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Personality Psychology Lecture 10 Personality, Culture, and Religion

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Title: Personality Psychology Lecture 10 Personality, Culture, and Religion


1
Personality PsychologyLecture 10Personality,
Culture, and Religion
  • Professor Ian McGregor

Hallelujah Pachelbels Canon
2
Final Quiz Questions
  • How do Western and Eastern religious practices
    help people cope with goal conflict? (4 marks)
  • Describe the evidence indicating that ideological
    extremes arise from goal regulation processes
    (i.e., personality trait, personal project,
    goal-priming, behavioral neuroscience, and
    neuroscience evidence). (4 marks)

3
Rigid Conviction (at low implicit)(McGregor
Marigold, 2003, JPSP)
4
Fascist Consensus (at low implicit)(McGregor,
Nail, Marigold, Kang, 2005, JPSP)
5
Line Bisection Task Behavioral Neuroscience
Measure of Relative Cerebral Hemisphericity
  • Please quickly look at each of the lines below
    and then make a short tick-mark on each line that
    divides it in half
  • __________________________________
    __________________________________________________
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    ______________________________

  • ____________________________________
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    ___________________________

  • __________________________________________________
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6
Behavioral Neuroscience
7
r Left EEG (F7F8). Line-Bisection Task .38
8
(No Transcript)
9
Anterior Cingulate Cortex (ACC)
Uh-Oh detection and correction Left EEG, r
-.53, with ACC
10
Academic Goal Frustration ? Religious Zeal
  • Which religious belief system do you most
    identify with?
  • Jewish (20)
  • Christian (45)
  • Muslim (5)
  • Buddhist (10)
  • Atheist (20)

11
Religious Zeal (scale from 1-5)
  • Confident
  • Aspire to live and act according to
  • Grounded in objective truth
  • Most people would agree if understood
  • If publicly criticized would argue to defend it
  • Would support a war to defend
  • Would sacrifice my life to defend
  • Believe in my heart more correct than others

12
Results
Academic goal frustration caused Overall zeal
3.0 ? 3.6 Support for war 1.8 ? 3.0
13
Approach Personality x Academic Threat
14
Religious Zeal and Anterior Cingulate Cortex
Religious Zeal is also negatively correlated with
ACC r -.63
15
Defensive Pride and Idealism (pictures of
neoanalitic theorists deleted)
16
Highest Happiness from Contemplating Perfect
Ideals and Abstract, Absolute Truth (pictures of
Greek philosophers deleted).
17
Authoritarian IdeologyInsecure Attachment and
Narcissism (pictures of authoritarian politicians
deleted)
18
What Causes Religious Extremism?
19
Reactive Zeal
  • Religious rapture is a unifying statesand and
    grit of selfhood disappear
  • Excessively intense thoughts repress
    conflictmental dams
  • Religious zeal is used as a displacement goal
  • Caused by important goal frustrations
  • Activates clear approach-motivation processes
  • Relieves sensitivity to uncertainty and anxiety
  • Liberates vigorous (myopic) action

20
But, Healthy-Minded Religious Devotion, Too
traits
religious commitments
spiritual values
goals
roles
relationships
cultural
view of
myth history
self in future
Narrative Integrity, Meaning, and
Resilience Stories We Live By
21
Philosophies, Religions, Cultures as Stories We
Live By
  • What to do?
  • Intrapersonal and interpersonal conflict
  • Salvation from chaos?hope for peace
  • Ritual reminders in community worship
  • Eastern and Western solutions

22
Western Culture and Religion from
  • Greek idealism
  • Pythagoras (582-500 BCE) Introspection and
    idealism from India to Greece Socratic (470-399
    BCE)/ Platonic (427-347 BCE) idealism for social
    utopia (Platos republic)make a better, more
    ideal world
  • Abstract principles and categories, logical
    analysis, individually realized
  • Highest happiness from contemplating
    self-realized, logical, abstract, truth (Plato
    and Aristotle)

23
And from
  • Judaic Monotheisms (J, C, I) Empowered
    Individuals
  • Dominant, nature transcending, powerful, loving
    will of God. Humans in Gods image.
  • Creeds, beliefs, the word, logos, people of the
    book. Ideals guide powerful action.
  • World is very good. Let them have dominion
    over all the earth.
  • God shapes history Exodus from Egyptian slavery
    as metaphor. Gods justice mercy as the
    righteous ideal
  • Freedom, self-responsibility, align with Gods
    willfrom wrestling with God to social justice
    and prophetic power
  • Salvation by alignment with Gods will, and yoke
    ego (Islam submission to God) thy will be
    done
  • Mistakes imperfections covenant of forgiveness
    grace along way

24
Exodus Deliverance from Bondage
25
Self-esteem Canadian sample
26
Independent self-construal (Markus Kitayama,
1991)
Father
Mother
x
x
x
x
x
Sibling
Self
X
X
x
X
X
X
X
x
x
x
Co-worker
Friend
x
27
Self-Affirmation Manipulations that Decrease
Reactive Idealism
  • Love
  • Self-Worth
  • Values Affirmation
  • Group-Identification and Consensus
  • (Note same domains of defense)
  • Self-affirmations only work in the West
  • Reactive Idealism only occurs in the West

28
Salience of Dilemma after Conviction Expression
29
Salience of Dilemma after Pride
Expression(McGregor, 2006, BASP)
30
Self-Affirmations, Goal Theory, and Personal
Growth (in West)
  • Recall, completed goals fade
  • Approach state also relieves uh-oh (ACC) and
    avoidance vigilance
  • Allow openness to other information
  • Less defensive, more generous
  • Paradox affirm self-goals so people can let them
    go.

31
Healthy Minded Monotheism (J, C, I)
  • Affirmation from a merciful God promotes healthy
    personality development (Erikson, Rogers, Maslow)
  • Basic Trust Grace, B-love, chosen, no death,
    father
  • Autonomy/Initiative Freedom to choose good and
    evil
  • Industry/Self-worthy Gods love, intervention,
    suffering
  • Identity Clear values of one God law guide
    action
  • Intimacy brothers, compassion, examples,
    relations, e.g., Jesus, Mary, Muhammed.
  • Generativity Cup runneth over with gratitude,
    empowered compassion, charity, justice, mercy,
    peace
  • Integrity Energy, light, vision, vitality,
    actualization, peak experience.
  • Cf. Hindu path of desire to path of renunciation..

32
Islam
  • Peace and Surrender
  • From Chaos to Harmony in Mecca
  • People of the Bookno doubt in this book
  • Abraham, Moses, Jesus, Muhammed (Koran and
    Hadith)
  • 5 Pillars
  • Creed
  • Prayer
  • Charity
  • Fasting
  • Pilgrimage

33
Sick Souled Monotheism (in J, C, I)
  • Punitive God of Sin, shame, guilt
  • Non-affirming, threatening God causes insecurity,
    impedes healthy psychosocial development
  • Introjection of shoulds
  • Zealous idealism and intolerance as defense
  • Insecurity and Battle for God (Karen Armstrong)
  • Ideological warfare more common in the West.

34
Self-esteem Japanese sample
35
Interdependent self-construal
Mother
Father
x
X
x
X
x
x
x
Self
Sibling
x
X
x
X
x
x
x
Co-worker
X
x
Friend
36
Eastern Cultures Religions India
  • Hinduism (Oldest)
  • Four Wants pleasure, success (path of desire),
    duty, Being (path of renunciation) Mukti
    liberation from limitations
  • Let people accomplish lower stages, they will
    want more
  • Four paths (Yogas yokes) to true Being, suited
    to personalities knowledge (O), love (A), work
    (E), meditation (I)
  • Maya illusion vs. True Being (Atman and
    Brahman)
  • Sounds Greek. Is this where Pythagoras got
    inspiration?
  • Advocates balanced engagement, e.g., Dancing
    Shiva, i.e., Not identifying with fruits of
    action
  • See notes field below for related reading

37
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38
Eastern Cultures Religions India
  • Buddhism (566-486 BCE He Who is Awake)
  • Pragmatic psychology for well-being
  • Reaction against Hindu authority, ritual,
    tradition, fatalism, superstition.
  • Four Noble Truths and Eightfold path (from
    wandering about to intentional living)
  • Do not over-attach to goals and fruits of goals
  • Meditation and mindfulness noticing and
    centering on breathing (left hemisphere!)
  • Strive with awareness middle way
  • See Shivas dance

39
Eastern Culture Religion Chinese
  • Confucius (552-479 BCE), after collapse of Chou
    dynasty, Period of Warring States, solve social
    chaos
  • human animal without instincts requires
    tradition for social harmony lover of the
    ancients.
  • Correct attitudes by following tradition
  • Perspective-taking man-to-manness, compromise,
    social sensitivity
  • Putting others at ease graciousness, face
  • Propriety situational, relational, and role
    norms
  • Doctrine of mean between extremes avoid pure
    values/ fanaticism
  • concrete, holistic, collectivism (vs. abstract,
    analytical, individualism)

40
Eastern Culture Religion Chinese and Japanese
  • Taoism Lao Tzu (Grand Old Master) contemporary
    of Confucius
  • Tao Te Ching (the Way and its power)order life
    in sync with natural world (not transcending and
    imposing will on it)
  • Yin Yang allow contradictions, avoid clear
    categories, no absolutes (sometimes, some
    situations)
  • Creative quiet, mystery, simplicity, humility,
    spontaneous flow
  • No self-assertion, competition, or
    conqueringinstead, befriend emptiness (cups,
    doors, windows). Water metaphors.
  • Zen Buddhism 12 Century Japan (Buddhism Taoism
    Zen)
  • Inspired by Buddhas Lotus sermon, Koans (one
    hand clapping) meaning of Zen (lifted little
    finger, kicked a ball, slapped in face).
  • Grapple with uncertain, experiential truth
    beneath words and categories. Kick habit of
    logical analysis. Silence and no words
  • Contrast this to Judaic people of the book, the
    word, logos.

41
Goal Theory Interpretation
  • East and West agree that narrow ego-self striving
    is problematic
  • Western solutions bolster identification with an
    ideal self, Eastern erase the self
  • At best, both facilitate well-being, lack of
    defensiveness, openness, and compassion

42
Compassion
  • Axial age and Great Transformation (Armstrong)
  • Emphasis on compassion discourages fanatical
    intolerance (West) and also aloof personal
    enlightenment (East)
  • Non-divisive ideal that directly discourages
    ego-self-focus
  • Compelling exemplars to emulate
  • Theraveda?Mahayana Buddhism (Bodhisattvas)
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