yet, for decades psychodynamic theories were
    snubbed because they were not falsifiable
    unable to be confirmed or refuted

5
TMT Theorists
  • Yet the cognitive revolution did give us
    innovative tools to study inner workings of the
    mind
  • Greenberg et al. saw the potential to apply these
    new tools to support a broad and progressive
    theory
  • Penned theoretical papers explaining TMTs
    principles (1986)
  • Ernest Beckers (1976) The Denial of Death
    cornerstone of theory

6
TMT Main Tenets
  • Fear of death is innate universal
  • Self-awareness leads to the recognition that
    death is unstoppable and unpredictable
  • Fear of death fundamental source of human
    conflict and anxiety
  • Death naturally conflicts with our powerful
    self-preservation and freedom instincts
  • Ultimate motive to manage this terror
  • Thus, TMT holds that human behavior fundamentally
    demonstrates how we cope or manage this anxiety
    this terror of death
  • From intergroup conflict to self-esteem needs,
    TMT has an explanation

7
Youve got to be kidding me?
  • How often do you really think about death daily?
  • How can death be responsible for intergroup
    conflict?
  • We learn to automatically that is,
    unconsciously repress and manage the fear of
    death using a dual-component buffer
  • A) Self-esteem
  • B) Culture (individualized worldview)

8
Culture Self-esteem Terror management
mechanisms
  • It all goes back to childhood, right?
  • Awareness of death
  • Before full awareness The monster under the
    bed
  • Full awareness not until around 10 12 y/o
  • But from infancy
  • Develop relationship between being good and
    having our needs met, anxiety alleviated
  • Develop a sense of the self (i.e., self-esteem)
    through these caregiver-child transactions
  • Explains our obsession with high self-esteem
  • From childhood
  • Adults edify children in cultural standards and
    beliefs
  • Culture provides meaning, permanence, stability
  • Link between fulfilling cultural standards
    (being good) and alleviation of anxiety then
    developed
  • Culture may serve as a proxy caregiver

9
Initial Reactions
  • Reaction to first theoretical papers was scornful
  • American Psychologist editors
  • I have no doubt that these ideas are of
    absolutely no interest to any psychologist, alive
    or dead.
  • TMT theorists reply
  • We had been hoping that at least the dead might
    have shown some interest
  • Must empirically test TMT before others took
    serious consideration

10
1. The Anxiety Buffer hypothesis
  • states that high self-esteem, derived from
    upholding parental and cultural standards,
    shields individuals from experiencing (death)
    anxiety
  • Empirical research says
  • Greenberg et al. (1992) High self-esteem
    lessened self-reported anxiety
  • in anticipation of electric shocks
  • in response to graphic video
  • in response to receiving information detailing a
    short life expectancy
  • Self-esteem also moderated Ps physiological
    response in anticipation of electric shocks

11
2. Mortality Salience hypothesis
  • states that when people are reminded of death
    (mortality salience), they will use various
    terror management (defense) mechanisms to rid
    death thoughts from the mind to return to a
    composed psychological state
  • Seeing that culture is vital to ward off death
    anxiety, people should defend their worldviews
    after mortality salience (i.e., elicit worldview
    defense)
  • Worldview defense can either involve
  • a) criticizing others disparate worldviews or
  • b) praising others who uphold your worldview

12
First empirical studies
  • Rosenblatt et al. (1989)
  • Completed mortality questionnaire or not
  • Judges read case brief and then allotted bail to
    the alleged prostitute
  • amount ranged from 100 - 999
  • Results
  • After mortality salience 455 vs.
  • Control condition 50

13
Rosenblatt et al. (1989) cont.
  • Also added heroine condition in which Ps
    allotted reward amount to female who apprehended
    thief (1,000 - 4,000)
  • After mortality salience 3,476 vs.
  • Control condition 1,112

14
Mortality Salience Results
  • MS not only affects attitudes
  • e.g., increased derogation of various outgroup
    members (e.g., Christians vs. Jews)
  • But also overt behavioral responses
  • Increased aggression against worldview
    transgressors (e.g., allotted more hot sauce to
    targets who criticized ones political views)
  • Decreased affiliation with dissimilar others
    (e.g., where one chooses, if at all, to sit with
    worldview threats)
  • A powerful experimental manipulation documented
    in hundreds of experiments

15
The Psychodynamics of TMT
  • What actually happens, cognitively, during these
    experiments?
  • Participants are unaware of worldview defense
    after mortality salience
  • How do we investigate unconscious processes
    processes of which participants have no awareness
    and on which cannot report?
  • Refer now to the diagram I passed out

16
Your worldview sucks!
Im going to live forever!
DELAY
Proximal Effects
Distal Effects
17
Skeptics? Anyone?
  • Our unconscious yeah, right!
  • Conclusive evidence demonstrates how big a role
    our unconscious plays
  • Our conscious mind only has limited capacities,
    thus our unconscious must pick up the slack
  • Such evidence explains how terror management
    mechanisms occur without our awareness
  • Experiments not generalizable..?
  • However, results transcend
  • Gender, cultures (East and West), and age
  • Mortality salience questionnaire not only
    manipulation used to present death reminders

18
Prague, Czech Republic
19
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21
The Scope of TMT
  • The scope of TMT is huge!
  • Keep in mind
  • Death reminders are everywhere
  • Media! Newspapers, TV, movies
  • The fear of death is universal and transcends the
    usual boundaries (e.g., age, region)
  • The fear of death is (at least partly) influences
    a variety of seemingly unrelated, but
    consequential, human behavior
  • Political, forensic, social, developmental, etc.
    applications abound
  • Is there such a thing as rational behavior, then?

22
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